💾 Archived View for gmi.noulin.net › mobileNews › 1661.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 07:56:07. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2021-12-05)

➡️ Next capture (2024-05-10)

🚧 View Differences

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Google launches real-time search

2009-12-08 11:32:09

By Maggie Shiels, Technology reporter

BBC News, Silicon Valley

Google has launched real-time search to give users access to up-to-the-second

information.

The search giant said it will draw real-time data from over a billion pages on

the web.

The new feature will also include updates from Twitter and the social networks

of MySpace and Facebook.

"Information is being created at a pace I have never seen before and in this

environment, seconds matter," said Google fellow Amit Singhal.

At an event staged at the Computer History Museum in California, the company

said this was the first time that any search engine has integrated the

real-time web into its results page.

"There is so much information being generated out there that getting you

relevant information is the key to the success of a product like this. It's all

about relevance, relevance, relevance," said Mr Singhal.

Technical feat

The Silicon Valley company said the feature was now live and would take a

couple of days to be rolled out across the world. Updates from Twitter will be

included right away, while those from Facebook and MySpace are not expected to

be integrated into results until the new year.

The real-time stream of data will be shown within Google's normal results page.

The feature will also be available on smart phones, such as the iPhone and

those running Google's Android operating system.

Google would not be drawn on the financial details of the deals it has done

with Twitter, MySpace and Facebook.

Facebook has publicly stated it is not making money on this collaboration and

that the updates it will give Google come from the public profile pages that

can be seen by anybody on the web.

From a technical standpoint, the company said this was a landmark event in the

world of search.

"This is a technical marvel, getting all these updates in seconds, making them

searchable right after they are posted and making them available so that anyone

in the world can find them," said Google's vice-president of search Marissa

Mayer.

"The updates (on Twitter) are so truthful and so in the moment. That is a

really, really powerful part of this. Are you at this event right now? Are you

on this ski slope right now? And because of that 'right now' element of it ,

this is hugely valuable data," Ms Mayer told BBC News.

Twitter founder Biz Stone told reporters the company was "super excited to be

doing this with Google. Relevance, relevance, relevance - they are good at it,

we're not," he said.

Competition drive

Reaction to Google's announcement has been largely positive in the blogosphere.

"It looks really great and is a next step in search," said Bas van den Beld at

Searchcowboys.com.

"The announcement signals an aggressive push by Google to maintain its mantle

as search-innovation leader amid unaccustomed pressure from rivals," said Ryan

Singel from Wired.com

Danny Sullivan of SearchEngineLand said with Microsoft pulling out the stops

with its own Bing search engine, Google needed to show it had its eye on the

prize.

"From the PR standpoint it would not have been helpful to be a leading

information resource and have people pointing out that you don't have certain

kinds of information, especially when you have a rival like Bing cutting deals

and diligently going after Google," Mr Sullivan told BBC News.

Google has around 65% of the search market while Microsoft's Bing which has

just done a deal with Yahoo commands nearly 30%.

Computer vision

The search giant also unveiled Google Goggles, a new visual search feature that

lets consumers use a picture instead of keywords as the search query.

The tool compares the image users have taken with Google's database to return

relevant information.

"In the nature of computer vision we are at the beginning here and the

technology is just getting underway," said Google's vice-president of

engineering, Vic Gundotra.

"This today marks the beginning of this visual journey. We are at the cusp of a

an entire new computing era where devices will help us explore the world around

us."

The feature will be available on the Android platform.