Microsoft Launches Experimental Search Site Tafiti

Built on its new Silverlight application, Microsoft last night released a new, experimental search site dubbed “Tafiti,” which means “do research” in Swahili. You’ll need to download Silverlight to use the engine, which offers a richer “visualization” of Microsoft Live search results. It offers Web, RSS, image, news and book search presented in a rotating […]

Chat with SearchBot

Built on its new Silverlight application, Microsoft last night released a new, experimental search site dubbed “Tafiti,” which means “do research” in Swahili. You’ll need to download Silverlight to use the engine, which offers a richer “visualization” of Microsoft Live search results.


It offers Web, RSS, image, news and book search presented in a rotating carousel. It also offers the ability to drag and save search results.

ScreenHunter_689.jpg

ScreenHunter_690.jpg

The most provocative (though perhaps impractical) aspect of Tafiti is its “Tree View” that literally indicates search results as leaves on a tree. Don’t see this as a serious search engine competitor, but rather an interesting interface experiment, which is where a great deal of innovation will undoubtedly take place over the next few years.

Postscript From Danny: I mostly thought this was unnecessary eye candy — fun to play with, but nothing particularly intuitive. The ability to drag and drop results into a scratchpad was neat, but you can do this with some services on Live Search already (images, last time I looked). But the news results display was cool — listings were put up as if they were on a newspaper page. Still, there was nothing intuitive about why one story was bigger than another.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Greg Sterling
Contributor
Greg Sterling is a Contributing Editor to Search Engine Land, a member of the programming team for SMX events and the VP, Market Insights at Uberall.

Get the must-read newsletter for search marketers.