Google Searchology Day: Recap Of Announcements
It’s Searchology Day today at Google, where the company is devoting time to look at the past, present and future of search at Google. There will be a number of significant announcements coming out of the event. Want to keep up? Stay tuned to this page. We’ll keep it updated with a summary of major […]
It’s Searchology Day
today at Google, where the company is devoting time to look at the past, present
and future of search at Google. There will be a number of significant
announcements coming out of the event. Want to keep up? Stay tuned to this page.
We’ll keep it updated with a summary of major developments plus link out to more
in-depth coverage we’re providing about some of the news. Want in on the action?
The webcast is
here and runs from 9:30am to 12:30pm Pacific Time.
News from the event:
- Universal Search: Do a "regular" search and books, news,
video, image and local results blended into one single page. It will still
mostly be web pages that dominate, but the verticals will be more noticeable.
See our very long article detailing this,
Google 2.0: Google
Universal Search.
- New Navigation:
New top-left navigation to help you move within Google properties and
contextually-changing navigation for search results have been added. See our
article, Google’s New
Navigational Links: An Illustrated Guide.
- Google Experimental: A new place where you can experiment
with Google interface experiments. See our write-up here,
Google Experimental:
Opt-In To Google User Interface Experiments. Try it
here.
- Meta
Video Search: Within the
Google 2.0: Google
Universal Search, there’s a section that describes how Google Video is
going to be listing video hosted from across the web, not just within Google
Video or YouTube.
- Google Views: Part of Google Experimental,
Google Views lets you do searches
and get back information presented in list, timeline and map fashion.
- Cross Language Information Retrieval (CLIR): Google has a system it
expects to debut within a few months that lets you search for information
across multiple languages, even if you don’t speak those languages. You’ll
enter what you’re looking for, and your search terms will be translated into
other languages. Matching pages in those languages will be found. If they are
among the most relevant, they’ll be translated back into your native language
and shown in the search results. Google’s been working on this for years,
first really
hinting at it during the
Google Factory Tour
of May 19, 2005 that was a predecessor to today’s Searchology event.
TechCrunch has a closer look at some of the slides from what was presented
today:
Google To Launch Cross-Language Search Engine; On-The-Fly Translations of
Queries and Results. We also now have a closer look in
Google Searchology:
CLIR and Views.
- Meaning Search: Google’s added a stemming function several years
ago,
so that a search for "runs" would match "running," for example. Coming in the
future is meaning-based matching, Google says. For example, a search for
"distance from zurich switzerland to lake como italy" might also be searched
for as "train milan italy zurich switzerland."
- Web Search Keyboard Shortcuts: Lets you skip around
within search results using your keyboard, similar to how you can with Gmail.
Access it via Google
Experimental.
Live Blogging
-
Searchology Event At Google Today, TechCrunch -
Google Searchology – Live Blog, AppScount
Roundup Coverage
Postscript by Barry Schwartz: Danny’s Live blogging coverage is available for Google Searchology 2009.
Contributing authors are invited to create content for Search Engine Land and are chosen for their expertise and contribution to the search community. Our contributors work under the oversight of the editorial staff and contributions are checked for quality and relevance to our readers. The opinions they express are their own.
Related stories
New on Search Engine Land