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September 26, 2007 9:01 PM PDT

Microsoft plays catch-up on search

by Elinor Mills

Microsoft unveiled on Wednesday the first significant changes to its Live search site since it was launched over a year ago, adding new shopping, entertainment and health verticals and improving video search. But most of the changes, particularly in the core search relevancy, mirror what competitors already offer.

The company demonstrated the new features at an event dubbed "Searchification" at its Mountain View, Calif. offices. Some of the news was leaked late last week in a blog entry written by one of its own employees.

The most interesting items are:

• User reviews and ratings when searching for products. "We basically crawled the entire Web, Amazon, Price Grabber, Yahoo Shopping, any other Web site, and really got to an algorithmically computed score effectively, which we call an 'opinion index,' which synthesizes what people are saying about this particular product," Satya Nadella, corporate vice president of search and advertising at Microsoft, said in an interview with CNET News.com. This is really useful and will speed up the shopping and research process.

• Expanded video index, scene detection, mouse-over video previews and other features that make it easier to find and watch videos. "With videos now we crawl the entire Web for videos, YouTube, AOL Video, Soapbox, what have you, and then created something called the 'Smart Motion Thumbnails,'" Nadella said. Hovering over the still images with the mouse brings up a short video preview. As part of a new entertainment vertical search, Microsoft has created rankings for celebrities, called xRank, which assigns a score to celebrities based on things like click-through rates and volume of queries on that name. Personally, I don't care if Britney Spears is hot or not in this week's Internet buzz.

Microsoft Live Search now integrates video in top Web search results and offers mouse-over previews.

(Credit: Microsoft)

• Mapping improvements will include single-click directions and printing, so that you can easily get directions from a particular major roadway and print the directions easily. The maps also will offer hints, such as informing you that if you have passed a particular street you have gone too far, and allow you to choose whether you want directions for the route with the least traffic, the shortest time or the shortest distance. Very handy.

• They also demonstrated some translation features that are kind of cool, including the ability to split the screen to see the original and translated versions, as well as the ability to hover over a section of non-English text and see the translation in a pop-up window.

Other new features that aren't anything novel:

• Business details on local listings. Results for specific businesses will include hours of operation, address, reviews, cuisine type, photographs and other information gleaned from sites like Judy's Book, Yelp and City Search.

Business search on Microsoft Live now shows user ratings, addresses and maps.

(Credit: Microsoft)

• Instant answers and query refinements on health-related results, an increasingly popular type of Web search. Microsoft Live Search is integrating technology it acquired from medical search engine Medstory. Searches can be refined to focus on things like conditions and medications, and includes fresh content from the Mayo Clinic and peer review journals. In an interesting side note, the company said that the top three health searches are "sex," "pregnancy" and "diabetes." Live Search now offers a due-date calculator for pregnancy queries. I'm not sure what new interactive features the site will offer for a health search on "sex."

The health, shopping and entertainment verticals are new and show results mixed in with the Web results, as well as having tabs on the main search page. The video search is now powered by Microsoft's in-house technology and not a third-party as before. All of the verticals will now have instant answers with topic-specific data and links. In addition, the size of the main index has increased four-fold and the main search interface is cleaner.

The core search relevancy improvements include auto-spell correction; recognition of compound words; stemming, or adding an "s" to the end of the word if it is needed; and including words like "the" that would normally be ignored in a search, but which might be necessary to understanding the meaning of the query. For instance, a search for "The Office" would rank results related to the television show of that name higher than Microsoft Office-related results.

Most of the changes to the core search will be available by the end of September, while the new features in the vertical searches will be rolled out before the end of October. The company plans to release major updates every six months to one year, Nadella said.

With the latest release, Microsoft's third generation of search, Microsoft is catching up to Google on core search relevancy and surpassing Yahoo, said Nadella, who joined the Search team six months ago from the business applications division.

But Danny Sullivan, editor of Search Engine Land, had a different take, calling the changes "incremental improvements."

Microsoft executives seem to be in denial on how much work they have ahead of them on search. Not only are they losing share according to Hitwise and comScore, but the usability of their site is sorely lacking, according to Google Blogoscoped.

And don't expect the other search giants to sit still. Sources close to Yahoo say the company plans to unveil significant enhancements to that Web search site in the coming weeks.

Granted, Microsoft's image search is one of the best and they have been innovative with maps, but that's pretty much where their search excellence ends. This latest face lift is more of a nip and tuck to get the search engine back into the contest than it is designed to win it.

Originally posted at News Blog
Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press. E-mail Elinor.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (10 Comments)
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Copy Copy Copy
by MaLvaDo39 September 26, 2007 9:36 PM PDT
That's all you do, Microsoft.
So uninspiring.
Reply to this comment
News?
by mikalg September 26, 2007 10:55 PM PDT
Shouldn't a news item be information that everyone doesn't know already. 'er.....NEWSFLASH: The Statue of Liberty is located in New York.
Reply to this comment
Re: News?
by imacpwr September 27, 2007 12:42 AM PDT
Actually this reads more like an Infomercial from Microsoft..
Re: News?
by imacpwr April 23, 2008 2:01 PM PDT
Actually this reads more like an Infomercial from Microsoft..
Hi I'm Steve
by t8 September 27, 2007 1:13 AM PDT
Hi I'm Steve Ballmer.

I am going to rule the world, so submit now or die, you bunch of losers.
Reply to this comment
Results, not "features"
by rcrusoe September 27, 2007 4:03 AM PDT
Who cares how they dress it up, the results of their search engine are inferior to both Google and Yahoo.

And in search, results are "Job One" (to steal a line from Ford).
Reply to this comment
Amen, Brother
by mjconver September 27, 2007 4:45 AM PDT
I Googled (Lived? Microsofted?) my name at Live.Com, and the first hit was a blog in Japanese. Sorry, boys, the only Japanese I know is "sushi".
Have u tried it?
by rohitharsh September 27, 2007 6:04 AM PDT
First of all comments here has a bias against MS. Its pretty amazing actually. Now whatever is said might be true but I don?t think anyone has taken time to experiment with the Live search.
For example are they really as relevant as Google. Before anyone says NO has anyone actually tried it out? Experimented with it? If not then is anyone quoting some study or research done on it. If NO again then the post is just stupid and obtuse.
I am more interested in seeing if they have improved their relevance. Google has way too much power and control over search technology. If people do not wake up then before you know it you will have a bigger problem than MS. The best scenario will be for the market to be divided between Google, MS and Yahoo.
Reply to this comment
Yeah, I tried it
by mjconver September 27, 2007 7:00 AM PDT
Didn't you see my other posts? I tried it, and got a blog in Japanese. What a joke!
Reply to this comment
live what?
by markthibault September 27, 2007 9:00 AM PDT
Did a search for car dolly and auto dolly and got nothing like what i wanted
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