Google Has its Own 'Live' Search Lab


Recommended Posts

It was Google that first made developers begin thinking of asynchronous JavaScript in the context of search technology, with the development and rapid expansion of its Google Earth, Maps and Gadgets features. But with Microsoft?s new, all-out effort with Windows Live Search to finally claim a serious share of searches, suddenly the question has become more pointed:

Should AJAX be employed for everyday searches, or should the search page be left uncomplicated?

Recently, Google has been floating a little trial project to come up with the answer. Entitled SearchMash, the system is essentially the AJAX version of Google Search, with some subtle adjustments that the amateur Web user might notice, and whose existence that may slip right past some veterans.

For instance, the front page gives a simple line of instructions, ?Type one or more search keywords to get started.? Once you?ve typed something, this line changes to read, ?Hit enter to get results.? It?s an extremely simple example of AJAX at work: responding to user input by altering the model of the page, even slightly. Sometimes, if you wait just a moment, this line will give you pointers or offer tips.

A more engaging example concerns the search results themselves. Google has always displayed the first ten searches, before showing you a ?G-o-o-o-ogle? tab that offers to take you to the next ten. This task typically requires a page reload. With AJAX, the existing page can allow itself to be changed internally without being reloaded ? only the changes are requested from the server.

This mode of operation is being demonstrated by Microsoft now, with Windows Live Search?s image search feature. There, you simply scroll the internal vertical scroll bar down to see more image retrieval results, each of which is loaded into memory as necessary, without forcing a page refresh and without the existing results having to be cached locally.

SearchMash tries applying this principle to textual searches. At the bottom of each batch of ten is a link that reads, ?more web pages.? When you click that, SearchMash renders the next ten searches below the existing ones, so the topmost results don?t get dropped into the browser cache. There?s a tradeoff: SearchMash doesn?t tell you how far you could go before you reach the end of the list. Here, Google could be trying to find out how useful it really is for users to know whether there are thirteen results or thirteen hundred ? perhaps users only make use of the first three pages? worth.

It?s apparent that Google is tracking how such subtle adjustments to the search experience are used. From the Features page, which shows you the handful of concepts that SearchMash is testing, you can give each feature a relative thumbs-up/thumbs-down by responding to the question, ?Is this useful??

One feature whose usefulness may have yet to present itself is the drag-and-drop reorganization of search results. If you don?t like the fact that an obviously matching result came in at #3 (SearchMash?s results are enumerated), you can drag it up the list with your mouse and drop it down at #1.

While this gives you the tools you need to move BetaNews search results higher up on your browser, this doesn?t actually change how SearchMash (or Google) would enumerate the result if you tried it again. ?This is just for fun right now,? reads the Features page, ?but we have some ideas for how to use this.?

Google isn?t exactly being secretive about this project ? it does take credit for SearchMash deep in the site?s credits, and apparently did make investors aware of its development some weeks earlier. But why isn?t this a feature of Google Labs, where the trademark could be made more prominent?

As a representative of the company told SearchEngineWatch, one of the factors the company is studying is the effect of its own trademark on its user. ?One of the important factors we wanted to address was the influence that may come from Google branding,? the representative wrote. ?Creating a separate site will help us gather more objective data about user response to new interfaces.?

One reason Google may be interested in the level of its own influence may have to do with how it could color user?s perceptions of the viability of new features, one direction or the other. As popular blogger David Naylor demonstrated in a recent review, the drag-and-drop feature seemed to be made less relevant by the fact that it was Google that came up with it. ?Thought you?d best bite the bullet and admit your relevancy sucks, yeah?? Naylor wrote. ?I can?t wait to start abusing this when they use it to help with rankings.?

As veteran technical book publisher Joe Wikert noted on his blog earlier this month, Google?s veil of faux secrecy could end up sending red flags. Citing SearchMash?s statement in the press that the Google trademark was omitted to enable a more objective measure of usage, Wikert wrote, ?The existing Google search interface is so simple and clean it?s hard to think there are any elements on it that would impede their research on SearchMash. Plus, the only way people are discovering SearchMash is through blogs and other links which refer to it as a Google property, so anyone using SearchMash is coming at it with Google in mind.?

It was Werner Heisenberg who messed up the realm of classical physics permanently by proving you can?t observe a physical system without changing it. As Google proceeds to observe the behavior of its users ?- whether or not it wishes to claim them -? its impact as a sociological force remains unmistakable, and perhaps inescapable.

Source

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/504581-google-has-its-own-live-search-lab/
Share on other sites

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Flying as the central point eh... As a massive Spyro fan who has replayed the Reignited Trilogy three times and the originals 4 times... I have some doubts, but maybe...
    • Apple is expanding Private Cloud Compute beyond its own data centers by Pradeep Viswanathan At WWDC 2026, as part of the improved Apple Intelligence capabilities, Apple today announced that it is expanding Private Cloud Compute (PCC), its privacy-focused cloud infrastructure for Apple Intelligence, beyond its own data centers for the first time. Private Cloud Compute was designed to handle Apple Intelligence requests that are too complex to run fully on-device. The PCC system does not store user data and does not allow Apple or anyone else to access user requests. Last year, Apple also expanded its Security Bounty program with rewards of up to $1 million for researchers who could find serious vulnerabilities in PCC. Until now, Apple's PCC data centers were using Apple's own silicon. As part of the expansion, Apple is working with Google and NVIDIA to run new Apple Intelligence workloads on Google Cloud systems powered by NVIDIA GPUs. Apple will be using this new infrastructure to execute more demanding AI tasks while maintaining the same privacy and security guarantees of PCC. The new implementation uses NVIDIA Confidential Computing with NVIDIA GPUs, Intel CPUs with TDX, and Google’s Titan chip. Apple says it has worked with Google to build additional protections beyond a traditional confidential computing deployment. Despite the expansion to third-party data centers, Apple claims that its core PCC requirements remain unchanged, including stateless computation, no privileged runtime access, non-targetability, and verifiable transparency. The company highlighted that it will continue to control the PCC software stack, and Apple devices will only trust PCC software that has been cryptographically approved by Apple. To take security to the next level, Apple mentioned that it is maintaining an append-only ledger of Google Cloud hardware that is part of the PCC fleet. The company claims this will help reduce the risk of supply chain attacks. In addition to AI infrastructure, Apple also worked with Google to use technologies behind the Gemini family of models to build the next generation of Apple Foundation Models to power Apple Intelligence features across on-device and cloud workloads. As expected, for more demanding AI tasks like agentic tool use and complex reasoning, Apple will rely on the expanded PCC infrastructure running on Google Cloud. The expansion of PCC on Google Cloud will gradually ramp toward the full set of protections during the summer preview period. As before, Apple will also publish binaries for public inspection, provide research tooling, and give researchers access to live PCC nodes in research mode through the Apple Security Bounty Program.
    • my problem with outlook (new) is that it connects only to outlook.com. all connections to external providers goes through there. Got your mail server and want to use imap directly? no way... it adds a connector on outlook.com. last bug; if your email on an external provider if the same as principal email of your microsoft account, it doesn't work...
    • It's the only reason I finally have an iPhone (for work) and enjoy using it so much that I'm tempted to move from android next time I need to replace my own device
    • So is Russia, China, Iran, North Korea, just to mention a few. What's your point? Everyone is a threat from their enemies' perspective. I'd say that Israel is only a threat to their immediate enemies like Hamas, Hezbollah and the Iranian regime, not to anyone else.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      Captain_Eric earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • One Month Later
      amusc earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      506
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      222
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      92
    4. 4
      +Edouard
      86
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      81
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!