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Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Google: Understanding is the next frontier of search; Meet Wonder Wheel, Google Squared

By | May 12, 2009, 11:05am PDT

Summary: Google executives argued that “understanding people, health, communication, education and knowledge” is the next frontier of search. At its annual Searchology powwow Tuesday, a series of executives led by Marissa Mayer, vice president of search products and user experience, unveiled Google’s latest efforts in search refinement, including a search option panel that allows users to drill [...]

Google executives argued that “understanding people, health, communication, education and knowledge” is the next frontier of search.

At its annual Searchology powwow Tuesday, a series of executives led by Marissa Mayer, vice president of search products and user experience, unveiled Google’s latest efforts in search refinement, including a search option panel that allows users to drill down deeper into the results (Techmeme, presentation).

Mayer described it as “a new set of tools that allows you to slice and dice results in new ways.”

The search option panel, which goes live today, is one example of how Google is aiming to capture more understanding about its users. The search giant said that it aims to figure out what the user intent is and get the results quickly. If this sounds vaguely familiar that’s because Wolfram Alpha has been pitching the understanding theme for search search. Indeed you could argue that Google is preempting what Wolfram Alpha is pitching.

Google also showed off something it called the “Wonder Wheel,” a graphical way to explore topics by clicking on related searches that go deeper into the subject of the main query. It also showcased Google Squared, a tool designed to chart research into columns and rows for those who are trying to track and organize information they get from the Web. Google Squared will be available in Labs later this month.

Mayer also talked about “rich snippets,” which enhances the results with refined information in the sampling of text that appears below the title and link. The idea is for users to be able to find information quickly and easily without clicking on a bunch of links that might not offer the information they’re seeking. The company also announced the support of open standards so that webmasters can code the site on their own to provide Google with the enhanced data for the snippet. “Not only will it improve Google’s search results, it’s a step toward making the whole Internet smarter,” Mayer said.

Google has altered its messaging in recent weeks to make it clear that it is just as technologically savvy as any newcomer. Udi Manber, vice president of engineering at Google, said the company’s aim is “to do rocket science that’s taken for granted.”

Also see: Google: Looking over shoulder at Wolfram|Alpha?

“The real goal is that we have many users and we have to solve their problems. What is user intent, what do they need and get it to them,” said Manber.

Manber and other execs highlighted automatic language translation, user options and mobile searches. The message from Google: It wants to understand you. “We can concentrate on starting to understand,” said Manber, who noted that Google isn’t there yet. “It’s a start.”

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Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic.

Disclosure

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan has nothing to disclose. He doesn’t hold investments in the technology companies he covers.

Biography

Larry Dignan

Larry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and SmartPlanet as well as Editorial Director of ZDNet's sister site TechRepublic. He was most recently Executive Editor of News and Blogs at ZDNet. Prior to that he was executive news editor at eWeek and news editor at Baseline. He also served as the East Coast news editor and finance editor at CNET News.com. Larry has covered the technology and financial services industry since 1995, publishing articles in WallStreetWeek.com, Inter@ctive Week, The New York Times, and Financial Planning magazine. He's a graduate of the Columbia School of Journalism and the University of Delaware.

For daily updates, follow Larry on Twitter.

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RE: Google: Understanding is the next frontier of search; Meet Wonder Wheel, Google Squared
mentormatt8 6th Mar 2010
I found wonder wheel today disappeared from the search results in Firefox. It is still there when I search with IE or Opera. Is that related to the roll out of Google Caffeine? See comments at http://annoyances-resolved.blogspot.com/2010/02/wonder-wheel-of-google-search-not.html
Did they leave out the part where they store your personal info and sell it to 3rd parties for a profit while you don't see a dime? Or how about how their services get canceled after 6 months because their employees would rather sit around and play with office toys instead of doing real work?
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So true!
maskman01 12th May 2009
Kind of like a guy that sits around all day not doing any real work waiting for Google related blogs so he can post the same boring trash.

Right again and keep up the good work.
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Those people annoy me
Loverock Davidson 12th May 2009
I'm glad I'm not one of them.
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Talk about playing.....
linux for me 12th May 2009
The CMIC sits around and waits to be the first troll to post. Talk about not doing any real work.
Google Squared is so cool. Looks very much like our vision at Cazoodle.

At Cazoodle, our goal is enable ?data-aware? search, by understanding the structure of Web data. Try our current products in apartment rentals, local events, and online shopping.

http://www.cazoodle.com
- with understanding - would be for the argument ?Loverock Davidson?....

Henri
Slicing and dicing: meaning is not a recipe for
cooking. Google's main failure is using Statistics to
handle meaning. As long as they continue to persist in
this fallacy, Google at best will remain a number-
crunching search-engine throwing up thousands of
results and will be eventually surpassed by other
Search engines using a more intelligent approach.
Looks like all companies as they grow big, become
complacent and that marks their doom. Come on Google
guys. We are fond of Google. Wake up and look around
you. The world doesn't stop.Does it need a Wolfram to
jolt the industry ?
In case you feel this statement is hot air. Want an
exammple: Your search engines are failures in
morphologically rich languages since they neither look
for lemmatised forms nor the spelling variants, nor
can they handle the grammar and at best give
approximate results.
See what language is and how it is structured and you
can better your search.


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RE: Meaning is not a recipe for cooking
raymond.doctor@... 13th May 2009
Slicing and dicing: meaning is not a recipe for
cooking. Google's main failure is using Statistics to
handle meaning. As long as they continue to persist in
this fallacy, Google at best will remain a number-
crunching search-engine throwing up thousands of
results and will be eventually surpassed by other
Search engines using a more intelligent approach.

Awesome! I had never heard about the Wonder Wheel until
reading your post. Thanks for sharing! No longer will I ever
be stumped for a blog topic wink

-Mia Taylor

http://www.miataylor.com
Larry,

I love the Wonder Wheel!. It's not only a great
feature, it's got a great story behind it.

The idea comes from Jon Klienberg of Cornell who had
the concept of "Hubs" and "Authorities" back in 1999
when Brin and Page where developing PageRank (they
were aware of each other at the time and cited each
others papers).

Interestingly, both concepts were developed concurrently with Network Theory ( Kleinberg and
Network Theorist Duncan Watts were at Cornell and
collaborated).

You can read more about it here: http://www.digitaltonto.com/archives/427

- Greg
I found wonder wheel today disappeared from the search results in Firefox. It is still there when I search with IE or Opera. Is that related to the roll out of Google Caffeine? See comments at http://annoyances-resolved.blogspot.com/2010/02/wonder-wheel-of-google-search-not.html

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