by CLAIRE CAIN
MILLER
Aug. 8, 2012
When Google imagines the future of
Web search, it sees a search engine that understands human meaning and
not just words, that can have a spoken conversation with computer users
and that gives users results not just from the Web but also from their
personal lives.
On Wednesday, Google showed a few
steps it has taken toward making that all-knowing search engine a
reality. The new tools, like voice search that seems to outdo Apple’s
Siri, make Google more useful. But some, like one that incorporates
personal Gmail messages in search results, could also unnerve
privacy-concerned users.
Google's new tool is being offered
to a million users who sign up at g.co/searchtrial.Karen Bleier/Agence
France-Presse — Getty ImagesGoogle’s new tool is being offered to a
million users who sign up at g.co/searchtrial.
Speaking at an event for reporters
in San Francisco, Amit Singhal, senior vice president in charge of
search at Google, called the announcements “baby steps in the direction
of making search truly universal” and of building artificial
intelligence into the search engine.
The Gmail tool, which Google is
still testing with a limited number of users, shows results from Gmail
if a user is signed in to his or her Google account. Search for Amazon,
for instance, and in addition to links to the shopping Web site and
information about the river, you could see the receipt from your recent
Amazon.com order. Search “my flights” and Google will cull information
about your forthcoming flight from your Gmail messages. Search for baby
shower games and Google might show you a relevant but forgotten e-mail
chain from last year between you and a friend.
Google says it wants to be able to
see in your Gmail inbox that you have a reservation at a restaurant an
hour away and alert you that the traffic is bad so you need to leave
early, an extension of Google Now, which the company introduced in
June. It also plans eventually to include personal information from
other Google services like Docs and Drive.
Google is aware that the new tool
could raise privacy concerns, a problem it has faced in the past when
it tested new products, like Buzz, an ill-fated social network, only
with Google employees. That is why the company is first offering it to
a million users who sign up at g.co/searchtrial. It also emphasized
that users can turn it off by moving a toggle at the top of the search
results page or signing out of Gmail, and that all searches are
encrypted.
“We have to do this very
carefully, we know that,” Mr. Singhal said.
He added, “These are very useful
things, services we need to bring to our users, and that’s the only way
we can build the search of the future that we all want.”
Google also showed off voice
search that seems to go far beyond what Apple’s Siri can do. These
tools came to Android phones in June, and Google said it had submitted
an app to Apple’s iTunes store that should be available in the next few
days. In a demonstration, a Google executive verbally asked Google
questions about the weather and maps, but also for more obscure
information like a baseball player’s salary, a video on quantum physics
and his personal flight information, and each time the search engine
responded with the answer in a friendly voice.
Finally, Google showed the latest
updates to the Knowledge Graph, which it introduced in May as a way to
show real-world things and the connections between them. (Search
“Twilight,” for instance, and on the right-hand side appears
information about the movie and links to Kristen Stewart and Robert
Pattinson.) Starting Thursday, Google will go further by showing you a
horizontal bar of relevant information on top (search “what to do in
Paris” and see the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre) and offering more
intelligent prompts in auto-complete (search “Rio” and see “Rio de
Janeiro” and “Rio, 2011 film.”)
Google also gave some astonishing
statistics. There are 30 trillion URLs on the Web, and Google crawls 20
billion Web pages a day and does 100 billion searches a month.
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