Microsoft Offers A Peek At New Search Engine
ObsessiveMathsFreak writes "The Inquirer is reporting that Microsoft is offering a preview of its new search technology. The search engine preview has a minimalist interface, similar to Google. Microsoft claims over one billion web pages searched, but admits the fact that searching is a little slow. This technology hasn't yet been incorporated into MSN Search, though the site claims it eventually will be. In related news, the Financial Times is reporting that Microsoft are to improve the regular MSN Search site by removing paid advertisements from regular internet searches, a move that will cost them 'tens of millions of dollars.' Are the Search Engine Wars finally upon us?"
Redhat, SUSE, Mandrake, etc. don't turn up on the first page. WTF?
... I think I'll stick to google.
Oh I get it. Microsoft don't want their competitors turning up in search results.
Hmmm
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
Searched for my domain, found results pointing to web pages that I haven't had online since November of 2002.
Anybody know what the search engine spider calls itself.
I make sure that msnbot is not allowed to traverse my web site via the robots.txt file. I'd like to do the same with this robot.
BTW, I've noticed no appreciable decline in web hits at all.
Caution: Contents under pressure
i randomly searched for "baseball" on both... Microsoft's #1 results was the mlb.com website (which is what i would expect)... Google's #1 result was baseball-almanac.com doesn't really mean anything, just thought that was interesting...
"Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true." - Homer Simpson
Would this imply that Microsoft is using the same algorithm as Google?
what do i think? i think you should stop having the marketing-drones right your copy, when Google says things like "give it a spin" or "it'll be back", it seems genuine, when Microsoft says it, it sounds forced and derivative of the original
May you be touched by His Noodly Appendage. RAmen.
Casual Games/Downloads
I'm getting more hits than most of my regular visitors in my logs.. even google does not check my site on a daily basis but these seem to do it on a semi hourly basis.
MSN Bot is highly inefficient at indexing large dynamic sites.
One of my sites is a dense, heavily cross-linked statistics search engine. Over the last few months I've noticed MSN Bot making a spirited attempt to pull the entire site. Since the number of unique pages (without a custom search) exceeds 100,000 it was generating enormous amounts of traffic until I banned it a few days ago.
Considering that the site gets very little user traffic and many of its pages are similar, I wouldn't expect anything like the level of effort expended by MSN Bot. By comparison, Google only indexes the first few pages.
MS has alot of really dumb execs who get their panties in a wad if they don't feel they're "on top." All this search engine can do is hurt them. Time and money will be wasted in a cheap imitation of google that nobody will use except the newbies who can't change the default page of IE. and why? because their egos are as bloated as their software.
I know I'm going to be modded up on this
Clicked next - suddenly, "Sorry, there a no results for 'eruvia'". Pardon? Try searching again from scratch, and once again suddenly Eruvia has disappeared. Can't get my original 15 results back at all.
I'm putting this down to extremely ungraceful load handling and the ongoing Slashdotting. What's this running on anyway? Netcraft says IIS/6.0 on Linux, so it's another Akamai job, but the hardware behind it doesn't seem up to scratch yet.
Cheers,
Ian
http://techpreview.search.msn.com/results.aspx?q=o pen+source&FORM=SMCRT
Keep the Classic Slashdot.
Try searching for Google. I half expected it to not show up at all, but it comes up as the first link. The second link is an antique site, which the contains no reference to Google or even the text "Google".
Even ignoring the slowness, the results are extremely lacking
/2 million times fewer/
compared to Google. Here's a few quick searches I tried:
gethostbyname - no matches (Google=161000)
starbucks - 1 match (Google=1500000)
spiderman - 1 match (Google=2550000)
cassini - no matches (Google=941000)
gucci - 1 match (Google=3340000)
"garner state park" - failure (Google=3190)
Looks like it will find roughly
matches for a given keyword of Google. I don't think it's
quite ready to enter ship-test just yet.
>;k
First, I did a search for "nei" (because it's part of my domain name). The search engine presented several pages of matching results.
Then, the search engine had an error during a request and I did a new search for the same word, "nei".
And the search engine answered with:
Sorry, no results were found containing "nei"
So it's a bug, because I got thousands of results when I searched for "wikipedia".
and the search engine said
You have entered a search term that is likely to return adult content.
Warning: If you are under 18 or live in an area where it is illegal for you to view explicit content, please revise your search.
There is a spark in every single flame bait point.
So compare then to now: you can't even get decent fucking search results of Microsoft's own support site from Microsoft itself. They can't even properly track their own content - how on earth can anyone trust them to track everyone elses? I work tech support a few days a week and I don't even think about using Microsoft's "search the knowledge base" page - it's often laughably short on search results even for well known things like "xp rpc exploit" and "download ie6."
When I can get proper tech support info on Microsoft's own products without having to go to Google and type site:microsoft.com THEN I'll start to believe this is like Netscape vs. Microsoft.
Are they being choosy in deciding from whom they will accept feedback? When I click the "submit" button (using Firefox on Linux) nothing seems to happen except that an error message appears in the Javascript console: "Error: changeImage is not defined".
flossie
Write now. Defend liberty
I don't think it's true that "Google won the mindshare a long time ago." As of Jan 2004, Google has less than 40% of the search market, nearly tied with MSN and Yahoo.
Unfortunately, all Microsoft has to do is to catch Google. If the quality is essentially indistinguishable from Google, most people will use MSN Search, since MSN Search will be the default in IE (and probably MS OFfice and WinXP soon).
As long as Google keeps innovating and stays ahead, they'll do fine. But, if they trip, Microsoft will catch up and trample over them, just like they did to Netscape.
It seems they've some work to do in ordering their search results.
I'm old enough to remember when discussions on Slashdot were well informed.
Microsoft's new search engine seems to duplicate "Google bombs".
A search for "miserable failure" or "weapons of mass destruction" yields the familiar results.
Microsoft's new search technology, however, has brought fame to latest most "talentless hack".
So, critics of google bombing won't find any relief from Microsoft...
Not that I post on slashdot or anything.
I tried typing in 'QGI', the acronmy for an open source project I started/dropped a few years ago, as a test. The first 5 ranked pages come up and point to www.quorumgroup.ca. The first ranked page was index.html, and the next four were single clicks off of index.html. Seems a bit redundant. Maybe I'm just picky, but I think the point of a search engine is variety.
"I am the Black Mage! I casts the spells that makes the peoples fall down!" ~8BT
On an aside, the ulitimate combination would be in Google would buy Archive.org and you would be able to get a historical cache of every site on the web from the very beginning.
Also, I will find if very very hard to ever trust Microsoft to give me real, unbiased, un-pre-purchased search results. Google is equally a stockowner owned, megacorp, but (so far) they have shown a spirit of remaining honest and aboveboard. Microsoft definitely does not have this kind of rep ...