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Google Testing Completely Revamped Look

SharkLaser writes "Google's search engine has always looked pretty much the same since it was introduced in 1998. However, Google is now testing a revamped look that is the largest change the search engine has ever done to its website. The new look strips the black bar running horizontally at top and places it as an openable menu on the left side. The move is said to promote Google's other services without making the search engine too cluttered. The new side menu is also more similar to Chrome OS and allows Chromebook and Google's website to have the same look and feel. Another consequence of the move is that it now takes users two clicks to enter other services such as Images and News, which is said to improve the amount of ad clicks and visitors advertisers get. Considering that European Commission is examining claims of Google downgrading rival websites and U.S. senators are calling FTC to inspect Google for unfair practices, the move comes at a surprising time."

16 of 195 comments (clear)

  1. Googlebashing every second article? by symbolset · · Score: 5, Informative

    Getting desperate much? Is this a new year project? Submitter is almost exclusively a Googlebashing troll.

    And the Googlebashing has no connection to the rest of the fine summary.

    Slow news cycle I guess. Let's put something else in the queue.

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    1. Re:Googlebashing every second article? by thestudio_bob · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes, I agree 100%. I relish the days that /. was unbiased with all the submitted articles about MicroSoft, Apple, Oracle, Python, C++, JavaScript, Religion, Governments, Global Warming...

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      The real Sig captains the Northwestern. This one captains /.
    2. Re:Googlebashing every second article? by Dyinobal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I just find the inclusion of stuff about the law suits to be really stupid. I get that you wanted to fill out the summary since the entirety of the article could be reduced down to. Google has slightly changed the look of their site, making their non search related features more prominent.

    3. Re:Googlebashing every second article? by dnewt · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If it's true, of course it's controversial; not to mention anti-competitive and therefore illegal. It's all about context. The vast majority of content on the internet is found via search engines. Google are the dominant player in the search engine market. Clearly, using their market position as the gate keeper of all things internet to push their plethora of other services is very anti-competitive and hugely controversial.

    4. Re:Googlebashing every second article? by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes, I agree 100%. I relish the days that /. was unbiased with all the submitted articles about MicroSoft, Apple, Oracle, Python, C++, JavaScript, Religion, Governments, Global Warming...

      You spelled "Micro$oft" wrong.

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  2. Completely Revamped Look by Haedrian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Completely Revamped Look"

    Its hardly as if they turned the front page into a clone of yahoo with too much information yelling at you.

    They just moved the top to the left. I don't see why this is even news.

  3. It's like Google is becoming Yahoo by BLToday · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I get the old version of Google if I'm using my desktop but the new one with my laptop. It's very annoying. Reminds me of the multiple versions of yahoo that I use to get. And worse, it's starting to feel that google.com is turning into the latest "portal" website.

    The new interface requires more mouse movement than the older and cleaner google. It now takes one drop menu and one side expansion menu to get to "finance". Plus, sometimes my search query doesn't transfer from "web" (now "search") to "images" or "finance".

  4. Classic by markdavis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Google would do well to offer something like-

    http://classic.google.com/

    That turns the clock back even more. No animations, no music, no pop-up junk on the side for search results (instant previews or whatever they call it), etc.

    I think that Google might need to offer new stuff to attract the type of person that finds the likes of Bing amusing. Having choice is a good thing. However, forcing [yet more] eye candy on people is going to alienate those (like me, who are already irritated) who just want minimal, fast, simple. Something that isn't distracting, irritating, CPU loading, complex, and doesn't use mouseovers or javascript. Personally, I would even prefer a new domain for it, like cgoogle.com so it can be easily whitelisted.

    1. Re:Classic by Mashiki · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sure would be nice. But google seems to be having a "automaker" complex. "We're so big, we're so great, we're so kick ass. The peons will take what we give them and like it. Where else will they go?" For those that don't get it, GM, Ford, Chrysler, AMC and so on said the same thing back when Japan was crushing them in the 70's and 80's. AMC didn't survive. Chrysler nearly didn't.

      Yeah I really don't like the changes at all, and by going with what's been said on their groups pages? The majority there don't like it at all. But then again, those are the people who can find them.

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    2. Re:Classic by Katatsumuri · · Score: 4, Informative

      You can try http://www.google.com/m - not exactly what you want, but might be useful in some cases, like old computers or slow connection perhaps.

    3. Re:Classic by ralphdaugherty · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Google would do well to offer something like-

      http://classic.google.com/ [google.com]

      Everytime they screw up the Google search page (which I have made my home page since 1999) I try to find a way to disable it and revert to the classic mode, and if I can't find it, type a bunch of searches on the latest Google screwing with the search to see how others are coping with it (or not).

      And each time I find quotes from that Marisa whatever saying she will do whatever she wants to it, they want to be on the cutting edge (or at least not left behind by Bing's changes or whatever).

      This is only happening to my laptop so far, not my desktops, but doesn't appear to be a way to revert it.

      The experience with Google is slipping day by day, attributed to Marisa's (or whatever her name is - I don't feel like Googling it in a rant against Google) perpetual meddling with it as that constitutes her justification for existence at Google.

      But everything else is worse. If it gets bad enough I'll use scripts to display the Google pages the way I want but it hasn't come to that yet. She's basically a major annoyance to me so far.

  5. Surprising Time? How so? by artor3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How is it a surprising time? A few ongoing legal procedures means that they can't make aesthetic changes to their website? Also, it does not take "two clicks" to enter Google Images - just a mouseover and a click.

    I'm pretty sure the last two sentences were just tacked on as flamebait, as they are either false or unrelated.

  6. Re:I, for one, by cultiv8 · · Score: 5, Informative

    DDG gets search results from over 50 sources.

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    sysadmins and parents of newborns get the same amount of sleep.
  7. Marketing drone in TFA sez: by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "If you compare the original Google home page to today's version, you will see that a makeover every so often can certainly be refreshing."

    This is quite possibly the single stupidest meme in the long, sad history of stupid web design memes, and it's been the death of many a once-fine site. No, a makeover on a familiar (good) interface is not "refreshing." It's irritating, especially since it pretty much always means adding clutter to something that used to be clean and functional. It is usually pushed on users with a patronizing explanation, after a "beta" period in which people loudly and repeatedly point out its flaws, and the new interface eventually becomes the default (or only) choice with none of the problems found in "beta" addressed.

    If it ain't broke, don't fix it. If there's something wrong, fine, fix that and leave the rest alone. And for God's sake, listen to the users.

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    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  8. Why risk what works? by RobinEggs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Google used to receive mystery emails from this random guy, one every month, containing nothing but a single number.

    After puzzling over it a while they realized this value was the number of words on their homepage that month; it was this guy's way of reminding them that a simple interface was working well and contrasted distinctly with the likes of yahoo!.

    Fast forward to today, and the double-layer of scrolling frames on the new front page looks suspiciously like Word 2010 or Facebook. Not nearly as bad, mind you, but suddenly showing some disturbing similarity.

    I bet that guy wants to punch them in the face right now.

    Google: you make the vast majority of your money on the ads that go with your simple, powerful search engine. Don't fuck it up by filling your products with endless references to your other products and trying to control the entire internet.

  9. Re:One of the unlucky testers by bashibazouk · · Score: 5, Informative

    Click the gear icon. Select revert to classic.

    For how long this will work...