Microsoft To Unify Search Across Windows 10, Office 365 and Bing with Microsoft Search (zdnet.com)
Microsoft has a new 'North Star' for search: One, unified, smart search box that will span Windows, Office, Bing and more. From a report: For the past several years, Microsoft been working to unify and personalize its search experience across Office 365. But now the company is going a step further and bringing Windows 10 the same search experience. At Ignite last year, Microsoft said its holy grail for search was to enable people to search from wherever they were without interrupting their workflow. Bing for Business -- a way to turn Bing into an Intranet search service -- also debuted last year. At this year's Ignite, Microsoft is refining and expanding that search mission. Microsoft's plan is to put the search box "in a consistent, prominent place across Edge, Bing, Windows and Office apps, so that search is always one click away." The company also is "supercharging" the search box so that users can more easily find people, related content, commands for apps and more before they actually start typing in the search box, as it will be contextually aware and offer proactive search results and suggestions. Today, September 24, Microsoft is starting to roll out a preview of this Microsoft Search feature to Office.com, Bing.com (where it's no longer called Bing for Business, but, instead Microsoft Search in Bing) and the SharePoint Mobile app. Microsoft Search will be coming to Edge, Windows and other versions of Office in the coming months, going into 2019.
Wow. And maybe after this, they can finally figure out how to make a decent search function for Outlook.
Searching is an interruption in one's workflow. Instead of allowing people to go directly where they want to go, Microsoft keeps trying to force search down people's throats by claiming it's a better "experience".
Question: if one went to the store for eggs, do you walk around the entire store "searching" for eggs, or do you go directly to where eggs are located?
As I have said many times, with each iteration of Windows Microsoft has made it more difficult for an end user to accomplish something. Things which used to be readily available are buried or moved to obscure locations. When you do find what you're looking for, the steps to complete the task have soared.
This is why, except for work, I will not use Windows 10. It's an abomination whose inept design will cause a myriad of bad habits to be the norm and cause a regression in accomplishing tasks easily.
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
Anybody remember "web desktop"?
"Network places"?
Stop trying to blur the lines between my local PC and some networked location out there. I want to know where something I am interacting with is. For security if nothing else.