INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Google has changed a lot in 20 years
What started as an index of &just& a few million pages is now reaching into the hundreds of billions; what was once a relatively simple (if
very clever!) search engine is now an impossibly complex brew of machine learning, computer vision, and data science that finds its way into
the daily lives of most of the planet.
Google held a small press event in San Francisco today to discuss what next, and what it saw as the
&Future of Search&.
Here everything they talked about:
Google Discover
The famously minimalist Google.com homepage is about to get a bit
more crowded (at least on mobile.)
Google says that 1 in 8 queries in a given month are repeats — a user returning to search on a topic
With that in mind, it going to start highlighting these topics for you before you start your search.
Google Feed (the content discovery news
feed it been building out in the dedicated Google App and on the Android home screen) is being rebranded as &Discover& and will now live
underneath the Google.com search bar on all mobile browsers.
Discover will highlight news, video, and information about topics Google thinks
you care about — like, say, hiking, or soccer, or the NBA
If you want a certain topic to show up more or less, there a slider to adjust accordingly.
It&ll start rolling out &in the next few
weeks
Recalling past queries
In the same vein: Google will now learn to recognize when you&re returning to a topic you&ve searched for
before, and try to start back up where you left off
When returning to a search topic, you&ll now see a card at the top of the results that&ll offer up a list of the pages you clicked through
to before, and relevant follow-up queries people tend to search for next.
While Google keeping track of what you searched for is nothing
new, finding that info generally meant digging through settings pages to find your history
With this, Google is attempting to play something that otherwise seems a bit creepy into a front page feature.
(And to answer what I imagine
will be just about everyone first question: Google Nick Fox says you can remove the card, or &opt out of seeing it all together&.)
Dynamic
Organization
Trillions of searches later, Google knows what you&re probably looking for, and what you&ll be looking for next
And they can get pretty specific about it.
To use their example: if you&re searching for &Pug&, you&re probably looking for characteristics
of the breed, or for images of well-known pugs
People searching for a longer haired breed like a Yorkshire Terrier, meanwhile, are often interested in things like grooming details —
even if it not the first thing they search for.
With this in mind, Google knowledge graph will now dynamically generate cards for a given
topic and present them at the top of the results page — basically, an all-in-one info packet of everything it thinks you&re looking for,
or might look for next.
Collections
In a move that feels pretty Pinteresty, you&ll now be able to save search results into &collections&
Google will look for patterns in your collections, and toss up suggested pages when it finds an overlap.
Stories
Snapchat has its stories
Even Skype tried it for a while.
Now Google is &doubling down& (their words) on stories
AI will generate stories built up from articles, images, and videos on a search topic (starting with notable people &like celebrities and
athletes) and incorporate them into search results.
Google Images Upgrades
Google Images is picking up support for Google Lens — the
company computer vision-heavy solution for figuring out exactly what is within an image
Their example: in a search result for &nursery&, Google Lens could help to identify a specific type of crib or bookcase that you&ve