Review: Microsoft’s Bing has a smart presentation, but still far from Google in key ways
By Peter Svensson, APThursday, July 30, 2009
Review: Yahoo’s shift to Bing could be risky bet
NEW YORK — Is Microsoft’s Bing really a better search engine? Since it debuted last month, it has earned praise for the smart way it presents results and how it lets users preview Web sites without clicking through to them.
Yet a closer look at its results reveals why loyal Yahoo users may not end up happy with the deal the company announced Wednesday, which calls for Bing to replace Yahoo Search.
ComScore Inc. says 19.6 percent of Web users go to Yahoo for their searches. Microsoft draws fewer, at 8.4 percent. That’s up just slighly from the 8 percent it captured before Bing launched at the start of June. It didn’t make a dent in Google’s commanding 65 percent market share.
I think I can see why. Not only is using Google such an ingrained habit that we talk of “googling” something, but also its technology is better in some key ways. I found Bing to be less comprehensive than Google and, surprisingly, Yahoo Search. It simply returns fewer results for a lot of search terms.
With common terms like “cars,” all the search engines return oodles of results. Yahoo reports 2.56 billion pages with that term. It doesn’t matter so much how many pages they report, as long as they give relevant results, and all do.
Then I tried to hunt for something purposely obscure, like background on the country manor that my sister is interested in buying. Google gave me 46 links, Yahoo 15. Bing supplied just six.
Of course, even in this kind of query you might not have time to look through every link. So if Bing has six and they’re good, that’s fine.
Yet in the country manor search and other cases, often at the fringes of what you’d expect the Internet to know, I found the most relevant results in Google and Yahoo only.
Years ago, search engines competed by citing their “index size” — basically, how many pages they had collected in their database. Google played this game too. But as Google grew to dominate the scene by presenting better results, Web users lost interest in the statistics. Google doesn’t make a big point of them anymore either, though it did say last year that it had more than 1 trillion Web pages catalogued.
Looking at results from Bing, it may be time to care about search index size again. That’s especially the case because in other respects, the top three engines are so similar as to be nearly indistinguishable. Nos. 2 and 3 have basically copied Google.
All of them present neat and clean search pages and advertising that’s placed through an auction process (advertisers bid for the right to show their ads alongside certain search terms, and pay the search engines when a user clicks on an ad). Search for a common term like “diapers,” and they yield nearly identical results.
They do have other little things that set them apart. Google injects a helpful little map when it finds a location among the top results. Yahoo has (or soon we might say “had”) a Search Pad application that lets you annotate your results, a useful aid in an extended research or shopping project.
Bing has earned praise for the smart way it presents certain search results. For instance it breaks down some results by category, giving you an easy way to quickly hone a search for “swine flu” with information on “symptoms” or “causes.” It will also helpfully show previous searches you’ve made in a column to the left of the results.
Bing also presents a preview of each search result if you hover your mouse cursor over it. Hover the cursor over a video, and a preview starts playing right on the results page.
Microsoft has said that it put special attention in Bing to presenting authoritative results in a few areas, like health information, but the effort seems a little superficial. When you search for “swine flu,” the Mayo Clinic’s presumably more reliable page will appear above Wikipedia’s on Bing. But if you search for “toddler fever,” the results look indistinguishable from those on the other two engines.
Bing is young. It’s possible Microsoft can make its index catch up to Yahoo’s and even Google’s, but doing so won’t happen overnight. More likely, it will take years.
That’s plenty of time for Yahoo users to discover that Bing — for all of its niceties in presentation — lacks depth. If they do, they’ll know where to go, and Google would end up being the winner on this deal.
Tags: Bing, Computing And Information Technology, Expense, New York, North America, Software, Swine flu, United States
July 30, 2009: 9:14 am
Of course the entry to wikipedia is in fact a more important link than the Mayo clinic, despite its lack of authority. The wikipedia entry is a central hub in the internet’s swine-flu information mesh. From there I get links to 84 relevant articles and sites that effectively do my web-search for me; and direct links to the authoritative NIH, US, NHS, UK, and WHO sites. Why wouldn’t I want wikipedia to be the first link on my search result list? It is in fact the most useful starting point for my web-search, and I’m not surprised at the prominence google’s algorithm gives it. |
Andrae Muys