In a bid to see off the increasingly strong challenge from Microsoft’s new Bing web search offering, Google has made several enhancements to its own capabilities in an effort to make web search more useful.
In a blog posting yesterday, Google software engineer Lingyun Liu revealed that Google now places images next to maps and links when searching for locations in Google Search.
Clicking on any of the images will then take the user to the photos layer on Google Maps where they can browse more geo-tagged photos, he said.
“Knowing the geographical location of a place is only part of the story,” wrote Liu.
“It's often just as valuable to get a sense of what the place is like, and there's no better way to do that than by looking at images of some of its most important sights.”
Google also announced users can now filter their image searches in advanced image search by Creative Commons license – a useful tool for bloggers who want to make sure they use non-copyrighted works .
Google has also extended its Product Search tool for mobile devices to “all devices with an internet connection in the US, UK, Germany and South Korea”.
“No matter what phone you use, just enter your product query on google.com and select the ‘Shopping results...’ link,” wrote software engineer Eiji Hirai on the Google Mobile blog.
“Or you can start your mobile product search directly by creating a bookmark to www.google.com/m/products.”
Microsoft’s rival search offering Bing has been gaining traction since it was launched. According to the latest stats from market research fiorm Net Applications, Google is still way ahead with a market share of 81 per cent, but Bing is gaining on second placed Yahoo, with 5.3 per cent.
Google enhances search to see off Bing
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