Google  has sped up its internet search engine by launching a new product,  Google Instant, that displays results as soon as users type in queries.  "This is search at the speed of thought. It represents a quantum leap in  search," the company said. Previously Google's suggested search terms  and did not reveal results until the "enter" key was hit or the "search"  button was clicked.
Google Instant goes live in the next week and on mobile devices by  autumn. It will be rolled out in US on Wednesday and in the UK, Spain,  Germany, France and Russia during the coming week.In  a demo event held at San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art, Marissa  Mayer, Google's vice-president of search products and user experience,  typed in "sfm" into the search box to demonstrate the new service. As  typed, results appeared instantly for "SF MOMA" - the first predicted  search result.
In  another demo, when the letter "w" was entered, a list of links offering  the "weather" appeared along with images showing the temperature.
"We've  actually predicting what query you are likely to do and we're giving  you results for that," said Ms Mayer. Google estimates that the typical  user spends nine seconds entering a query and 15 seconds looking for  answers.
The  company says Google Instant could shave between two and five seconds  off a typical web search. "Google is betting all they have that speed is  everything," Harry McCracken of technology blog Technologizer.com told  the BBC.
"Saving  one or two seconds isn't that big of a deal. One of my instant thoughts  is that I am going to see results I don't want because until I type  enough that it knows what I want, it is going to show me links I am not  interested in."
Technology  commentator Robert Scoble said that the new feature would present a  real challenge to Microsoft and its search engine Bing, which has been  slowly chipping away at Google's lead in the search market.
"Playing  with it, it dramatically changes the way I do searches. I think it is a  pretty major leap forward but this means that Bing becomes far less  interesting and they now have to step up," said Mr Scoble. (Reuters)
Source: (wateen.net)  
