I love to discover new places, from sandwich shops in my neighborhood to great museums around the globe. When I start looking for something in a new area, like a barbecue restaurant in Austin, I usually do quite a few searches. I might search for a list of restaurants and then search for details about each place, like which one has the best atmosphere and live music.
Today we’re introducing Place Search, a new kind of local search result that organizes the world’s information around places. We’ve clustered search results around specific locations so you can more easily make comparisons and decide where to go. Say you’re looking for that great barbecue restaurant with live music. With Place Search here’s what you’ll get:
The new results are marked with red pins, and each one is a unique restaurant with relevant information and links from across the web. I can see that Stubb’s has live music, and I can click citysearch.com, tripadvisor.com and other sites to read reviews. In the past, the same search would return links with information about Stubb’s in different parts of the results page (here’s a screenshot of what it used to look like). Now information is grouped conveniently to make it easier to digest and compare.
Place Search results will begin appearing automatically on Google when we predict you’re looking for local information. In addition, you’ll find a new link for “Places” in the left-hand panel of the search results page so you can switch to these results whenever you want. For example, when I’m in New York, I love to go out and play foosball, but a search for [foosball] doesn’t automatically show me Place Search results. If I click “Places” I get the new view:
We’ve made results like this possible by developing technology to better understand places. With Place Search, we’re dynamically connecting hundreds of millions of websites with more than 50 million real-world locations. We automatically identify when sites are talking about physical places and cluster links even when they don’t provide addresses and use different names (“stubb’s bbq” is the same as “stubbs bar-b-que”).
One of the great things about our approach is that it makes it easier to find a comprehensive view of each place. In our new layout you’ll find many more relevant links on a single results page—often 30 or 40. Instead of doing eight or 10 searches, often you’ll get to the sites you’re looking for with just one search. In our testing Place Search saves people an average of two seconds on searches for local information.
Place Search is rolling out now and will be available globally in more than 40 languages in the next few days. During the roll-out process you can use this special link to preview the new results. Our goal is to help you feel like a local everywhere you go!
Rabu, 27 Oktober 2010
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- This week in search 10/29/10
- Ghosts, goblins and haunting Halloween search trends
- Google Apps highlights – 10/29/2010
- Searching your way to the ballot box
- Place Search: a faster, easier way to find local i...
- Into the cloud: Virgin America goes Google
- $5 million to encourage innovation in digital jour...
- Trip report: Google and YouTube in Iraq
- This week in search 10/22/10
- Creating stronger privacy controls inside Google
- Working to stop bullying, National Ally Week and n...
- YouTube highlights – 10/21/2010
- Bringing ultra high-speed broadband to Stanford homes
- This is Demo Slam
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- The new Google Search Appliance—a bridge to the cloud
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- This week in search 10/8/10
- Google Apps highlights – 10/8/2010
- Goodbye to an old friend: 1-800-GOOG-411
- Simply Lennon
- YouTube highlights – 10/7/2010
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