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Posts Tagged ‘ Bing ’

By Matt Hamblen
May 5, 2011

FRAMINGHAM – Microsoft’s investment in putting its Bing search and maps in BlackBerry mobile devices by the fall holiday season pits Research in Motion and Microsoft against Google in a massive scramble for mobile search customers.

Like Microsoft’s recent billion-dollar-plus investment in Nokia, analysts speculated that Microsoft is probably paying RIM “boatloads” for the partnership deal, although Microsoft would not reveal any terms.

The announcement Tuesday that Microsoft is “going to invest uniquely in the BlackBerry platform ” came from Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer in a surprise keynote appearance at BlackBerry World in Orlando, Fla.

Immediately, several analysts noted the importance of the move, given the growth in smartphones and the use of mobile search in advertising and location-based purchasing.

“This shows that the battle for mobile search is on,” said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Gartner and a Computerworld columnist, in an email.

“Ballmer’s presence at BlackBerry World is a great example of the enemy of my enemy is my friend,” Gartenberg said. ” Google indeed is the enemy in this case.”

Ballmer said that Bing would become the default search provider in the browser and maps on BlackBerry devices, adding, “I’ve never been more excited about where our future is going.”

The news was such a surprise that analysts attending BlackBerry World said that RIM officials couldn’t immediately explain any of the details to them.

A Microsoft spokeswoman clarified in an email to Computerworld that Microsoft and RIM announced a partnership to “make Bing the preferred search and maps provider on all new BlackBerry devices … starting this holiday season.” She said Bing will be the search default for the BlackBerry browser and the default search and maps provider on new RIM devices that are “presented to mobile operators in the U.S. and select international markets.”

Asked to clarify the difference between being the “default” and “preferred” provider of Bing, the Microsoft spokeswoman said that Bing would be the default search and maps provider on new RIM devices when they are presented to carriers, but noted that “the carrier can change the default,” which means Bing is still preferred by RIM but carrier customers will also have other choices for mobile search.

Kevin Burden, an analyst at ABI Research, said that while Bing will be the preferred search engine on BlackBerry devices, Bing will not be the only search and mapping tool available on those phones. “The companies are saying they will put more emphasis on Bing and that it works better … than Google,” Burden said.

In a blog posted later Tuesday, Microsoft’s Bing Director Matt Dahlin noted that Bing is already shipping as the default search and map application for the recently released BlackBerry PlayBook. “Together we’ll also market and promote the strength of our joint offerings as ‘Making better decisions with Bing on BlackBerry,’” he said.

Dahlin also said there will be a “convergence of search, commerce, social and location-centric searches where Bing will provide the intelligence and the organizing layer in the cloud that connects a user’s intent with action, helping people be more productive.”

Deciding to work together against Google makes sense for both RIM and Microsoft, analysts said.

“RIM doesn’t really want Google as the default search and mapping tool, since RIM competes so heavily with Android, also made by Google,” said Jack Gold, an analyst at J. Gold Associates.

Meanwhile, “Microsoft has the potential to make lots of money with Bing search and services, so it’s a win for Microsoft and takes revenues that Google would have had. So both companies get something out of this and both are poking at Google with this partnership.”

Gold noted that Microsoft already has a partnership with RIM on cloud-based hosting services through RIM’s BlackBerry Enterprise Server and with office productivity software.

“Even though Microsoft has Windows Phone 7 [an operating system for smartphones that Nokia and others will deploy], the potential revenue implications for Bing are actually far greater than WP7,” Gold added.

Burden said that the partnership with RIM is “almost like a kind of safety net for Microsoft since what happens if Windows Phone doesn’t take off? The safety net is to make sure you have a mobile play and that Microsoft isn’t shut out completely.” Rather than relying just on the Windows Phone OS, Microsoft “realizes that one of their best plays is to be an enabler or technology,” Burden added.

Burden and Gartenberg wondered how much Microsoft paid RIM to be its preferred search and maps provider, given that Microsoft paid more than $1 billon to provide the operating system to Nokia, a fact acknowledged by Nokia officials in February.

Microsoft wouldn’t discuss any terms of the alliance.

Burden concluded: “To be the preferred provider for BlackBerry didn’t come for free. I don’t know what the number is, but it is certainly not free.”

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By Rick Broida
May 27, 2010

ieSAN FRANCISCO – Remember Accelerators? They were a much-touted new feature in Internet Explorer 8–but I don’t know a single person who uses them. Personally, I just never took the time to investigate them all that closely.

That may change now that I’ve tried out Define with Bing, an IE accelerator that’s genuinely useful. With just a couple clicks, it looks up definitions of any word or phrase you highlight in the browser.

To install, just visit the link in the preceding paragraph, then click Add to Internet Explorer. Presto, you’re done–you don’t even have to restart IE. (Take that, Firefox!)

Now, when you highlight a word or phrase, you’ll see a little blue-white arrow appear next to it. Click it, then mouse over All Accelerators. In the pop-up list that appears, mouse over Define with Bing–you’ll then see a pop-up box with an abbreviated collection of related information.

Alternately, if you click Define with Bing instead of just mousing over it, IE will open a new tab with a more complete list of definitions (from sources like Encarta, Wikipedia, and the Web at large).

Very handy, no? Actually, this add-on would be a lot handier if it appeared in the primary Accelerators menu, so you didn’t have to navigate into the All Accelerators sub-menu. Here’s how to accomplish that:

In Internet Explorer, click Tools, Manage Add-ons. Click Accelerators, and then click Define with Bing in the list that appears. Now click Set as default, then Close, and you’re done.

What do you think? If you like the cut of Define with Bing’s jib, maybe it’s finally time you checked out all IE8′s Accelerators.

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By Jeff Bertolucci
February 18, 2009

windows-phone-7SAN FRANCISCO – Windows Phone 7, a dramatic upgrade of Microsoft’s mobile operating system, looks fairly impressive out of the gate. In addition to a stylish user interface that’s strongly influenced by the underappreciated Zune HD media player, Windows Phone 7 is tightly integrated with Redmond’s Bing search engine.

Tap the Search button on a Windows 7 device, for instance, and a Bing window appears. Microsoft says the Windows Phone interface is locked, that its hardware partners won’t be allowed to replace the UI. Might those rules extend to the default search engine too? It’s a given that Bing, not Google, will be the default search engine for every Windows 7 phone that ships. Users will likely have the option of digging into the settings to select another search tool (e.g., Google or Yahoo), but most won’t bother.

The Bing Push

If Windows Phone 7 is a big success, Bing’s market share would rise. Redmond has spent hundreds of millions of dollars to build and market Bing, which has become a very capable alternative to Google and Yahoo. Despite Microsoft’s aggressive campaign, however, Bing still has a small fraction of Google’s market share, albeit one that’s rising slowly.

The most recent comScore data for January 2010 shows Google leading the U.S. search market with a 65.4 percent share, down 0.3 percent from December. Bing, by comparison, garnered 11.3 percent of the U.S. market in January, a 0.6 rise from the previous month. (Yahoo Search had 17 percent of U.S. searches last month, a slightly drop from December.)
Android vs. Windows Phone

Mobile devices are the latest battleground in the search wars, and a revitalized Windows Phone 7 would make for a more bruising fight. Google, of course, is gaining mobile market share too. Its Android OS is slated to debut on dozens of mobile devices this year, all of which will have tight hooks into Google Search.

As for Apple’s iPhone, rumors persist that Bing may soon become the device’s default search engine. Cupertino’s relationship with Google continues to sour, particularly in light of Google’s Android push and its iPhone-like Nexus One handset.

A Google vs. Apple battle may be very, very good for Bing. Healthy sales of Windows 7 phones wouldn’t hurt either.

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By Jeff Bertolucci
November 12, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO – Given undistinguished history of Microsoft‘s late and unlamented Live Search engine, the predecessor to Bing, it’s easy to dismiss Redmond as a hapless also-ran in the search market. But given the vast sums of money and resources that Microsoft is investing in its fledging Google challenger, this could change in a hurry.
Launched in May, Bing initially received a tepid response; some critics essentially called it Live Search with a new coat of paint. But Microsoft is nothing if tenacious. (Old-timers will recall how badly the early versions of Windows stank before Redmond finally found success with version 3.0.) The company has been steadily upgrading Bing since May, including some pretty useful innovations announced Wednesday.

One new and noteworthy upgrade is the inclusion of search results from Wolfram Alpha, an oddball, “computational knowledge” search tool that’s probably too geeky for the average user. When integrated with a mainstream query engine, however, Wolfram Alpha algorithms prove their mettle by returning actionable data rather than just a page of links. Microsoft provides a few examples on its Bing blog. Search for “bmi,” for instance, and Bing displays Wolfram Alpha’s body mass index calculator at the top of the results page.

It’s debatable whether Bing is gaining market share, however, or simply spinning its wheels. According to online data service Experian Hitwise, Bing’s share of U.S. Web searches rose to 9.57 percent in October 2009, up from 8.96 percent in September. Of course, Bing was still a distant third behind Google (70.6 percent) and Yahoo (16.14 percent).

Flash back to May, and Microsoft Live Search had 9.9 percent of the U.S. search market, according to Nielsen Online. Not a lot of improvement there, despite Microsoft’s extensive and expensive Bing marketing blitz.

If you’re a diehard Google Search fan, don’t hate Bing. Embrace it. Because Microsoft’s nipping at Google’s heels will only make the world’s dominant search engine that much better. In fact, it appears that Google is already playing catch-up. Last month it launched a new tool called Similar Images, a feature that’s very much like one first seen in Bing and Live Search. (To be fair, Similar Images was first launched in test mode in Google Labs in April.)

Bing hasn’t amazed anyone yet–and it may very well have to if it hopes to grab significant market share from Google. And let’s not forget that Google has the resources and determination to match and surpass any of Bing’s enhancements.   This fight should be fun to watch.

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Finding your photos online

By on November 9, 2009

By Dave Johnson
November 10, 2009

Recently, a friend of mine congratulated me for selling one of my wildlife photos. When I asked him what he meant, he sent me a link to a site that was prominently using a shot I had taken of some wolves. The problem? I had never given the site owners permission to use my photo, which they had “borrowed” from my Flickr page. I asked them to remove the photo, and they did–but not everyone out there is so reasonable. You can watermark your photos to prevent this sort of thing from happening. But is there any way to find your photos online to see they’re being used inappropriately?

It turns out that there are a couple of ways to keep an eye on your photos.

Your Photos Are Vulnerable
Before we go any further, though, allow me to emphasize that whenever you post a photo on the Internet, there’s a potential for theft. There is no way to completely protect a photo from being used without your permission. Even if your Web page uses a special script to disable the right-click “Save picture as” command, a determined photo borrower can simply take a screen shot of the Web browser. The only way to absolutely secure your photos? Never share them online.

Reverse Image Search
Suppose you have posted some photos on a photo sharing site, and you’re curious to see if someone has absconded with them. What you need is a way to perform a reverse image search–where a smart search engine looks for a photo by detecting identical content within the image itself, rather than keying on file names or metadata, which are easily changed.

That might sound like science fiction, and in fact it’s pretty close. But I’ve found a Web site out there, TinEye, that can actually perform reverse images searches today.

To use TinEye, you can upload a photo from your computer or point the site to a Web page that already hosts the photo. TinEye then returns a list of sites using the same image.

TinEye is far from perfect. It often identifies photos that are similar to–but not exactly the same as–the source image. Worse, TinEye’s database of photos represents only a fraction of what’s available on the entire Internet–so if you get zero results, that doesn’t mean your photo isn’t being repurposed out there somewhere.

Look for Similar Photos
I haven’t been able to find any competing reverse image search sites that are similar to TinEye, but I do have a slightly different strategy you can try.

The new-ish Bing search engine lets you zero in on “similar” photos when conducting an image search. This can lead you to photos that are being re-used on multiple sites.

Just go to Bing and click Images, then search for a photo. When you see the results, hover over a photo that interests you. Click “Show similar images,” and Bing will refresh the page with results that might contain the same photo from a different site.

Of course, this approach has its flaws as well. You can’t start with a specific photo like you can with TinEye; you have to nudge Bing to a photo you’re interested in using the right search terms. And once you find that photo in question, looking for “similar” photos is still far from a sure thing.

The moral of the story? There are a few tricks you can use to see if your photos are being used out there in cyberspace, but it’s still really hard and the results are inconclusive. Don’t post anything you aren’t willing to give away.

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Yahoo! and Microsoft announced an agreement that will improve the Web search experience for users and advertisers, and deliver sustained innovation to the industry. In simple terms, Microsoft will now power Yahoo! search while Yahoo! will become the exclusive worldwide relationship sales force for both companies’ premium search advertisers.

For Web users and advertisers, this deal will accelerate the pace and breadth of innovation by combining both companies’ complementary strengths and search platforms into a market competitor with the scale to fuel sustained development in search and search advertising. Users will find what they care about faster and with more personal relevance. Microsoft’s competitive search platforms will lead to more value for advertisers, better results for Web publishers, and increased innovation and efficiency across the Internet.

Carol Bartz
Carol Bartz, Yahoo! CEO

Under this agreement, Yahoo! will focus on its core business of providing consumers with great experiences with the world’s favorite online destinations and Web products.

“This agreement comes with boatloads of value for Yahoo!, our users, and the industry. And I believe it establishes the foundation for a new era of Internet innovation and development,” said Yahoo! CEO Carol Bartz. “Users will continue to experience search as a vital part of their Yahoo! experiences and will enjoy increased innovation thanks to the scale and resources this deal provides. Advertisers will also benefit from scale and enjoy greater ease of use and efficiencies working with a single platform and sales team for premium advertisers. Finally, this deal will help us increase our investments in priority areas in winning audience properties, display advertising capabilities and mobile experiences.”

Providing a viable alternative to advertisers, this deal will combine Yahoo! and Microsoft search marketplaces so that advertisers no longer have to rely on one company that dominates more than 70% of all search. With the addition of Yahoo!’s search volume, Microsoft will achieve the size and scale required to unleash competition and innovation in the market, for consumers as well as advertisers.

Steve Ballmer
Steve Ballmer,
Microsoft CEO

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said the agreement will provide Microsoft’s search engine, Bing, the scale necessary to more effectively compete, attracting more users and advertisers, which in turn will lead to more relevant ads and search results.

“Through this agreement with Yahoo!, we will create more innovation in search, better value for advertisers, and real consumer choice in a market currently dominated by a single company,” said Ballmer. “Success in search requires both innovation and scale. With our new Bing search platform, we’ve created breakthrough innovation and features. This agreement with Yahoo! will provide the scale we need to deliver even more rapid advances in relevancy and usefulness. Microsoft and Yahoo! know there’s so much more that search could be. This agreement gives us the scale and resources to create the future of search.”

“This deal fits the long-term strategic direction of Yahoo! to remain the world’s leading online media company and Carol Bartz has the full and unanimous support of the Yahoo! Board behind this deal,” said Roy Bostock, chairman, Yahoo! Inc. “This is a significant opportunity for us. Microsoft is an industry innovator in search, and it is a great opportunity for us to focus our investments in other areas critical to our future.”

The key terms of the agreement are as follows:

  • The term of the agreement is 10 years;
  • Microsoft will acquire an exclusive 10-year license to Yahoo!’s core search technologies, and Microsoft will have the ability to integrate Yahoo! search technologies into its existing Web search platforms;
  • Microsoft’s Bing will be the exclusive algorithmic search and paid search platform for Yahoo! sites. Yahoo! will continue to use its technology and data in other areas of its business such as enhancing display advertising technology.
  • Yahoo! will become the exclusive worldwide relationship sales force for both companies’ premium search advertisers. Self-serve advertising for both companies will be fulfilled by Microsoft’s AdCenter platform, and prices for all search ads will continue to be set by AdCenter’s automated auction process.
  • Each company will maintain its own separate display advertising business and sales force.
  • Yahoo! will innovate and “own” the user experience on Yahoo! properties, including the user experience for search, even though it will be powered by Microsoft technology.
  • Microsoft will compensate Yahoo! through a revenue sharing agreement on traffic generated on Yahoo!’s network of both owned and operated (O&O) and affiliate sites.
    • Microsoft will pay traffic acquisition costs (TAC) to Yahoo! at an initial rate of 88% of search revenue generated on Yahoo!’s O&O sites during the first five years of the agreement.
    • Yahoo! will continue to syndicate its existing search affiliate partnerships.
  • Microsoft will guarantee Yahoo!’s O&O revenue per search (RPS) in each country for the first 18 months following initial implementation in that country.
  • At full implementation (expected to occur within 24 months following regulatory approval), Yahoo! estimates, based on current levels of revenue and current operating expenses, that this agreement will provide a benefit to annual GAAP operating income of approximately $500 million and capital expenditure savings of approximately $200 million. Yahoo! also estimates that this agreement will provide a benefit to annual operating cash flow of approximately $275 million.
  • The agreement protects consumer privacy by limiting the data shared between the companies to the minimum necessary to operate and improve the combined search platform, and restricts the use of search data shared between the companies. The agreement maintains the industry-leading privacy practices that each company follows today.

The agreement does not cover each company’s Web properties and products, email, instant messaging, display advertising, or any other aspect of the companies’ businesses. In those areas, the companies will continue to compete vigorously.

The transaction will be subject to regulatory review. The agreement entered into today anticipates that the parties will enter into more detailed definitive agreements prior to closing. Microsoft and Yahoo! expect the agreement to be closely reviewed by the industry and government regulators, and welcome questions. The companies are hopeful that closing can occur in early 2010.

The companies have established a Web site at choicevalueinnovation.com to provide consumers, advertisers and publishers with additional information about the benefits of the agreement.

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