Bing is Official! Mobile Client on the Way!
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05-28-2009 12:10 PM
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Bill Fisher


- Joined on 03-20-2008
- Portland, OR
- Posts 1,883
- Points 22,917


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Bing is Official! Mobile Client on the Way!
Microsoft's new "decision engine," Bing, is now official! This is a destination for desktop PCs, representing the evolution of the live.com search engine, and not really a mobile experience (at least not in the press release), so we'll have to wait and see what the implications are for mobile search... A note: the Bing.com site is not yet live - that's scheduled for June 3. UPDATE: I just noticed at the site Discover Bing that there WILL be a mobile client. Currently, however, the links point to Live Search downloads:
Bing for Mobile is designed specifically for quick, task-oriented
searches of local information on mobile devices. Local search and
mapping features will provide an easy way to find details and
directions for local businesses.
[EDIT] And there's yet another Bing information site: http://www.decisionengine.com/Default.html

Microsoft Corp. today unveiled Bing,
a new Decision Engine and consumer brand, providing customers with a
first step in moving beyond search to help make faster, more informed
decisions. Bing is specifically designed to build on the benefits of
today’s search engines but begins to move beyond this experience with a
new approach to user experience and intuitive tools to help customers
make better decisions, focusing initially on four key vertical areas:
making a purchase decision, planning a trip, researching a health
condition or finding a local business. The result of this new
approach is an important beginning for a new and more powerful kind of
search service, which Microsoft is calling a Decision Engine, designed
to empower people to gain insight and knowledge from the Web, moving
more quickly to important decisions. The new service, located at http://www.Bing.com, will begin to roll out over the coming days and will be fully deployed worldwide on Wednesday, June 3. The
explosive growth of online content has continued unabated, and Bing was
developed as a tool to help people more easily navigate through the
information overload that has come to characterize many of today’s
search experiences. Results from a custom comScore Inc. study across
core search engines show that as many as 30 percent of searches are
abandoned without a satisfactory result. The data also showed that
approximately two-thirds of the remaining searches required a
refinement or requery on the search results page. “Today, search
engines do a decent job of helping people navigate the Web and find
information, but they don’t do a very good job of enabling people to
use the information they find,” said Steve Ballmer, Microsoft CEO.
“When we set out to build Bing, we grounded ourselves in a deep
understanding of how people really want to use the Web. Bing is an
important first step forward in our long-term effort to deliver
innovations in search that enable people to find information quickly
and use the information they’ve found to accomplish tasks and make
smart decisions.” A New Approach to Internet Search Based
on the customer insight that 66 percent of people are using Internet
search more frequently to make complex decisions,* Microsoft identified
three design goals to guide the development of Bing: deliver great
results; deliver a more organized experience; and simplify tasks and
provide insight, leading to faster, more confident decisions. The new
service, built to go beyond today’s search experience, includes deep
innovation on core search areas including entity extraction and
expansion, query intent recognition and document summarization
technology as well as a new user experience model that dynamically
adapts to the type of query to provide relevant and intuitive
decision-making tools.
| • | Great search results.
Relevant search results are still a top priority for people, yet
Microsoft studies show that only one in four search queries deliver a
satisfactory result. Bing helps identify relevant search results
through features such as Best Match, where the best answer is surfaced
and called out; Deep Links, allowing more insight into what resources a
particular site has to offer; and Quick Preview, a hover-over window
that expands over a search result caption to provide a better sense of
the related site’s relevancy. Bing also includes one-click access to
information through Instant Answers, designed to provide the
sought-after information within the body of the search results page,
minimizing the need for additional clicks. | | • | Organized search experience.
More and more customers are regularly spending time with search
engines, engaging in complex, multi-query and multi-session searches.
Respondents also said an organized search experience would be twice as
useful in helping find information and accomplishing tasks faster. Bing
includes a number of features that organize search results, including
Explore Pane, a dynamically relevant set of navigation and search tools
on the left side of the page; Web Groups, which groups results in
intuitive ways both on the Explore Pane and in the actual results; and
Related Searches and Quick Tabs, which is essentially a table of
contents for different categories of search results. Collectively,
these and other features in Bing help people navigate their search
results, cut through the clutter of search overload and get right down
to making important decisions. | | • | Simplify tasks and provide insight.
Microsoft’s research identified shopping, travel, local business and
information, and health-related research as areas in which people
wanted more assistance in making key decisions. The current state of
Internet search isn’t optimized for these tasks, but the Bing Decision
Engine is optimized for these key customer scenarios. For example,
while a consumer is using Bing to shop online, the Sentiment Extraction
feature scours the Internet for user opinions and expert reviews to
help leverage the community of customers as well as product experts in
trying to make a buying decision. In Bing Travel, the Rate Key compares
the location, price and amenities of multiple hotels and provides a
color-coded key of the best values, and the Price Predictor actually
helps consumers decide when to buy an airline ticket in order to get
the lowest prices. |
The new brand portfolio will include the following changes to existing Microsoft programs:
| • | Microsoft’s mapping platform, Virtual Earth, will now be branded as Bing Maps for Enterprise. More information can be found here. | | • | Technology
from Microsoft’s April 2008 acquisition of Farecast is now a central
part of Bing Travel. More information coming soon. | | • | Microsoft’s
popular cashback program, now dubbed Bing cashback, with more than 850
merchants and more than 17 million products available, will be fully
integrated into the Bing Shopping experience. |
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Dave Parker MVP


- Joined on 06-13-2008
- UK
- Posts 2,234
- Points 20,331





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Re: Bing is Official! Mobile Client on the Way!
I just "found" this, this morning. I was a bit surprised when I clicked my home button and it pinged me to "Bing". Funny name "Bing", what do you think?
Dave Parker Microsoft M.V.P. Mobile Devices Reviewer & Moderator - www.smartphonegurus.comMy Blog - Guru Meditation
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Bill Fisher


- Joined on 03-20-2008
- Portland, OR
- Posts 1,883
- Points 22,917


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Re: Bing is Official! Mobile Client on the Way!
m.bing.com is now live! This is the Bing mobile browser version, which provides a mobile-optimized search engine experience with a heavy emphasis on local results, instant answers, and specific tasks - with Bing's very cool categorization capabilities! You can also input your location to get tuned local results...
Note: This is NOT the Bing mobile client, which is still expected later this year. 
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