Google has its search engine, and it email client, and several other applications many of us are familiar with, such as the blogging platform Blogger. And Google also has a bunch of apps no one really pays attention to, or have yet to go mainstream. Then again, many of these peripheral apps don’t need to go mainstream; they’re just a small portion of what Google is trying to do on a rather large scale.
Recent changes and updates to some of Google’s more familiar apps are shedding more light on what Google may have up its sleeves, with some social integration that could enable the search king to better contend with the likes of Facebook and Twitter.
One such change has already taken effect. For Google users that remain logged into their Google accounts while searching the Google web, they will notice some socially driven recommendations at the bottom of their search page. Based on their Google friends network, which largely includes friends on their Gchat and those they share Reader items with, will appear with links to additionally relevant information.
Another upcoming change could be an update system to alert Gmail users as to new activity from their friends around their activity. This could include status updates for Gchat, or photo uploads to Picassa. It could even include social networking updates such as Twitter or Facebook updates, though current information on this possible new feature doesn’t suggest this level of integration upon launch.
The ability to create more of a social network around an email client is an idea that Google, Yahoo and others have been throwing around for a couple of years now. At first it seemed silly, but email is still a centralizing factor in most social media activity. The way in which the web is opening up for more cooperative interaction, there is plenty of opportunity for search engines and email clients to improve their core competencies based on this type of social integration.
What we’re seeing is a social inclusion of content into search results, such as real time trends powered by the likes of Twitter. Facebook, too, is beginning to open its content more to search engines, making it a potentially powerful database of socially relevant information that’s been shared within previously closed networks.
Google’s strength in competing and dually leveraging the realm of social networks is its ability to combine several aspects of its multiple applications. This has been a rather creepy incorporation of socially driven content prior to the popularity of Facebook and Twitter, but the adoption of open sharing and users’ ability to recognize the benefits of doing so has made it easier for Google to implement it’s over-arching plan.
Yahoo has already made several moves in this direction as well, incorporating social updates into its main email interface over a year ago. Pulling in updates and recommendations from some of its other applications, even the newer ones like Buzz, has given Yahoo some time to experiment with these tactics.
As Google furthers its own push into the social networking realm, it looks as though the company is going to focus on providing a utility instead of a replacement to what sites like Facebook and Twitter already offer. This leaves Google in a position of being needed, validating whatever efforts it’s currently working towards.