Tag Archives: real-time search

Google and MySpace have forged a new deal, primarily for real-time search results. The search engine company has confirmed the rumors that the two companies have been in talks regarding an SEO deal, and Google will begin including MySpace content in its real time search results.

Despite issues between Google and MySpace in the past, MySpace may be able to provide some value still to the large search engine company. As Google looks to build out its real time search options, MySpace is being leveraged towards providing relevant and immediate search results for added context.

Real time search has largely turned to social media content for the past few months, highlighting social media’s ability to add another layer of context to th data we receive in the form of search results. For a given query, we can gain a certain level of instant gratification based on content published from user-generated sites such as MySpace, moving away from the validation process required by more trusted news sources. As the content from social media outlets is also rather plentiful, the ability to pull from all that time/date-stamped data has been a low-hanging fruit tempting search engines for quite some time.

Twitter helped to bring real time search into the mainstream, with Facebook and MySpace quickly following suit. For Google, the deal with MySpace means that the search engine can expand its real time search offerings, potentially improving the context behind such social searches. This goes along with many of Google’s other initiatives on the social front, including socially-oriented search results that now appear for signed in users. Along with Google Buzz and a few other social efforts, Google is clearly moving towards a more inclusive format regarding its real time search.

Whatever Google ends up doing with MySpace content for its real time search products, we’re likely to see something more useful than what other search engines have provided. Jumping head first into real time search has been something other search engines have done in the past year or so, while Google already has a founation upon which real time, socially-generated search results can be provided. Nevertheless, Google has had a harder time incorporating real time search into its established methods, especially when it comes to forging certain deals in order to access social media outlets.

Facebook has been another large database with a great deal of potential towards the real time search efforts of several search engines. For the time being, Microsoft has a better standing with Facebook regarding the use of its increasingly public interface towards real time and social search content. Google’s deal with MySpace may help overcome some of the shortcomings of its deal with Facbook, especially as it looks to stay competitive with the likes of Microsoft Bing.

For MySpace, the social network has been losing ground to Facebook for quite some time now. Having become a trend passed, MySpace has spent the past year or so rebuilding its company and its network. Returning to the basics of user-generated content and social networking, MySpace is also looking for a way to get back into the game. A real time search deal with Google may be a good outlet for MySpace, given its intentions towards its own marketing efforts.

According to Mashable, popular blogging site Tumblr is launching two new features today: hashtag and Facebook integration.

Their use of hashtags will happen in “Tag Channels,” which allow bloggers to tag their content that turns up in the most popular place on the web right now: real-time search. Tumblr is getting into the real-time search area. Their search includes a sliding filter that lets you narrow down results.

Additionally, Tumblr is releasing Facebook integration that ensures all of your posts – no matter what media or format – will post correctly and prettily to Facebook.

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The real time search engine Collecta has released some new features this week, adding video and image search results from a handful of partners. Video feeds from 12seconds, uStream and Qik will now be included in search results on Collecta, enhancing the multimedia affect for real time quieries.

Launched last month, Collecta is one of the more recent additions to the real time search engine space. Coming with the concept of expanding real time search to as much of the web as possible, Collecta looks to give a more comprehensive look at what is occurring at any given moment across the Internet.

Not surprisingly, the bulk of this real time search data is coming from microblogging platforms and more traditional blogs, as these have become the most efficient ways of spreading breaking news. 12seconds, for instance, has a short-form blogging model that’s akin to Twitter. In creating such microblogging platforms, companies like Twitter and 12secnds have become standard for mining real time search results.

In the month that Collecta has been out, the company has also shared some of its own tracked data. Collecta is reporting that users are keeping the Collecta window open for 30-60 minutes. What does this stat say about the real time search trend? One could infer that users are facsinated with watching real time search, or like to be able to check on a moving real time search engine. So who does that benefit?

Advertisers is one possibility, should Collecta find a way to incorporate ads, either on the page or as part of the real time search query. This is something that many search engines and microblogging platforms are looking to do, especially as brands turn to such platforms in order to achieve some outreach data mining of their own. This would segue into another monetization option for Collecta, which would be as an enterprise tool.
But will the trend of real time last long, and is it beneficial as a lasting trend beyond enterprise use? How long will users keep a real time search engine window open for an hour or so? I guess we’ll find out soon enough how long real time search will be around, and how we’ll all benefit from streaming search result content. Right now it’s a curious study in human behavior, responding to a need for instant gratification on a cross-device manner, quenching an important aspect of quenching our thirst for immediate answers.

Search is possibly undergoing a major change right now, with the introduction of real time capabilities. As a result, services like OneRiot are being utilized for their API offerings to supplement other tools including search engines such as Scour.

As a one-stop shop for search engines, Scour combines search results from several major resources in order to give you a well-rounded set of links for your query. With Google, Yahoo and MSN Live (now Bing) already supported, Scour wanted to add some real time flare to its search results. Teaming with OneRiot and using its recently released API was the answer for Scour.

In using OneRiot’s API for real time search, Scour is able to provide real time search along with all the other search result options. For each result, you’ll see the OneRiot search ranking alongside the rankings from Google, Yahoo and Bing. Click on the OneRiot icon and you’ll be redirected to OneRiot’s site, with all the relevant information pertaining to that search query.

OneRiot was among the first socially-driven search engines to take real time search beyond Twitter. In an effort to provide a better glimpse at what the web is offering for realtime content, OneRiot looks at a wide array of blogging and news content in addition to Twitter for real time search results. This has allowed OneRiot to become an appealing tool for other search engines and social media sites to employ in order to power real time search results.

Scour isn’t the first to use OneRiot in this manner. A handful of other companies like Yoono have taken on OneRiot to use its API for similar purposes. And Scour isn’t the only search engine out there to turn to a third party for the provision of real time search. Bing itself has teamed with Twitter and Federated Media to provide real time search content on a search page separate from the main Bing site.

Perhaps an API offering from Microsoft with integrated real time Twitter search results would offer itself up as competition to OneRiot. But it’s really too soon to tell which format and which combination of resources will be of most value when it comes to real time search.

Yesterday a new – and amazingly cool – search engine launched. I don’t know if it’s a competitor to Google so much as a complement to Google.

Collecta is a real-time search engine. It lets you search through what is happening right now in blog posts and articles, comments, Twitter, Jaiku, Identi.ca, and Flickr. The difference between it and Google is Collecta is pulling everything in as it happens. Google tends to run a day or so late.

You can run multiple Collecta searches at a time. My searches (one for Really Goode Job and one for iPhone 3.0) each took about 30 seconds to initally show results. You can modify your search parameters with where to search (ie, search in comments, but not blog posts).

It’s still a pretty basic site, but it offers a lot of promise and a different way to approach search. With real-time Twitter search already here, and real-time Facebook search on it’s way, what is happening Right Now is obviously the direction search is taking. Collecta might already be out in front of the game.

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