Google testing Gmail results in search
Google is ramping up its search offerings, saying
Wednesday that it has started a pilot program that lets users include Gmail
results in their normal search queries.
In a company blog post Wednesday, the company said that
Google users can now sign up to have the feature enabled on their accounts.
“We think you shouldn’t have to be your own mini-search
engine to find the most useful information— it should just work,” wrote Amit
Singhal, a senior vice president for Google and a Google fellow, in the post.
“A search is a search, and we want our results to be truly universal.”
In an interview with the Associated Press, Singhal said
that the company would be open to adding other e-mail services to the results
as well, though there’s no indication that any other companies have expressed
interest yet.
According to the post, the feature would cull information
from users’ inboxes for relevant queries. A search for “my flights,” for
example, would pull flight confirmation e-mails and match that information
against Google’s existing flight tracking search feature. Searches related to
other things, such as plans for the weekend, would also showcase e-mails
related to that subject on the right-hand column of Google’s search results.
Singhal said that the company is adding features to
search one “baby step” at a time, and that the company wants to hear from users
who enable the feature.
Google also announced that it will soon expand its voice
search feature on the iPhone and iPad to work better with natural speech
queries.
Asking your device, “What movies are playing this
weekend?” should surface showtimes, trailers and nearby theaters, Singhal
wrote.
The inability to return movie times is a common complaint
about Siri, Apple’s personal assistant app, which will be in direct competition
with the voice search app. And while Siri’s strength may lie in being able to
set reminders and add calendar appointments for the iPhone, Google’s search app
is available on far more devices.
The app will pull information from the Knowledge Graph,
Google’s encyclopedia-like summaries of notable people, places and things, and
the app speaks your answers to you when possible.
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