Google Now Comes inTamil

Google Now Comes inTamil Recently Google has added 40 languages to its services and now Google has added support for Tamil. On August 6, 2008 Google has released Tamil version Google news. Google has recognize that entering Tamil text through keyboard is very hard task, Google’s transliteration technology enables the conversion from English text to phonetically equivalent text in Indian languages. For example, using transliteration, you could type “vanakkam” and we would convert it to Tamil script as ???????. Google has embedded this technology in it’s several other services also.

Google search in Tamil enables users to start typing in English and automatically get query suggestions in Tamil. If you wanted to enter the query “ponniyin selvan” in Tamil, just start typing it in English - e.g. “ponni” and we will show the Tamil suggestions

Google search in Tamil

Tamil transliteration in Blogger is designed for bloggers publishing content in Tamil when using the English keyboard for text entry. It’s our hope that this will make Tamil content more popular and more easily available online.

Tamil transliteration in orkut makes it easier to communicate with friends and family by exchanging scraps in Tamil.

Source Google Blog

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Top search providers -June 2008

I find some real good search results of last month while searching the web. I am sharing all of those search engine data with our reader.

Top search providers, ranked by total searches. Searches represent the total number of queries conducted at the provider.
Top 10 Search Providers for June 2008, Ranked by Searches (U.S.)

Provider Searches (000) YOY Growth Share of Searches
All Search 7,878,483 6.3% 100.0%
1 Google Search 4,650,982 19.0% 59.0%
2 Yahoo! Search 1,310,273 -12.4% 16.6%
3 MSN/Windows Live Search 1,108,976 12.5% 14.1%
4 AOL Search 335,436 -17.0% 4.3%
5 Ask.com Search 159,778 4.9% 2.0%
6 Comcast Search 37,577 23.3% 0.5%
7 My Web Search 35,630 -53.6% 0.5%
8 MapQuest Search 23,997 57.9% 0.3%
9 NexTag Search 21,744 10.4% 0.3%
10 AT&T Worldnet Search 21,222 106.5% 0.3%

Source: Nielsen Online, MegaView Search In June, Google Sites retained its lead in the U.S. core search market capturing 61.5 percent of the searches conducted, down slightly from 61.8 percent in May. Google was followed by Yahoo! Sites (20.9 percent, up from 20.6 percent in May), Microsoft Sites (9.2 percent, up from 8.5 percent in May), Ask Network (4.3 percent), and AOL LLC (4.1 percent).

comScore Core Search Report* June 2008 vs. May 2008 Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations Source: comScore qSearch 2.0
Core Search Entity Share of Searches (%)
May-08 June-08 Point Change June-08 vs. May-08
Total Core Search 100.0% 100.0% 0.0
Google Sites 61.8% 61.5% -0.3
Yahoo! Sites 20.6% 20.9% 0.3
Microsoft Sites 8.5% 9.2% 0.7
Ask Network 4.5% 4.3% -0.2
AOL LLC 4.5% 4.1% -0.4

Based on the five major search engines including partner searches and cross-channel searches. Searches for mapping, local directory, and user-generated video sites that are not on the core domain of the five search engines are not included in the core search numbers.Americans conducted 11.5 billion searches at the core search engines, representing a 7-percent increase versus May. Google Sites handled more than 7 billion core searches (up 6 percent from May), followed by Yahoo! Sites with 2.4 billion (up 9 percent), and Microsoft Sites with more than 1 billion (up 15 percent).

Source : comScore Core Search Report NEW YORK, NY – July 15, 2008 – Google accounted for 69.17 percent of all U.S. searches in the four weeks ending June 28, 2008, Hitwise announced today. Yahoo! Search, MSN Search and Ask.com each received 19.62, 5.46 and 4.17 percent respectively. The remaining 42 search engines in the Hitwise Search Engine Analysis Tool accounted for 1.70 percent of U.S. searches.

Percentage of U.S. Searches Among Leading Search Engine Engine Providers
Domain June-08 May-08 June-07
www.google.com 69.17% 68.29% 63.92%
search.yahoo.com 19.62% 19.95% 21.31%
search.msn.com 5.46%* 5.89%* 9.85%*
www.ask.com 4.17% 4.23% 3.42%

Note: Data is based on four week rolling periods (ending /28/08, 5/31/ 2008, 6/30/2007 from the Hitwise sample of 10 million U.S. Internet users.  * - includes executed searches on Live.com and MSN Search but does not include searches on Club.Live.com.

Source: Hitwise

google.com+yahoo.com+msn.com_uv_460 Top search providers -June 2008

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Google dominates worldwide search

Around the world, Internet users are conducting about 1.4 million searches every minute — most of them through Google Inc.
According to comScore’s qSearch 2.0 service, more than 37 billion searches worldwide went through Google in August. That’s about 60 percent of all searches, higher than Google’s 50 percent in the United States.

Yahoo Inc. was second worldwide with 8.5 billion, followed by Baidu at 3.3 billion, Microsoft Corp. at 2.2 billion and NHN at 2 billion.

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Microsoft Launches Assault on Google’s Search Appliances

In a clear move to undercut one of Google’s most noteworthy revenue sources outside of advertising, Microsoft today launched its “search server” strategy by releasing both a free and a commercial version of software that performs many of the same functions as a dedicated search appliance.

In classic Microsoft fashion, the company has released a free edition of the product as its way of crashing the gate.

“Our aim for Search Server Express is to give you a free and powerful enterprise search product that’s incredibly easy for you to deploy,” reads a message from Enterprise Search General Manager Jonathan Kauffmann to his team’s blog this morning. “After you download it, you’ll find it takes just a few minutes to get it up and running. It’s going to be the fastest way you can bring an enterprise search experience into your business.”

Also in classic fashion, the Express edition will be shipped as part of Office SharePoint Server 2007, giving Microsoft’s search strategy a foot in the door of many organizations automatically.

Microsoft Search Server 2008 generates network-wide indexes on a company’s existing server equipment, rather than on new server appliances such as Google’s or Thunderstone’s. These indexes can be used as an infrastructure for internal query pages, giving employees a tool for natural-language searches deep into the matrix of their internal documents.

But while Microsoft repeatedly used the phrase “out of the box” to describe many of the features of the free Express edition, some careful parsing of that phrase may point you to a different box than you might have expected. While a search tool or appliance is capable of accessing data within individual documents, typically out of the ordinary box, for it to access the information within databases and repositories, it needs a kind of software driver called a connector. Among Microsoft’s “sample connectors” are drivers that enable indexing of Exchange public folders and SharePoint sites.

Enterprises use content management systems like EMC Documented and business document services such as Lotus Notes and IBM File Net repositories. Getting access to those is what generally distinguishes an “enterprise class” product from one that merely indexes document files. And here is where Microsoft’s product starts evolving out of “Express” territory, and toward the commercial side.

“We believe Microsoft and its partners can offer you the one-stop search experience you’ve been looking for,” Kauffmann’s message continued, “and today, companies like EMC, Cognos, HP, Business Objects, SAS, and Open Text have already announced their intent to support federation with Search Server and Search Server Express. We expect many of them to release federated search connectors to coincide with the release of these products in the first half of 2008.”

Other distinguishing factors between the Express and commercial editions include that the commercial Search Server 2008 is not limited to a single server per seating, and can be adapted to a larger server cluster. Availability, load balancing, and failover policies are added to the administration tool of the commercial edition.

By comparison, Google’s search appliance does appear to maintain, shall we say, a “barrier to entry.” Its entry-level Mini search appliance currently sells for $1,995, though even then, it uses individual “enterprise connector” software add-ons to access repositories such as Documented. Google’s appliances are also sold on an indexing scale, on which its Mini tool is limited to 50,000 documents, while its $9,000 edition is set up to index 300,000 documents.

Neither the Express nor commercial editions of Search Server 2008 have set document limits, boldly sticking it to Google’s entire business model for hardware. If all goes according to Microsoft’s plan, IT departments could find themselves asking some familiar questions: Is Microsoft’s alternative qualitatively better than the industry leader? And if it isn’t…will it matter?

source Microsoft Launches Assault on Googles Search AppliancesNews source: BETANEWS

For more detail about Microsoft Search Server 2008
http://www.microsoft.com/enterprisesearch/serverproducts/searchserver/default.aspx

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