Internet Marketing Course -
Desktop Search
Google's release of its new Desktop Search service made an already
hot topic in the search community even hotter!
What is Desktop Search? Ever try finding that KEY Word document,
Excel spreadsheet, or PowerPoint presentation on YOUR own hard
drive, and come up empty?! Who hasn't?!
How about trying to search for a specific email by using a single
name or phrase? Impossible? Not any more!
Google Desktop Search allows you to search your PC hard drive
as easily, efficiently and as quickly as you currently search
the Web. If you've read about Search
Engine Optimization in this Internet Marketing Course, you
know that what these search engines really "search"
is a database index compiled by having their search engine "spiders"
crawl millions/billions of Web pages on a regular basis. And that's
the same concept that's used in Desktop Search - a spider crawls
specific types of content on YOUR PC's hard drive, creates a "database"
of that content, indexes that database, and then returns links
to content based on the searches you perform.
Just for the fun of it, Google's release of Desktop Search also
marks the REAL beginning of the long anticipated search war between
Google, the king of Web search, and Microsoft, the king of everything
else!
For over a year, Microsoft has been dropping broad hints about
the "integrated" (Web and desktop) search environment
its new operating system, code named "Longhorn", would
offer users. Then, less than a year ago, it became evident that
Microsoft would a) not be able to deliver this all-encompassing
operating system with all of its features, including desktop search,
on time, and b) made it clear that it was going to offer its own
crawler-based search technology via its MSN Web portal in direct
competition with Google in order to grab a significant share of
the sponsored search ad revenue that's shown explosive growth
over the last 18 months.
Google has trumped Microsoft with its release of Google Desktop
Search (Beta Edition). Google has taken its incredibly relevant
search results magic, applied it to YOUR hard drive, and fully
integrated it with its already wildly popular Web search service.
And it's all Free! And it beat Microsoft at its own game!
Google
Desktop Search
Here's what Google tells potential users about its desktop search
service:
"Google Desktop Search is how our brains would work if we
had photographic memories. It's a desktop search application that
provides full text search over your email, computer files, chats,
and the web pages you've viewed. By making your computer searchable,
Google Desktop Search puts your information easily within your
reach and frees you from having to manually organize your files,
emails, and bookmarks.
After downloading Google Desktop Search, you can search your
personal items as easily as you search the Internet using Google.
Unlike traditional computer search software that updates once
a day, Google Desktop Search updates continually for most file
types, so that when you receive a new email in Outlook, for example,
you can search for it within seconds. The index of searchable
information created by Desktop Search is stored on your own computer.
In addition to basic search, Google Desktop Search introduces
new ways to access relevant and timely information. When you view
a web page in Internet Explorer, Google Desktop Search "caches"
or stores its content so that you can later look at that same
version of the page, even if its live content has changed or you're
offline. Google Desktop Search organizes email search results
into conversations, so that all email messages in the same thread
are grouped into a single search result."
Click on this link to review the Google Desktop Search FAQ:
Google
Desktop Search Features
I downloaded Google Desktop Search, installed it in seconds,
and used it for most of the day. It really is a cool tool to have
on your PC!
The feature I like best is the way it integrates seamlessly with
the standard Google Web search page. I spend a lot of my work
day on the Web, and I use Google as my primary Web search tool.
Now I have a quick and easy way to ALSO search what's on my hard
drive for the same search phrase I'm researching on the Web. It
lets me search ALL aspects of my electronic knowledge base simultaneously
for that particular thought or concept.
Other major and second tier search engines are supposedly working
feverishly to offer their users the same capability, so Desktop
Search is only going to get bigger.
===========
What do YOU have to do as a Web marketer to take advantage of
this new Desktop Search concept?
For now, I recommend that you download the application and give
it a try. Get used to it, experience its potential for simplifying
and integrating ALL of your electronic information.
What's probably coming on the FREE Google Desktop Search results
pages are what you already see on the FREE Google Web Search results
pages - sponsored search results - aka ads! Privacy advocates
are already warning about what it would take to serve relevant
ads based on hard drive searches performed with an application
like Google Desktop Search, but where there's a will there's a
way!
Actually, if most Google Desktop Search end-users implement the
service the way I did (searching the Web and my PC simultaneously
for the same search phrase), they will be served relevant sponsored
ads on the initial Web/PC search results page just the way they
are now when they do a Google Web-only search. These ads come
from the Google AdWords program.
And here's a potential sponsored search results scenario that
could work even if the the PC owner chose to do Web and PC hard
drive searches separately – pay the computer Owner a portion of
the ad revenue to allow relevant sponsored search results to be
displayed on the search results pages for his/her computer. How
would that work? There’s already a successful model for this type
of sponsored search results advertising – contextual advertising
- Google’s version is called AdSense. A good example of AdSense
can be seen on this Web site - the ads being served in the RIGHT
Column of this Web page, and almost every Web page on this Web
site, are provided by Google. Once I applied to and was accepted
into the Google AdSense program, Google crawled and indexed this
Web site. The ads displayed on a specific Internet Marketing Course
Web page are determined by Google’s relevancy ranking of that
page for specific search phrase. The ads come from Google’s Adwords
program. (To
learn more about the Google AdSense Program, click on this link.)
I’m not saying this last scenario is without potential pitfalls
for BOTH the provider of Desktop Search and the PC owner, but
the KEY event that is occurring in this scenario - the owner of
content is being paid to position advertising with that content
when it’s displayed – is the KEY event that occurs in ALL forms
of advertising. So why not bring relevant ads to the individual
level, and base the display of that ad on content relevant to
that specific individual?
Stay tuned! In the meantime, you'll have a much easier time finding
your email, computer files, chats, and the Web pages you've viewed.
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