Archive for May, 2009

Will Bing Bring A Bigger Bang To Search?

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

bing-homepage-low-resfire-2

IN A FIGHT to compete with the global search engine market Microsoft announced their new replacement for Windows Live Search this week.

Launching locally next Wednesday, and previewed by nineMSN on Friday, partnered companies Microsoft and nineMSN (PBL media) unveiled their new search engine Bing.com.au.

The product, of which the companies say has been two years in the making, is consider a brand change by many and more of an upgrade to what Windows Live Search currently offers.

Launching in beta to begin with it will see the launch of a bunch of new features that won’t be available locally straight away.

Hot Spots, Categorised Search and Vertical Search Categories covering local travel, health and shopping are some of the features we won’t be seeing on Wednesday.

However, Instant answers, Best match, Hover preview, Rich image search and Video thumbnail preview are some of the new innovative features we will see on launch.

When asked how long it would take for nineMSN to get its localisation team into gear, they said they’d announce something in the next month, suggesting one had not been formed.

Once such a team is initiated on its task to make the search engine more localised, the team would then take “six to 12 to 18 months” to roll out the localised features.

The two localised features that stood out from the rest, Bing cash back and a flight information tool, are features Google will no doubt look at implementing.

Driving Traffic

The companies hope to use mainstream television programs on the nine network to drive traffic to their online portal, such as using end credits and “editorial cues” that will suggest to viewers to head on over to Bing with a certain search term.

According to nineMSN director of MSN products, Alex Parsons, the Australian search engine market is worth around $800 million, and is set to become “the new rivers of gold” online. Whether it be 1 percentage point at a time, the two companies hope to grab a piece of that $800 million dollar pie.

NineMSN said that Google currently owns 90 percent of the global market, but locally nineMSN has a strong hold of it, with about 70 percent of Australian active internet users touching the nineMSN portal at least once a month.

A missed opportunity?

Initial impressions of the search engine indicate nineMSN are after more page views than anything.

By adding features that will keep users within their portal such as Bing cash back, a price comparison tool, and a flight information tool that can predict and show previous pricing of flights to certain destinations, there are quite a good number of features that could lead for a switch from Google if they don’t adopt some of the features Bing has.

One advantage nineMSN has over any other search engine is the fact they’re the default home page for Windows Internet Explorer users ‘out of the box’.

Embracing new features like a background picture that changes daily is something I think a lot of tech-savvy users are not going to be interested in. The brilliance behind Google is its ability for it to be simple, fast and relevant to use. On the other hand you have users like my mother and grandmother who don’t care about Google and love the fact nineMSN has news inbuilt into its portal as well as search.

The name

Bing… to bing…do you bing? These are some of the questions the marketing team would’ve been asked to try out on the public. A name is important. If the product is good then it really should not matter… or should it? Can you imagine nine network presenters telling you to Bing a certain product or telling us to “head on over to bing” to search for the latest video of karl stefanovic drunk? I just can’t imagine it. Only time will tell.

Tech Wired writer Ben Grubb was flown to Sydney for the launch of Bing.com.au


Novell sees 25 per cent growth in Linux sales

Saturday, May 30th, 2009
Novell has reported a year-on-year fall in second-quarter revenue, but a small rise in profit as a result of a 25 per cent growth in Linux product sales.

U.S. cyber-spy report leaves czar role open - sources

Saturday, May 30th, 2009
The White House report on cyber-spying to be released on Friday is business-friendly and privacy-conscious but leaves the tech community waiting anxiously for a hint of how powerful a new "cyberczar" may be, a cybersecurity expert who has read the draft said.

SATA spec promises faster data transfers and slimmer laptops

Saturday, May 30th, 2009
The Serial ATA (SATA) Revision 3.0 specification has been released by the Serial ATA International Organization (Sata-IO) and promises double the data speed across the board to 6Gbit/s.

Silverlight 3 set for winter launch

Saturday, May 30th, 2009
Microsoft will release version 3 of its Silverlight graphics platform in early July, according to reports.

Google considers dropping beta tag

Saturday, May 30th, 2009
Google has revealed that it is considering taking some of its products out of beta, after years of keeping flagship applications such as Gmail in test status.

ACCC approves Vodafone-3 merger

Friday, May 29th, 2009
Competition regulators have approved the merger of the Australian arms of mobile carriers Vodafone Australia and Hutchison 3.

BREAKING NEWS: ACCC approves Vodafone-3 merger

Friday, May 29th, 2009
Competition regulators have approved the merger of the Australian arms of mobile carriers Vodafone Australia and Hutchison 3.

ACCC approves Voda/Hutch merger

Friday, May 29th, 2009

update The Australian Consumer and Competition Commission (ACCC) today decided not to oppose the Vodafone/Hutchison merger — a move welcomed by the two companies.

The competition watchdog concluded that the merger of the two telcos' mobile networks was unlikely to "substantially lessen competition in the relevant markets", in part because the two would not have maintained the same level of competition they do today over the longer term.

"Accordingly, the ACCC concluded that the proposed merger would not result in a substantial lessening of competition in the retail mobile telecommunications market," the watchdog said in a statement late this afternoon. It also said it was required to "balance its concerns against the likely competitive position if the proposed merger were not to proceed."

The decision clears the way for the two to complete the merger transaction which, according to a joint announcement by Vodafone and Hutchison, is expected within the next two weeks. The new entity will be a 50/50 joint-venture known as Vodafone Hutchison Australia (VHA).

"The ACCC's decision confirms our view that this merger will be good news for Australian customers. VHA will be a stronger mobile company, more competitive and more capable of providing an even better deal for customers," Nick Read, the proposed chairman and incumbent CEO of Vodafone Asia-Pacific & Middle East Region said.

Proposed CEO of VHA and CEO of Hutchison Telecoms Nigel Dews said: "Our first priority is to retain the best elements of both independent brands. The next step is to apply the combined scale and resources of VHA to deliver real benefits to all customers."

"Ongoing investments are needed to meet the increased customer demand for bandwidth-hungry data services, including mobile broadband. In this respect, the ACCC considers that mobile voice and data services will continue to converge in the future," ACCC chairman Graeme Samuel said in a statement.

"The pricing commitment issued on 25 May 2009 by the merger parties has not had any bearing on the ACCC's decision," said Samuels. "Behavioural measures, such as this, are generally viewed by the ACCC as an unattractive merger remedy. Such measures are not likely to be considered acceptable by the ACCC to assuage competition concerns."

VHA said it would continue to use both the Vodafone and 3 brands with all network arrangements, caps, plans and handsets, and would stay the same into the "foreseeable future".

Comments (0) | Email this
Share: Google | | del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Slashdot | StumbleUpon

Advertisement


Related Articles

Opinion: Google’s wave drowns the bling in Microsoft’s Bing

Friday, May 29th, 2009
The browser battle renewed today as Google launched its game-changing successor to e-mail, Wave, while across town NineMSN demonstrated its new search engine, Bing.