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What Happens When the Whole World becomes Searchable?
September 21, 2006 |
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There are a few items that crossed the threshold of my inbox recently
that led me to speculate about search in the grand scheme of things.
First of all, fellow Search Insider David Berkowitz talked about online
data storage, and how it could introduce reams of new content into
online depositories, there to be connected to by consumers through
search.
Secondly, Apple and Google are in talks about iTV, Apple’s new set top
box that allows you to view downloaded video on your TV, at the same
time making it searchable.
Welcome to e-World
The fact is, the whole world is becoming digitized and indexable. It’s
not a new trend, it’s been making inroads for the last two and a half
decades, but there seems to be a tipping point of convergence that’s
rapidly approaching. National and international news is almost fully
digitized, and local news is following in the same foot steps. There are
now digital editions of most periodicals. And Google is doing its level
best to digitize every book ever written. So the print world is well on
the way.
The Genetics of Music
For electronic media, music is largely in the digital domain, and the
searchability of it is rapidly improving. The biggest bottleneck is in
trying to categorize and rationalize what is largely a subjective
experience. I either like music or I don’t. How do you make that
searchable? Well, interestingly, Pandora’s Music Genome Project is
trying to do just that. Since 2000, they have analyzed hundreds of
thousands of songs based on over 400 attributes or “genes” (hence the
Genome moniker) which include melody, harmony, rhythm, instrumentation,
singing styles, lyrics and arrangements, to name just a few. It’s a
large scale attempt to make music searchable by something other than
genre, artist or title, which is far to limiting for most of us. The
Pandora interface, in it’s attempt to be intuitive, doesn’t allow for
power searching, but it’s still a quantum leap forward in allowing us to
help define our likes and dislikes in the musical universe.
What You See is What You Search
If you take this same approach to video entertainment, there is a much
more complex, and therefore richer, content depository to mine. Think of
the universe of movies, TV shows, documentaries that exists, each loaded
with dialogue, topicality, visuals and styles. As complex as music can
be, video explodes the content to be categorized and analyzed in a dozen
different directions. It provides a huge indexing challenge, but therein
lies the promise and profitability. And it appears to be a challenge
that Google is ready to take on. Of course, we haven’t even touched on
aspects like consumer generated video content (the YouTubes of the
world, which seems to be the latest over laden band wagon) and social
tagging.
We’ve Only Just Begun…
But that’s the globally visible world, the tip of an immensely large
iceberg. There is very little in our physical world now that isn’t
digitized somewhere. There is a virtual mirror for almost every physical
presence. Store inventories exist in the digital domain, and have for
some time. Aggregating those inventories and making them searchable
turns the entire world into your personal shopping mall. We leave GPS
trails as we move from point A to B. Our vehicles churn out detailed
performance summaries via the onboard computer as we do so. Mobile
computing makes the very stuff of our personal lives; our thoughts, our
activities, our appointments, our contacts, all digital and all
indexable. At work and at school, we all produce content on a daily
basis. My daughters are content producers each time they do homework,
and increasingly, that work is in bits and bytes.
As the barriers disappear between our hard drive and the Net (the
subject of David’s column) all this content theoretically can enter the
public domain and be searchable. Increasingly, the question we ask
ourselves is “where do I draw the line between my private and my online
world?” File sharing becomes a substantially bigger deal.
Brain Melting Questions
Fellow blogger Mitch Joel calls these questions “Brain Melters”. I like
that. It captures the mind numbing aspects of this stuff. Our electronic
footprint is now bigger, and in some ways, more real than our physical
one. There is this vast binary universe out there, terabyte after
terabyte of data that grows each and every second, capturing the essence
of who we are and what we do. And the sole door to that world, the
channel we all must pass through to gain entry, is search. In the act of
searching, we connect to that universe.
Cast the search question in that light. Realize that we have yet to
scratch the vast potential of this fundamental glue that holds the
internet together and bonds us to it. Imagine owning the solitary access
point to everything!
Google, Yahoo and Microsoft are jockeying for position to do just that.
It should excite the hell out of their respective shareholders, but it
should scare the hell out of us. Do we really want this much power in
the hands of so few?
These are big questions, and I’d love to get your viewpoint. Leave your
thoughts on the Search Insider blog, or drop me an email at gord@enquiro.com. |
Gord Hotchkiss
President and CEO
Enquiro Full Service Search Engine Marketing
Search Engine Positioning by Searchengineposition
Blog: www.outofmygord.com
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