Member Sign In
Not a member?

A Wired.com user account lets you create, edit and comment on Webmonkey articles. You will also be able to contribute to the Wired How-To Wiki and comment on news stories at Wired.com.


It's fast and free.

Sign in with OpenID
Sign In
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...
Join Webmonkey

Please send me occasional e-mail updates about new features and special offers from Wired/Webmonkey.
Yes No

Please send occasional e-mail offers from Wired/Webmonkey affiliated web sites and publications, and carefully selected companies.
Yes No

I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site constitutes agreement to Webmonkey's User Agreement and Privacy Policy.
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...

Retrieve Sign In

Please enter your e-mail address or username below. Your username and password will be sent to the e-mail address you provided us.

or
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.
processing...

Welcome to Webmonkey

A private profile page has been created for you.
As a member of Webmonkey, you can now:
  • edit articles
  • add to the code library
  • design and write a tutorial
  • comment on any Webmonkey article
Close
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.

Sign In Information Sent

An e-mail has been sent to the e-mail address registered in this account.
If you cannot find it in your in-box, please check your bulk or junk folders.
Sign In
Webmonkey is a property of Wired Digital.

Yahoo Open Search Gives Users Richer Results

yahooopensearch.jpg

Yahoo is on a roll this morning. Following on the heels of the Yahoo Buzz announcement, the company has also announced a new Search platform/API that will allow sites to inject more useful information into Yahoo Search results.

Before anyone cries foul, it’s important to realize that this doesn’t introduce any way of changing the ranking of a site within the search results.

Rather the very poorly named “Open Search” platform is a way for sites to create better search result information. Instead of just a headline, url and two line summary, a site can include deeper links to things like related topics, reviews, photos and more.

The example given on the Yahoo search blog is Yelp, the restaurant review site. As you can see in the screenshot above, the original listing is just the basic links while the Open Search platform allows Yelp to offer info from deeper within its site, like an image, the restaurant’s phone number, price range, address and Yelp user rating. [I’m pretty sure Open Search won’t anti-alias your results like in the image above and I’m not sure why Yahoo feels such an obvious PR trick is a good idea.]

Google has been experimenting with the same sort of enriched results, but thus far hasn’t provided a way for site publishers to control the additional information. Ask.com also offers something similar.

What isn’t clear so far is how exactly the platform works. Yahoo plans to provide more details at the SMX West conference later today. For the time being, here’s how the Yahoo search blog describes the new platform:

 

website owners like Yelp, WebMD, <cite>The New York Times</cite> and anyone else can supply us with their data and our patented Machined Learned Ranking helps ensure these results are presented to users at the right time.

On the surface Open Search looks like a great tool for sites like Yelp, the <cite>Times</cite>, Eventful and more to get more (and better) links into Yahoo Search results and at the same time gives Yahoo users a more compelling search engine.

But the Open Search announcement also highlights what might Yahoo’s ultimate undoing - completely inept PR. Normally I would ignore the bad PR since it happens all the time, but it seems more relevant for Yahoo with a potential Microsoft merger looming on the horizon.

For instance, as Mark Hopkins points out on Mashable, the press release for both of today’s announcements features an overabundance of the latest stupid buzzword - “open.” I counted 23 uses in twelve paragraphs.

Both of these announcements are for services with some pretty cool new features, but neither one of them has anything to do with anyone or anything being “open,” and by trying to cling to latest meaningless buzzword Yahoo manages to totally obscure the functionality of the tools they’ve created.

And that in turn is part of the reason why it always looks like Yahoo is struggling - the company has some great products and services, but nobody knows about them because Yahoo is always chasing the latest buzzword rather than clearly explaining what it’s offering, which is a shame.

See Also:

Post Comment Comments Permalink Print
Reddit Digg

 
Subscribe now

Special Offer For Webmonkey Users

WIRED magazine:
The first word on how technology is changing our world.

Subscribe for just $10 a year