Google
will begin displaying Google profile results at the bottom of U.S.
name-query search pages, with the results linking to the user's full Google
profile. Someone searching for a name using the popular search engine can now
read through profile information posted by people with that name.
Typing "Me" into the main Google search page will result in an
option, at the top of the search results page, to "Create your own profile
on Google." Users can then choose to display personal information such as
the schools they've attended and links to their blogs.
"These results offer abbreviated information from user-created Google
profiles and a link to the full profiles," Brian Stoler, a Google software
engineer, wrote in an April 21 post on the Google corporate blog. "We've
also added links so it's easy to search for the same name on MySpace, Facebook,
Classmates and LinkedIn."
Is this a big deal?
"I see this as a Very Big Deal," John
Battelle, author of "The Search," which traces the evolution of
Google, wrote in an April 21 blog post. "Why? Well, Google has always been
predicated on being a neutral black box. You, as a solitary entity, could not
influence the results that Google provided (though of course a very large
industry has emerged that attempts to do just that). But this launch changes
the game, in a few very, very interesting ways."
The first change, Battelle continued, is that Google is now making use of
its search presence to convince more people to sign up for Google profiles,
which in turn leads to a potentially deeper bond between search engine provider
and search engine user, akin in certain ways to the relationship that users
have with Facebook and Twitter.
"Second," Battelle said, "this move creates, for the first
time ever, a new signal that is directly controlled by an individual but changes
what [everyone else] will see in results. … Third, this is Google putting a
human, community-driven face on itself. It's Google saying, 'Hey, search user!
We want to listen and respond to you!'"
The rollout of this new Google feature comes a day after Google introduced
two new Google Labs features, Similar
Images and the Google News Timeline.
Similar Images attaches a "Similar Images" link beneath images
searched via this Google Labs site, which
provides images related to the original search query. For example, typing
"Jaguar" into the initial search page will yield images of both big
cats and fast cars; clicking "Similar Images" beneath the photographs
of the vehicles will allow the user to drill down, revealing page after page of
related car images.
Google News Timeline organizes information from Google News, including new
and archived news, blog posts, and movies, into a "zoomable"
graphical timeline, ordering everything chronologically.