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Tag: Google Now

  • Google Announces Updates to Now on Tap

    This year at Google I/O, Google introduced Now On Tap as part of Marshmallow, the latest Android release. It let users utilize Google Now from third-party apps rather than just Google itself.

    On Tuesday, Google announced some updates to the feature, which it says will be useful to people throughout the holiday season as well as the rest of the year. In a post on the company’s Inside Search blog, product manager Aneto Okonkwo writes:

    On airport pick-up duty? If your cousin sends you a text with his flight number, simply tap and hold your phone’s home button to get info on flight status without a separate search. Your text message is still right there, so you can respond easily after a quick peek.

    If you need make sure all the last-minute gifts you ordered online will make it under the tree on time, tapping and holding on your confirmation email will display tracking info and the status of your package.

    With news articles on Google, you you can now tap and hold to get links to related articles. You’ll see an icon when you can use Now on Tap to share what’s on your screen without having to leave what you’re doing.

    The new features are rolling out over the coming days. Additionally, Google is expanding Now on Tap to more languages including: French, German, Spanish, Italian, Russian and Korean. More languages are coming soon.

    Read this for thoughts about how businesses may benefit from Now on Tap.

    Images via Google

  • New Google Feature Opens Opportunities For Businesses

    New Google Feature Opens Opportunities For Businesses

    Google announced that Google Now on Tap is now rolling out on Nexus phones, and will hit other devices using the latest version of Android (Marshmallow) over time.

    Do you expect to be able to take advantage of this feature with your business’ app? Discuss.

    Google first unveiled Now on Tap at Google I/O earlier this year as a feature of Marshmallow. It’s basically a way for users to utilize Google Now on their own terms rather than in the confines of Google itself. That means the device will be more useful throughout more apps as they allow Now on Tap to provide users with a quick way to get information related to what they’re looking at.

    As director of product management Aparna Chennapragada explained, “With ‘Now on tap,’ you can simply tap and hold the home button for assistance without having to leave what you’re doing—whether you’re in an app or on a website. For example, if a friend emails you about seeing the new movie Tomorrowland, you can invoke Google Now without leaving your app, to quickly see the ratings, watch a trailer, or even buy tickets—then get right back to what you were doing.”

    “If you’re chatting with a friend about where to get dinner, Google can bring you quick info about the place your friend recommends,” Chennapragada added. “You’ll also see other apps on your phone, like OpenTable or Yelp, so you can easily make a reservation, read reviews or check out the menu.”

    Google Now on Tap presents businesses with new opportunities to reach consumers through Google Now. It utilizes app indexing, which Google now considers a search ranking signal as well, so you’ll have even more reason to take advantage of that.

    When the user taps and holds the home button, Google presents options for its best guess of what might be helpful in the moment. If it doesn’t provide the right thing(s), the user can say, “Ok Google” from any screen or app. If it works as advertised it’s pretty smart. If you’re listening to a band on Spotify, Google says you can simply ask “who’s the lead singer?” and it will get you the answer.

    As Google notes, it shows apps from your phone that may help with what you’re doing based on context. It might tap IMDb for movie review, OpenTable for reservations, etc.

    Google Non on Tap should get businesses thinking more about optimizing for app search.

    An interesting point was made in a recent ClickZ article, which quoted Danielle Levitas, senior vice president of research and analysis for App Annie:

    “Part of the reason Google is providing deep linking is to give developers another way to be discovered outside of the app store. SEO is still critical, but you’ve also got to think about ASO [App Search Optimization], which has to do with keywords for discoverability, how an app is described, and even its reviews. But Now on Tap actually makes mobile and the app experiences easier for brands to execute because they can think about discoverability as a continuum as opposed to these two very disparate platforms.”

    Google says Now on Tap another way to get apps in front of users at the right moment. If you have an app with content that people need to see, well, that applies to you. Luckily, beyond app indexing, there’s nothing else you really have to do to be integrated with Now on Tap. Just have your app indexed by Google.

    As we talked about in another article on this topic, while optimizing for Google via app indexing is one thing, businesses will also need to market their actual apps in other ways to drive app installs. The more people who have your app installed, the more chances they’ll have to actually see the content within via Now on Tap. As the Clickz article points out, a lot of downloaded apps are rarely opened, and Now on Tap could be just what those apps need to get more engagement from the users who downloaded them in the first place.

    In other words, if you’ve found app creation to be a waste of time in the past because you didn’t think people would really use your app, this means that people may actually use it more, provided that you can convince them of its usefulness enough in the first place to get then to download it.

    You might want to check out this Google Developers page on optimizing content for the assistant as well.

    “It’s early days but we’re excited about taking another step towards making your smartphone even smarter, by assisting you: getting you straight to the answer you need or the next step of what you’re doing,” says Chennapragada.

    Once your Android device is updated to the latest version, you’ll be able to tap and hold down the home button to use Now on Tap. It’s now available in English, but will be expanded into additional languages over time.

    Is Google Now on Tap something that you can directly take advantage of? Let us know in the comments.

    Images via Google

  • New Google Feature Means Businesses Need Apps For Search Marketing

    New Google Feature Means Businesses Need Apps For Search Marketing

    The world of search engine marketing is ever-changing, and it’s no secret that mobile continues to take over the desktop. Google has a new feature, even beyond a related ranking signal for organic search on mobile devices, that gives businesses more incentive to have mobile apps for search marketing purposes. It essentially expands as search marketing-related benefit device-wide, as opposed to limiting it to the actual search results page.

    At Google I/O, Google announced the launch of something called Google Now On Tap. It’s a new feature in the latest version of Android, which the company unveiled in developer preview. You’d be forgiven if you missed that particular announcement as the company made many of them.

    Google Now on Tap is essentially a way for you to utilize Google Now on your own terms rather than in the confines of Google itself. While Google Now already served as a virtual assistant, this makes it even more so.

    Do you see Google Now on Tap as a new opportunity to increase visibility of your content? Share your thoughts about it in the comments.

    “Since we launched Google Now, we’ve been expanding the ways it can help and do more of the work for you,” says director of product management Aparna Chennapragada. “You can get notifications like where you parked your car, news stories based on your interests, or help with travel like your upcoming reservations. We’ve also gotten better at giving smarter answers to some of your questions (‘Is my flight on time?’) and at helping you get things done across your apps (‘Ok Google, play Sugar on Spotify’).”`

    “We’re working to make Google Now a little smarter in the upcoming Android M release, so you can ask it to assist you with whatever you’re doing—right in the moment, anywhere on your phone,” Chennapragada explains. “With ‘Now on tap,’ you can simply tap and hold the home button for assistance without having to leave what you’re doing—whether you’re in an app or on a website. For example, if a friend emails you about seeing the new movie Tomorrowland, you can invoke Google Now without leaving your app, to quickly see the ratings, watch a trailer, or even buy tickets—then get right back to what you were doing.”

    “If you’re chatting with a friend about where to get dinner, Google can bring you quick info about the place your friend recommends,” Chennapragada adds. “You’ll also see other apps on your phone, like OpenTable or Yelp, so you can easily make a reservation, read reviews or check out the menu.”

    When the user taps and holds the home button, Google presents options for its best guess of what might be helpful in the moment. If it doesn’t provide the right thing(s), the user can say, “Ok Google” from any screen or app. If it works as advertised it’s pretty smart. If you’re listening to a band on Spotify, Google says you can simply ask “who’s the lead singer?” and it will get you the answer.

    As Google notes, it shows apps from your phone that may help with what you’re doing based on context. It might tap IMDb for movie review, OpenTable for reservations, etc.

    There’s an SEO element to all of this. App indexing. Google recently made App Indexing a ranking signal for mobile search results on Android devices, and announced that it’s starting to index iOS apps as well. Google Now on Tap is another reason to utilize app indexing.

    Clickz says Google Now on Tap “makes app search optimization more critical than ever.” Emily Alford reports:

    While the announcement comes as a boon to app developers, it also means that it’s now more important than ever for brands to think about App Search Optimization> (ASO) along with SEO, since Google is taking both into consideration for Now on Tap, according to Danielle Levitas, senior vice president of research and analysis for App Annie, which provides app ranking data and mobile analytics for businesses.

    “Part of the reason Google is providing deep linking is to give developers another way to be discovered outside of the app store,” says Levitas. “SEO is still critical, but you’ve also got to think about ASO, which has to do with keywords for discoverability, how an app is described, and even its reviews. But Now on Tap actually makes mobile and the app experiences easier for brands to execute because they can think about discoverability as a continuum as opposed to these two very disparate platforms.”

    Google says Now on Tap another way to get apps in front of users at the right moment. If you have an app with content that people need to see, well, that applies to you. Luckily, beyond app indexing, there’s nothing else you really have to do to be integrated with Now on Tap. Just have your app indexed by Google.

    While optimizing for Google via app indexing is one thing, businesses will also need to market their actual apps in other ways to drive app installs. The more people who have your app installed, the more chances they’ll have to actually see the content within via Now on Tap. As the Clickz article points out, a lot of downloaded apps are rarely opened, and Now on Tap could be just what those apps need to get more engagement from the users who downloaded them in the first place.

    In other words, if you’ve found app creation to be a waste of time in the past because you didn’t think people would really use your app, this means that people may actually use it more, provided that you can convince them of its usefulness enough in the first place to get then to download it.

    Google does say it will have more details about everything once the release of Android M gets closer. In the meantime, I really can’t urge you enough to get your mobile apps indexed, and if you don’t have a mobile app, now is a better time than ever before to build one or have one built. It’s becoming a matter of visibility in Google, and that’s not even taking the Google Play Store into account, which is now doing paid search results like Google Search.

    It’s actually possible that your business may be able to take advantage of Now on Tap in the future without having an app, as the company is reportedly considering including website content in the feature at some point, but that hasn’t been announced.

    Does your business have a mobile app? Do you expect Google Now on Tap to make a significant difference? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Images via Google

  • This Isn’t Really How Yahoo Expects To Compete In Search Is It?

    Yahoo held a conference call on Tuesday to discuss its Q1 earnings. Over the course of the call, CEO Marissa Mayer said a lot about search in her prepared remarks before talking about the subject even more in the Q&A session.

    It turns out that she was apparently alluding to an actual product the company is building, which would aim to compete with things like Siri, Google Now, and Microsoft’s Cortana. If Yahoo wants to compete in mobile search, which it obviously does, it would certainly make sense for the company to have its own take on this type of search/virtual assistant product.

    Some words from Mayer (via SeekingAlpha’s transcript of the call):

    I really think that there are two types of products that are emerging. The classic web search, call it deep reference web search which is classic Google search, Bing search, and there’s a new class of products that’s really arising with Cortana, Siri, Google Now. And those products are really heavily differentiated both from each other as well as from the historic legacy products and so that’s really where we see an opportunity to play, in something that’s mobile and as it moves to, for example, the watch and on to television screens and video, we think that there’s a really interesting place to play there to help people make better sense of the content they already have access to, content in their mail, using more context to actually provide higher quality results.

    I’ve given examples, things like, for example, searching for JFK producing essentially my boarding pass and the gate number on a search results page en route to the airport, rather than just producing the John F. Kennedy Wikipedia page. I’ve used an example like that on previous calls, so that’s really where we see a big opportunity. And the profile for searching people’s personal information, pulling in context, searching entities and making search more action oriented is a very different problem than crawling a trillion or more URLs and perfectly ordering millions of results.

    We think that’s something that’s potentially more relevant to users of technology as we move forward. And that’s really where we’re excited to invest and that’s why we’ve worked on things like Aviate, like Search My World and we’ve been making investments there and we’d like to do more with that and that’s what I’m referring to, the classic web search has a different cost profile than that future oriented mobile search that’s more personal.

    When Mayer says they’d like to “do more with that,” she seems to be referring to a product Yahoo is building that it expects to have at least preliminarily built in Q2. That is according to a new report from Business Insider’s Nicholas Carlson, who recently had a book about Mayer published. He writes:

    According to this source, the product’s code-named is Index. It’s going to be a smartphone app. Mayer has set a company-wide goal to have a pilot version of Index built sometime during the second quarter. Advertising engineers are already involved in the project, so it’s likely the product will be ad-supported. The product’s development is being led by executives named Jeff Bonforte and Peter Monaco.

    According to the report, Yahoo is betting on being able to compete with Google because of the length of time people have been using Yahoo, and Yahoo Mail in particular. The thinking is that Gmail has only been around for ten years, and that Yahoo Mail has been around for much longer, and that that older information is of great value. At least that’s what I’m taking away from Carlson’s report.

    With all due respect, Mayer knows a whole lot more about search, email, and Yahoo users than I ever will, but this concept seems pretty misguided to me. Is there really that much value to users in being able to more easily recall content from 15 years ago?

    From Carlson’s report:

    “Gmail users have only had their accounts for 10 years,” says our source. “Yahoo has many 20 year old accounts. Back then people used to email themselves a lot — store things. To surface that kind of data usefully is exciting.”

    Our source imagined a user who has been talking about a particular baseball team with his friends for the past decade or so. By scanning that user’s inbox, Yahoo will know to keep that user abreast of everything going on with that baseball team.

    Wow, I hope they’ve got something better up their sleeve than that. Certainly Yahoo must get into this kind of search if it hopes to compete, but I’m afraid that I don’t see people’s fifteen to twenty-year-old Yahoo Mail messages being a game changer.

    Of course this is just one random source’s presumably random example of what they’re trying to do, but if you’re going to spill the beans to the media, you should probably come up with something better than that, unless that really is the height of what we’re talking about here.

    “We do deeply believe in the search,” Mayer said on the call. “It’s deep in Yahoo!’s DNA from the very start of the company. That said, we are particularly interested in search in the mobile sector, what happens when you involve context. What happens when you involve personal information, from things like e-mail, and so that’s really where we’ve been putting a lot of our innovation on the user search experience side.”

    Well, at least they’ve got Firefox. According to Mayer that partnership is profitable so far, and they’re even higher on that deal now than they were when they made it. In other words, it’s working out better than they even expected.

    Mayer has expressed great interest in getting a similar deal with Apple to make Yahoo the default search experience in that browser, but somehow the name Safari didn’t come up a single time on the conference call this time around.

    Now that would help Yahoo compete much more significantly with Google (and especially its partner Microsoft) in the search space. It wouldn’t only put Yahoo in a very popular space, but it would knock Google out of one, assuming that the vast majority didn’t immediately switch back over to Google.

    New research is out from StatConter saying that Safari accounted for over half (55%) of U.S. mobile and tablet Internet usage in March.

    “This emphasises the potential prize in the rapidly growing mobile space for Yahoo, Bing or others if Apple decides to end its default search deal with Google,” said CEO Aodhan Cullen.

    “While Safari is the major player in the US for mobile and tablet, it is ranked number four on the desktop with just 10.5% of internet usage share. From a desktop perspective, this makes it less significant than the recent Yahoo deal with Firefox,” Cullen added.

    StatCounter also analyzed search engine preferences of Safari users. Unsurprisingly, Google dominates at 83% in the U.S. and 87.9% worldwide. Yahoo is at 4.7% for the U.S. and 2.5% worldwide.

    Even still, a Safari deal with Apple, who has already been doing a great deal to distance itself from Google, could give Yahoo a significant boost. Never underestimate the power of users who simply don’t care enough to make the switch. As long as Yahoo could provide a service that doesn’t turn them off, it would likely gain some significant ground.

    But again, Safari didn’t even come up in the conversation on the conference call, and some have been pretty skeptical of the company’s ability to even compete for the deal with Google likely wanting to renew and Microsoft also reportedly showing interest. And with the newly reworked deal between Microsoft and Yahoo announced late last week, it seems like those companies might be getting along much better now. Maybe Yahoo is backing off a little on that. Or maybe participating analysts just didn’t ask the right questions.

    Images via Wikimedia Commons, StatCounter

  • Google Now Just Got A Lot More Useful

    Google Now Just Got A Lot More Useful

    Google Now may be getting a whole lot more useful as Google just announced that it’s integrating with third-party apps on Android. The company has already partnered with over 30 developers to bring new cards into the fold, giving users helpful updates from the apps they use.

    “Starting today, the Google app on Android can help you keep up with all the good stuff in 40 different apps at a glance—it’ll bring you Now cards to help you out with your day-to-day life, giving you information that’s helpful to you, right when you need it,” says Director of Product Management Aparna Chennapragada.

    “In the morning, catch up on news of the day with cards from The Guardian,” she adds. “On your commute, Pandora can give you recommendations for music to play, based on what you like, or you can be reminded to complete your daily French lesson on Duolingo. During your downtime, you can take care of the groceries, with a card from Instacart reminding you to stock up on the things you often order. If you’re planning a trip and looked up places to stay on your Airbnb app but couldn’t make up your mind, you’ll see Now cards from Airbnb for the location and dates you’ve researched. And when you land at an airport, you’ll see a card to order a Lyft.”

    Compatible apps include: Airbnb, Instacart, Pandora, Shazam, Lyft, TripAdvisor, Kayak, eBay, Walgreens, Ford, Waze, Strava, Duolingo, Intuit, The Economist, The Guardian, Belly, Bitcoin Wallet, Redfin, Zillow, Family Locator, Hootsuite, Wattpad, Runtastic Running & Fitness, Runtastic Me: Daily Tracker, Delivery Hero, Hailo, MyTaxi, Busuu, ESPN Cricinfo, Housing, Meru, Shaadi, The Economic Times, Cookpad, SmartNews, Suumo, BookMyShow, and Lincoln.

    These are all, of course, in addition to all the services using Gmail mark-up for Now cards.

    Google lists all of the cards associated with its new partner apps here, and lets you see specifically what each one allows you to do.

    Image via Google

  • Google Now To Start Reminding You About Your Bills

    Google is reportedly adding bill pay reminders to Google Now, which will notify users about upcoming bills that are due, and how much they cost. Google reportedly gains this information from users’ Gmail accounts.

    Cult of Android reports:

    No configuration is necessary in order to register for this service. Google has the facility to generate its bill payment reminder cards by scanning through emails in a user’s Gmail inbox and picking out relevant information. It then condenses this data and displays it in a card, which is housed in the Search application, otherwise known as Google Now.

    Compatibility is fairly restricted for this new feature, but it’s thought that support for additional services will be added in the not-too-distant future. Amongst the few supported payment processors are American Express, Bank of America, MasterCard and Visa.

    This reportedly comes as an update to the Google Search app on Google Play, though we’re not seeing that yet.

    The feature certainly makes sense and fits the general purpose of Google Now quite nicely. Google has added numerous types of cards to the service since first launching. As of right now, Google lists the following card types: Boarding Pass, Activity Summary, Next Appointment, Traffic & Transit, Flights, Weather, Restaurant Reservations, Events, Hotels, Friends’ Birthdays, Your Birthday, Location Reminders, Event Reminders, Packages, Sports, Movies, Time Reminders, Concerts, Stocks, Zillow, Fandango, Developing Story & Breaking News, Research Topic, New Video Games, New Books, Nearby Events, Public Alerts, Places, Translation, Nearby Photo Spots, New Albums, Public Transit, Nearby Attractions, Time at Home, News Topic Card, What to Watch Card, New TV Episodes, Website Update Card.

    Earlier this month, Google added parking information, and a card that shows when you’re near a store that carries a product you searched for.

    Image via Google

  • Google Shows When You’re Near A Store That Carries A Product You Searched For

    Google announced that it has added functionality to Google Now to show consumers when they’re near stores that carry products they have searched for.

    In a Google+ post, the company said, “You’ve been looking for the perfect pair of hiking boots online, but haven’t gotten around to pulling the trigger. Starting today, if you’re out and about and near a store that carries those boots, you might see a Google Now card showing you the product and price to remind you that you wanted them. Now all you have to do is pop into the store and check if they’re in stock!”

    The feature is apparently only for Android for now. You’ll need to make sure you’ve updated to the latest version of the Google Search app.

    A few days ago, Google announced that it has added offline availability for Google Now as well.

    Google said, “Next time you’re on the subway and want to check on your day’s appointments with Google Now, you won’t have to worry about lack of cell service…your Google Now cards stay loaded, even when you lose service in the subway… or your favorite underground bar!”

    Before that, Google added the addition of functionality that shows you where you parked your car.

    Image via Google+

  • Bing’s Answer To Google Now Comes To The Desktop

    Microsoft announced on Wednesday that it is launching personalized cards on the Bing Homepage, which will let users keep track of news, weather, flights, stocks, and eventually more. Kind of like an early version of Google Now on the desktop, only Bing.

    The personalization utilizes technology that the company uses in its Cortana offering for Windows Phone 8.1. Users can set up their interests in the Bing settings.

    You just need to sign into your Microsoft account, set up the interests, and then Bing will let you know about things when “appropriate”. It uses the examples of delayed flights or stock changes.

    “The best part?” Bing program manager Chen Fang writes. “As long as you’re signed in, Bing will remember your interests and notify you, as appropriate, across a range of Bing-powered Microsoft services, such as Cortana and the Bing Sports app, for example.”

    This is obviously Bing’s answer to Google Now, which recently made its way to the desktop as well. Google has added a lot of features and cards to its offering since first launching, and it sounds like Bing will do the same.

    Remember when Google had a personalized homepage?

    Images via Bing

  • Google Now Notifications Come To Chrome (Beta)

    Google announced that it has launched Google Now notifications in Chrome beta.

    If you’re on the beta channel, you’ll be getting notifications via the notification center on Mac, Windows or Chromebook. You’ll need to sign into Chrome with the Google account you already use for Google Now, of course.

    “Your friend Steve’s flight from New York is delayed by an hour,” writes Google software engineer Travis Skare. “Your favorite soccer team is up by one point with two minutes left. Your Chromecast has just shipped. If you’re using Google Now, you’d already know all of that information without having to ask.”

    “So the next time you’re finishing up emails at your desk, Google Now might suggest that you leave the office a bit early to beat the heavy traffic on the way to your dinner date,” he says. “To view the notifications, click on the bell icon on your desktop (on Mac and Windows) or the numbered box (on Chromebook) to open the Chrome notification center.”

    Google Now

    The good thing about Google Now, which will only be more useful with the addition of desktop notifications, is that it gets more useful as time goes on, and Google adds more types of cards.

    In November, Google added site updates, traffic incidents and TV recommendations. Here’s a look at all the different kinds of cards it currently offers.

    The desktop notifications are only available in English for now. It’s unclear when they’ll be available in the stable release.

    Image via Google

  • Here Are Over 60 Things You Can Say To Google Now

    TrendBlog.net has put together a pretty cool infographic listing all the different commands you can use with Google Now. There are over sixty of them.

    What would you like to be able to tell Google Now in the future? Let us know in the comments.

    You may already know most of these, but it’s nice to see them all collected together, and serves as a reminder of some of the things you can do.

    Google Now Voice Commands by trendblog.net
    Google Now voice commands by trendblog.net

    Google Now is about more than just voice commands. It’s really about getting users information they need before they even have to go looking for it.

    Gartner recently predicted that by 2017 smartphones will be able to reliably predict what to do next before their users interact with them, based on use patterns and data collected about the device’s owner. The firm believes smartphones will take over booking reservations, creating to-do lists, and responding to emails, to name a few things.

    With Google Now, and how far it’s already come in its early life, expect Google to remain at the forefront of this kind of thing, especially as it continues to integrate its various products (like Google+, Gmail and Google Wallet) with one another.

    Earlier this month, Google announced site updates, traffic incidents and TV recommendations to Google Now.

    Google also just released a new Chrome extension that will let you engage with Google search from your desktop computer using “Okay Google” commands.

    What would you like to see Google Now do that it doesn’t already? Let us know in the comments.

    [via IntoMobile]

  • Google Now Adds Site Updates, Traffic Incidents, TV Recommendations And More

    Google has added some interesting new cards to Google Now for Android. The features come in the latest update of the Google Search app.

    Google has added a Website update card, which could mean more traffic for publishers. It brings the latest posts from sites the user frequents, “so you’ll never miss a story.”

    Website Updates

    There’s a new News topic card, which will show users fresh articles from around the web on topics of interest.

    The “What to watch” card gives users movie and TV recommendations when they’re “staying in” (remember, Google Now knows you every move). This is a nice complement to the TV show episode reminders launched a while back.

    Watch Now

    Google Now will also now show traffic incidents while you’re on your commute, utilizing real-time data from Waze. Google added this data to Google Maps on the desktop last week.

    You can also now set repeat reminders , get real time scores from rugby teams and see when packages are ready for in-store pickup.

    Images: Google

  • Smartphones Will Soon Run Themselves, Says Analyst

    Smartphone (or smart TV or smart watch) is a bit of a misnomer at this point. Sure, the devices are far more capable than feature phones and their wireless access to the internet can make their users seem smart, but they are still just tools. That could soon change, though, as the software running on the devices begins to predict what users will want next.

    Market research firm Gartner today predicted that by 2017 smartphones will be able to reliably predict what to do next before their users interact with them. These capabilities will be based on learning the use patterns of users, as well as the wealth of data collected on smartphone owners.

    Gartner believes that smartphones will eventually be able to take over all of the menial tasks associated with smartphone use. These actions include booking reservations, creating to-do lists, and even simple e-mail responses.

    “Smartphones are becoming smarter, and will be smarter than you by 2017,” said Carolina Milanesi, VP of research at Gartner. “If there is heavy traffic, it will wake you up early for a meeting with your boss, or simply send an apology if it is a meeting with your colleague. The smartphone will gather contextual information from its calendar, its sensors, the user’s location and personal data.”

    A preview of such software capabilities can be seen in Google Now, Google’s Android software that provides users with information they have not yet searched for.

    Of course, these capabilities will be based on consumer willingness to have tons of their personal data stored in the cloud. It also relies on governments taking a hands-off approach to digital privacy regulation.

  • That Google Smart Watch Might Be Coming Sooner Rather Than Later [Report]

    Everybody these days is making a smart watch. Even if Samsung and Sony are the only major manufacturers out of the gate, many more are finalizing plans to launch one within the year. Now a new report has found that the next smart watch to hit the market may be from Google.

    The Wall Street Journal reports that Google’s smart watch is “in late-stage development” and could be available within months. At the moment, Google is in talks with Asian suppliers to build the smart watch. Once that’s wrapped up, we could see Google’s take on the smart watch very soon.

    So, what would a Google smart watch look like? It would obviously run Android, but it would be modified to place an emphasis on Google Now. By connecting to a smartphone, the Google smart watch would be able to fetch showtimes, flight times and traffic information, and display all of that information on your wrist.

    Aside from software, Google is working to perfect what it reportedly feels is the biggest problem with the current smart watches on the market – battery life. Some devices, like Sony’s SmartWatch, can sometimes require a recharge every day. Google wants to prolong battery life, but it doesn’t say how long of a time period between recharges the company’s engineers are aiming for.

    It’s also suggested that Google will work to make its smart watch more useful and cheaper. The former is actually rather important as smart watches have really yet to prove their worth to the mainstream consumer. The Galaxy Gear is definitely more useful than Sony’s SmartWatch, but it being restricted to Samsung devices limits its usefulness. It’s reliance on a custom OS that’s not Android also limits the kind of apps that developers can make for it. As for affordability, hopefully Google can come in under the $300 price point set by Samsung for its Galaxy Gear. It’s a little much to ask consumers to pay more than $200 for a smart watch.

    [Image: Wikimedia Commons]

  • New Google Now Knowledge Graph Reminders For Music And TV Shows Are Pretty Awesome

    As we reported last week, Google launched an update to its Google Search app for Android, adding some new Google Now functionality. Among the improvements were the ability to set reminders when you search.

    Now that we’re seeing this in action, it’s really cool. You can set reminders while you’re searching from the desktop as well. Search for a band or a TV show, for example, and you can set reminders for album releases or new episodes.

    Google Now - Neko Case

    Google Knowledge Graph Reminders

    Unfortunately, it doesn’t appear to work with sports teams, despite Google’s various rich results for them. I wouldn’t be surprised to see it come in the near future though.

    This is a great example of how Google Now truly is going to change how we interact with Google search, and will only make the things Google pushes to us more useful.

    The feature is also smart enough to know when there will no longer be anything to remind users about. Shows that are no longer on the air, for example, do not have the “remind me” button.

    Hat tip to Google Operating System

    Images: Google

  • Google Now Just Keeps Getting More Useful

    Earlier this week, Google updated Google Keep with new Google Now reminders for notes. Now, Google Now itself is getting new kinds of cards.

    The update comes to the Google Search app for Android. Presumably, iOS will get it later.

    New cards include: car rentals, concert tickets, improved public transit, commute sharing, updated TV, NCAA football scores, and the ability to set reminders while you search.

    The car rentals card will let you get reservation details and directions to the rental center, which Google notes will make things easier while your traveling, particularly when combined with the boarding pass and hotel reservations cards.

    The concert ticket card will get your digital event ticket ready for you when you arrive at the venue, as well as popular and “locally relevant” sites, like the upcoming events page for a venue you’re at.

    The public transit card will now let you know about the last train or bus home, and the commute sharing card will now give you the option of letting your family know you’re on your way home.

    The TV card will tell you about news mentioned and music playing in the TV show you’re watching. Note: this only works if you have a smart TV or if you tap the mic, and say “listen to TV”.

    The NCAA football scores are particularly timely, as the season is getting ready to start.

    Now, when you’re searching for music artists, movie actors, filmmakers and TV shows, you’ll get a “remind me” button on the panel by the search results, which you can tap to set up a Google Now reminder for new albums, book releases, upcoming episodes of shows, etc.

    [via 9to5Google]

  • Google Keep Gets A Lot More Useful

    Google Keep Gets A Lot More Useful

    Google is launching an update to Google Keep, which includes Google Now reminders and a new photo note option.

    You can select the “remind me” button from the bottom of any note, and choose to be reminded based on time or based on location. For time, you can add a specific date and time or a more general time of day (like “tomorrow morning”). For locations, it will start suggesting locations as soon as you start typing.

    “Of course, sometimes plans change. If you get a reminder you’re not ready to deal with, simply snooze it to a time or place that’s better for you,” notes product manager Erin Rosenthal. “It’s now even easier to get to all of your notes using the new navigation drawer, which includes a way to view all of your upcoming reminders in one place. And for people who want more separation between their home and work lives, the drawer also lets you easily switch between your accounts.”

    Google Keep

    Google Keep Reminder

    Users can also now utilize their existing photos for notes on Android. When you use the camera icon, you’ll have the option of selecting a photo from your gallery.

    Google Keep

    The update is rolling out on Google Play, and is currently available in the Chrome app.

  • Will Google’s Expanding Personalization Help Or Hurt Businesses?

    Google has been getting more personalized little by little for years now, but it’s happening much more rapidly these days, and not only is it getting more personalized, it’s getting more conversational, in the sense that it’s just telling you what you want to know (or at least trying to) without having to point you to third-party sites quite so much.

    This presents both pros and cons for businesses, but which there are more of is debatable. What do you think? Is the direction Google is moving in better or worse for businesses? Let us know what you think in the comments.

    Google is adding some new Google Now-like functionality to Google Search. Users will be able to ask Google for specific, personal information, and the search engine will retrieve it from across the various services the user uses, like Gmail, Google Calendar and Google+.

    “Ever had trouble checking your flight’s status on the go because it meant digging through your email for the flight number?” asks product manager Roy Livne. “Or wanted to just quickly see whether your package would arrive on time, without having to look up the tracking info first? You’ve told us it would be much easier if you could skip the fuss and just ask Google.”

    Users will be able to ask Google for information on flights, reservations, purchases, plans and photos, and get them right from the search interface. You can ask Google if your flight as time, or say “my reservations” or my hotel” to get info on your plans, including hotel/restaurant names and addresses.

    “With one tap, you can get driving or public transit directions straight there, saving you lots of steps,” Livne notes.

    You can say, “my purchases” and see the status of current orders, or ask “What are my plans for tomorrow?” to see upcoming flights, hotels, restaurant reservations, events, etc.

    You can also say something like “show me my photos from Thailand” to see photos from your Google+ account, which will be all the more useful if you’ve enabled instant upload. It will even recognize something like “my photos of sunsets”.

    Google actually added this kind of personalized photo search back in May.

    The new stuff will be rolling out to all U.S. users in English on the desktop, tablet and smartphones, with Voice Search.

    This all expands on the conversational search features Google launched a few months ago, but it’s also a just part of an ongoing trend we’ve seen with Google over the last couple years.

    The search engine (originally designed to surface content from across the web) is continually becoming more of a personal assistant. Google has been personalizing results to some extent for years, but the company really started pushing personalization with “Search Plus Your World” launched early last year. As we recently reported, by the way, Google is no longer labeling the personalized results the way it used to.

    Other personalization efforts have come in the forms of the field trial that let users opt in to include content from Gmail, Calendar, and Drive in their search results, and Google Now, which utilizes your personal information from across Google services and presents it to your when it thinks it might be of use.

    Again, more personal assistant than search engine.

    But Google Now, when it came out, was somewhat separate from search. Google appears to be doing everything it can these days to keep you in the Google universe, rather than truly searching the web. Searching the web (organic search) is almost a secondary thing at this point. Just an added service that Google provides when it doesn’t really know what you’re looking for.

    The good news about all of this personalization and “quick answers” from the business perspective is that businesses have new avenues to get in front of users in Google search that basically sidestep past SEO strategies. With Google integrating Gmail into search, for example, businesses may be able to get emailed information in front of users when they’re simply searching. There’s no reason not to assume that Google won’t continue to expand on these features.

    It’s already getting harder to get in front of Gmail users thanks to Google’s recent Gmail redesign, and additional integration into search could be a blessing in disguise. Search ads have always been attractive to businesses because they get messages in front of users right when they’re searching for that particular need. Increased Gmail integration into Google search could provide a similar effect for email marketing messages. Of course, this really comes down to Google’s implementation.

    Activity on Google+ is also more likely to find its way into search. You get the idea.

    The point is that the more Google integrates its various services into search, the more businesses will be able to get out of these services. Rather than trying to outrank competitors with SEO tactics, businesses could end up better off by simply being better at working the greater Google universe. As Google continues to integrate its various offerings in different ways, businesses should also look to integrate these offerings into their strategies.

    Google just launched some new business features (and an API) for Google+ this week, for example. This might be a good place to start looking at possibilities.

    And don’t forget that authorship, which may already be playing a significant role in Google rankings these days, is directly tied to Google+.

    Do you see Google’s increased focus on personalization and direct answer-providing as a positive evolution for businesses or is it just going to make things harder? Tell us what you think.

  • Google Now Cards Feature Spotted In Chrome

    It was a little surprising that Google Now coming to Chrome wasn’t one of the Chrome announcements Google made at Google I/O last month, but just because it hasn’t been announced doesn’t mean it’s far off.

    There have been rumors of Google Now coming to Chrome since last year, and now CNET has found notifications in the developer version of Chrome, which say “Enable Google Now Cards”.

    Google Now Notifications

    There has also been talk that Google Now could come to the Google homepage, which certainly fit right along with the recently launched conversational search feature.

    Google did launch some new Google Now features for Android this week, with some TV cards that allow users with Internet-connected televisions to tap and “listen for a TV show” in Google Now. This will show info, like cast credits, and info about people mentioned in the show. More on that here.

    image via CNET

  • Google Search Android App Gets New Google Now, Voice And Offers Features

    Google has launched an update to the Google Search app for Android with some new Google Now features, Voice actions and Offers integration.

    There are new Google Now TV cards. Google explains in a Google+ post, “If you have an internet-connected TV, Google Now can help unlock more information about what you’re watching. Just connect your Android device to the same network that your TV is on and tap ‘Listen for a TV show’ in Google Now.”

    Watching Live TV

    “We will show you information, like where you’ve seen an actor in the cast before, or more information about the people mentioned in the show,” says Google. “So if you were watching Nik Wallenda cross the Grand Canyon this weekend, with Google Now, you could learn that the ‘King of the Wire’ in fact holds seven Guinness World Records, including highest bike ride on a high-wire.”

    The TV feature is US-only, and requires the phone/tablet to be on the same network as the TV.

    Th app also adds reminders for saved offers from Google Offers when you’re near the store.

    Also listed in the “what’s new” section for the app on Google Play is a new voice action to play music from your phone or the Play Store and voice actions tips.

  • Is It Worth It To Your Site To Help Google Build Its ‘Knowledge’?

    Search is moving more and more toward structured data, which in turn, is leading search engines to delivering the information users are seeking without the need of having to send them to third-party sites. Google, in particular, is making tremendous use of this data in offerings like its Knowledge Graph and in Google Now, and it’s still very early days for both products. Google continues to provide webmasters with tools to help build Google’s structured database, but what ramifications does this have for businesses getting web traffic from Google going forward?

    Are you willing to provide Google with structured data from your site, even if it means Google getting users this data without sending them to your site? Let us know in the comments.

    Google announced the launch of Knowledge Graph just over a year ago. It was a major indication of Google’s reduction in dependence on keywords.

    “It’s another step away from raw keywords (without knowing what those words really mean) toward understanding things in the real-world and how they relate to each other,” said Google’s Matt Cutts at the time. “The knowledge graph improves our ability to understand the intent of a query so we can give better answers and search results.”

    From the user standpoint, it’s been hard to argue with the results, especially these days when you see them interact with your questions in a conversational manner. Outside of the occasional piece of erroneous data, the info has been pretty useful, and even when relevant, more traditional, organic results appear on the page next to a Google “Knowledge Panel,” it’s often the Knowledge Graph part that jumps off the page and captures your attention, and in many cases, let’s you know the information you needed without having to click further.

    So far, the biggest loss in site clickthroughs has probably been seen by Wikipedia, simply because it’s typically the first source Google offers up with the Knowledge Graph, but Google is working to greatly expand the Knowledge Graph, and as that happens, more sites face the possibility of a similar sacrifice. It’s also worth noting that Wikipedia, of course, is a nonprofit entity. How much of the Knowledge Graph will consist of info from nonprofits when it’s all said and done?

    It will never truly be done though. It will just keep growing, and Google’s giving webmasters the tools to give the search giant better access to the data it needs to give answers to users. For many, this will no doubt be an attractive option in an age where it has become increasingly hard to appear on page one of a Google results page.

    Google launched the Data Highlighter back in December. It was initially just for event data, but has already expanded significantly.

    “Data Highlighter is a webmaster tool for teaching Google about the pattern of structured data on your website,” Google explains. “You simply use Data Highlighter to tag the data fields on your site with a mouse. Then Google can present your data more attractively — and in new ways — in search results and in other products such as the Google Knowledge Graph.”

    “For example, if your site contains event listings you can use Data Highlighter to tag data (name, location, date, and so on) for the events on your site,” the company adds. “The next time Google crawls your site, the event data will be available for rich snippets on search results pages.”

    This week, Google announced that it has expanded the tool to support more types of data. Now it supports: events, products, local businesses, articles, software applications, movies, restaurants, and TV episodes. Suddenly, this is starting to involve businesses a lot more directly.

    Google also introduced another tool called the Structured Data Markup Helper.

    “As with Data Highlighter, one simply points and clicks on a sample web page to indicate its key data fields,” says product manager Justin Boyan. “Structured Data Markup Helper then shows exactly what microdata annotations to add to the page’s HTML code. We hope this helps give HTML authors a running start with adding structured data to their sites, in turn making search results more meaningful.”

    “When Google understands a website’s content in a structured way, we can present that content more accurately and more attractively in search,” says Boyan “For example, our algorithms can enhance search results with ‘rich snippets’ when we understand that a page contains an event, recipe, product, review, or similar. We can also feature a page’s data as part of answers in search from the Knowledge Graph or in Google Now cards, helping you find the right information at just the right time.”

    To be clear, there will certainly be plenty of cases, as with rich snippets, where new links to sites are created, potentially leading to more clickthroughs, but even sometimes with those, users will get the info they need on the page, without having to click. There are plenty of variables that enter the equation, not least of which is Google deciding when and where to display the data it obtains from sites.

    The question is whether this move toward structured data will truly benefit sites in general in the long run or if it simply gives search engines like Google more control as the gatekeepers to information. With Google Now, for that matter, Google is even deciding when to show users this data, without waiting for them to search for it.

    Another issue worth considering is just how well Google will be able to deal with accuracy of data as it gets more and more structured data from webmasters, as it is encouraging. We’ve seen Google make mistakes on more than one occasion. They’ve gotten marital status wrong. They’ve let nudity slip through when inappropriate (multiple times). Will they be able to keep too much erroneous information from being passed off as “knowledge”? If not, things could get really out of hand.

    Earlier this week, I had a bad experience with Google Maps in which I was directed to a non-existent eye doctor on the other side of town (turn by turn, no less) when the actual doctor was right outside of my neighborhood. I was late for the appointment because of a Google error. What happens if some piece of erroneous data from some webmaster’s site makes it into Google’s Knowledge Graph, and gets served to me via Google Now when I supposedly need it, only for me to find out that it is completely wrong. Who knows what kinds of mishaps that could bring on?

    Maybe Google can keep the errors from becoming too prevalent. I guess we’ll see, though I can’t say my confidence is incredibly high. Back when Google launched Knowledge Graph I questioned the company about accuracy with regards to Wikipedia vandalism. I was told that Google has quality controls to “try to mitigate this kind of issue,” and that Google includes a link so users can tell them when they come across inaccuracies.

    “Our goal is to be useful,” a spokesperson told me. “We realize we’ll never be perfect, just as a person’s or library’s knowledge is never complete, but we will strive to be accurate. More broadly, this is why we engineer 500+ updates to our algorithms every year — we’re constantly working to improve search, and to make things easier for our users.”

    But that was before Google Now, and it was when the Knowledge Graph was significantly smaller than it is now. At Google I/O earlier this month, Google announced that Knowledge Graph was up to over 570 million entities (not to mention rolling out in additional languages), and that it continues to grow. Even since then, Google has announced the launch of nutritional information.

    It also remains to be seen how well Google is able to keep spam out of the structured data pool. I can’t say I’ve seen any spam from it thus far, but as more and more businesses look to provide Google with this kind of data in hopes of boosting their search visibility, which again, Google is encouraging them to do, and as long as Google moves further and further into this direction, making it harder for businesses to get traditional first-page rankings, it seems likely that more will try to game the system. Maybe they won’t be successful. Maybe some will find ways.

    The point is that it’s still early days for this era of search, and it’s hard to say just what it all means for webmasters and for search quality. Either way, things are getting interesting.

    Do you like the direction this is all headed in? Share your thoughts in the comments.

  • Google Offers Webmasters Tools To Get Content In Knowledge Graph, Google Now

    Google has launched two new tools for webmasters to provide the search engine with structured data from their sites.

    For one, Google’s Data Highlighter now supports eight types of structured data, including: events, products, local businesses, articles, software applications, movies, restaurants, and TV episodes.

    “With Data Highlighter, webmasters don’t even need to change their site’s HTML,” explains product manager Justin Boyan. “Instead, they can just point and click with their mouse to ‘tag’ the key fields on a few sample pages of their site. Google learns the pattern of the fields and applies it to similar pages on the site, so all their information can be understood.”

    More on Data Highlighter here.

    The other tool is the Structured Data Markup Helper.

    “As with Data Highlighter, one simply points and clicks on a sample web page to indicate its key data fields,” says Boyan. “Structured Data Markup Helper then shows exactly what microdata annotations to add to the page’s HTML code. We hope this helps give HTML authors a running start with adding structured data to their sites, in turn making search results more meaningful.”

    These tools should help webmasters stay current with the evolution of Google into products like Knowledge Graph and Google Now, while also potentially improving these Google offerings themselves.

    “When Google understands a website’s content in a structured way, we can present that content more accurately and more attractively in search,” says Boyan “For example, our algorithms can enhance search results with ‘rich snippets’ when we understand that a page contains an event, recipe, product, review, or similar. We can also feature a page’s data as part of answers in search from the Knowledge Graph or in Google Now cards, helping you find the right information at just the right time.”

    You might also be interested in this recent Google talk about integrating Google’s Knowledge Graph data into your own apps.