8
Jan

Recently Google announced the unleashing of Google’s “Real-time search” in the search engine results. Matt Cutts covered it in his blog. This is a new feature that will facilitate Google to provide up-to-the-minute updates (”freshness” and “relevance”) on any search inquiry/subject a user researches.

 

According to Amit Singhal of Google (responsible for Google search algorithms), “Light can travel around the world in 1/10th of a second, and we won’t rest until the speed of light is the only barrier to getting good search results to you.”

 

How to use the Google Real-Time Search Feature:

 

Matt Cutts said in his blog that Google processes billions of documents per day for their real time search. Google has really enhanced considerably in speeding up the crawling and indexing procedure, which is exceptional even with the already-enormous and mounting size of the web.

 

Step 1: Go to www.google.com

Step 2: Type your query and press “search.”

Step 3: When the results load completely, find “Show options” under the search box. Click it.

Step 4: Under “Any time,” click “Latest.” This will let Google give the latest results (real-time search results).

 

It is very extraordinary that Google is still able to grant updates as early as “1 minute ago.” This is very fast, and is really “real-time.” You can even observe that Google regularly adds updates even when the browser is not refreshed as indicated: “New results will appear below as they become available.”

 

One feature I noticed that was neat was the Twitter updates included in the Real-Time Search Results as seen below:

 

 

To stop receiving frequent updates, you can click “pause.”

Category : News / Social Networking / Twitter / search engines

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Comments

live soccer streaming January 10, 2010

this is really cool , i tried it with soccer news, it works, i am thinking of iframing it and putting it on my my site page, so it keeps on updating , thanks for sharing

Beth January 28, 2010

This is cool but the speed of light? Isn’t that a little obsessive?

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