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Opting Out of Open Directory Listings for Webmasters

1:09 pm - May 22, 2006 in Live Search

Here in Search, we are always interested in hearing about ways to improve the search experience. And, along with Danny Sullivan and Dave Winer, customers have let us know that they wanted us to change how we used Open Directory descriptions in search results. So… we did!

 

Just to give some background, the Open Directory Project at dmoz.org is a repository of millions of human-edited descriptions. Even though these human-edited descriptions provide a lot of value, with human editing may come human error, bias, descriptions getting outdated, or the editor’s text may simply not suit the webmasters who want to be represented in their own way.

 

What has bothered the webmasters previously is that when search engines preferred search result descriptions from dmoz.org, they did not empower webmasters to opt-out of those descriptions. This can be especially annoying if the descriptions from dmoz.org are outdated, or just plain inaccurate.

 

We had one customer who was frustrated because the ODP description of their site mentioned “favours” and was listed under Canada when their site was actually in the United States and was spelled as “favors”. All they wanted was a way to specify that MSN Search should use the description from their page instead of using ODP.

 

So what we did was introduce a new option at the page level  - a robots meta tag – that tells the MSN search bot not to use the DMOZ site snippet.  This is something that only can be done at Web page level, by a webmaster, and is not done as part of the robot.txt file.

 

So in your Web page you’d put

 

<META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOODP">

 

or

 

<META NAME="msnbot" CONTENT="NOODP">

 

In theory the first of these applies to all crawlers and the second just to us. As far as we know right now, we are the only search engine  to support this  tag, so the two are the same for the moment. But when others follow suit, you could use the second tag to get only MSN to ignore ODP content for your page.

 
A word of caution: Putting either tag in your pages will not make your search results descriptions change immediately – they will change once our crawler has re-crawled the page. Usually that takes about 1 day -4 weeks for us to re-crawl you (ok, that sounds odd, but we hope you know what we mean).  :)  

 

Try it out, and give us your feedback!

 

 

Girish Kumar, MSN Search Development Lead

 

 

Opting Out of Open Directory Listings for Webmasters

1:09 pm - May 22, 2006 in Live Search

Here in Search, we are always interested in hearing about ways to improve the search experience. And, along with Danny Sullivan and Dave Winer, customers have let us know that they wanted us to change how we used Open Directory descriptions in search results. So… we did!

 

Just to give some background, the Open Directory Project at dmoz.org is a repository of millions of human-edited descriptions. Even though these human-edited descriptions provide a lot of value, with human editing may come human error, bias, descriptions getting outdated, or the editor’s text may simply not suit the webmasters who want to be represented in their own way.

 

What has bothered the webmasters previously is that when search engines preferred search result descriptions from dmoz.org, they did not empower webmasters to opt-out of those descriptions. This can be especially annoying if the descriptions from dmoz.org are outdated, or just plain inaccurate.

 

We had one customer who was frustrated because the ODP description of their site mentioned “favours” and was listed under Canada when their site was actually in the United States and was spelled as “favors”. All they wanted was a way to specify that MSN Search should use the description from their page instead of using ODP.

 

So what we did was introduce a new option at the page level  - a robots meta tag – that tells the MSN search bot not to use the DMOZ site snippet.  This is something that only can be done at Web page level, by a webmaster, and is not done as part of the robot.txt file.

 

So in your Web page you’d put

 

<META NAME="ROBOTS" CONTENT="NOODP">

 

or

 

<META NAME="msnbot" CONTENT="NOODP">

 

In theory the first of these applies to all crawlers and the second just to us. As far as we know right now, we are the only search engine  to support this  tag, so the two are the same for the moment. But when others follow suit, you could use the second tag to get only MSN to ignore ODP content for your page.

 
A word of caution: Putting either tag in your pages will not make your search results descriptions change immediately – they will change once our crawler has re-crawled the page. Usually that takes about 1 day -4 weeks for us to re-crawl you (ok, that sounds odd, but we hope you know what we mean).  :)  

 

Try it out, and give us your feedback!

 

 

Girish Kumar, MSN Search Development Lead

 

 

Live Local – What’s REALLY New

8:01 pm - May 30, 2006 in Live Search

The Live Local team shipped a major update this week with a bunch of new unique features. Coverage in blogs and other online sites has been really positive, but they all seem to focus on the same couple of features. We wanted to spotlight some of the other goodies that are often overlooked, while also providing tips for the big ticket features that might not be obvious.

 

International Coverage

Until now, International support in Live Local has been thin, focusing on North America. Not any more! With this release we introduced maps all over the world, street address lookups in nearly 30 Countries and driving directions in places you’ve probably never heard of. You can just as easily get one in Budapest.  Also new in this release, we have begun rolling out super high-res aerial and birds eye imagery that you won’t find anywhere else online. The UK is the first area covered, but as promised we’ll just keep rolling out the imagery over the coming weeks. The Google Earth Blog has a good look at this feature and how it stacks up to competing offerings.

 

Live Messenger Integration

Probably one of the most useful features we’ve ever popped out. This lets you and a friend on your Messenger contact list navigate a single shared map! If you’ve ever tried to help a friend pick a hotel in a new city via phone or try to agree on a place to meet to throw a Frisbee, this is your feature. You initiate the Messenger conversation from within Live Local – Use the ‘Share -> Share in Messenger’ menu (just above the map) to display your Messenger Contact list. Choose a contact and they will be alerted to accept your invite. When they do, a conversation window will open with your map loaded from Live Local. When you drag the map, it updates on their display as well. If your friend does a search for Thai Restaurants, you both see the results. If you right click on the map to add a custom pushpin, it is displayed for both of you. Give it a try! Works in MSN Messenger 6.0 or higher including Live Messenger.

 

Microsoft Outlook Integration

Coinciding with the launch this week, a free Windows Live Local plugin for Microsoft Outlook hit the streets that integrates maps and driving directions into your calendar items and appointments. The must have feature here is the automatic buffering of a meeting’s reminder based on estimated travel time!

 

Traffic

Lots of coverage has focused on Live Local being the first major mapping site to offer traffic flow data drawn right on the streets as an overlay. Slick indeed, but when you add a layer of real-time Traffic Cameras for a region, you suddenly have an indispensable tool that you’ll bookmark and use everyday. Check to see if a traffic cam Collection already exists for your city and if not why not be the first to create it. Your entire city will thank you!

 

Collections and Live Favorites

Collections are just what they sound like – a grouping of stuff on your Scratchpad that you want to save together. From a list of restaurant recommendations that your friends have told you about, to a Collection of your best hikes in Italy. Collections are easy to create and share, and with the integration we’ve added for Live Favorites, it’s also easy to keep track of Collections sent to you by friends that you want to recall later. Lets say they send you this Collection of Beach videos from TurnHere.com. In the viewer is an ‘Add to Favorites’ link that will add a permalink for the Collection to your live Favorites. You can then view all of your faves from within Live Local by going to the ‘Collections -> Favorites’ menu.

 

As you can see, we packed a lot into this release.  Give it a try and let us know what you think. Your feedback will shape the next release, just as it has these past three. And for the coders reading this, all of the details of the latest map control and API can be found on Alex Daley’s blog so you can get started building all of this goodness into your own applications..

 

 

---Chandu Thota, Steve Lombardi and the entire Virtual Earth Team

 

Live Local – What’s REALLY New

8:01 pm - May 30, 2006 in Live Search

The Live Local team shipped a major update this week with a bunch of new unique features. Coverage in blogs and other online sites has been really positive, but they all seem to focus on the same couple of features. We wanted to spotlight some of the other goodies that are often overlooked, while also providing tips for the big ticket features that might not be obvious.

 

International Coverage

Until now, International support in Live Local has been thin, focusing on North America. Not any more! With this release we introduced maps all over the world, street address lookups in nearly 30 Countries and driving directions in places you’ve probably never heard of. You can just as easily get one in Budapest.  Also new in this release, we have begun rolling out super high-res aerial and birds eye imagery that you won’t find anywhere else online. The UK is the first area covered, but as promised we’ll just keep rolling out the imagery over the coming weeks. The Google Earth Blog has a good look at this feature and how it stacks up to competing offerings.

 

Live Messenger Integration

Probably one of the most useful features we’ve ever popped out. This lets you and a friend on your Messenger contact list navigate a single shared map! If you’ve ever tried to help a friend pick a hotel in a new city via phone or try to agree on a place to meet to throw a Frisbee, this is your feature. You initiate the Messenger conversation from within Live Local – Use the ‘Share -> Share in Messenger’ menu (just above the map) to display your Messenger Contact list. Choose a contact and they will be alerted to accept your invite. When they do, a conversation window will open with your map loaded from Live Local. When you drag the map, it updates on their display as well. If your friend does a search for Thai Restaurants, you both see the results. If you right click on the map to add a custom pushpin, it is displayed for both of you. Give it a try! Works in MSN Messenger 6.0 or higher including Live Messenger.

 

Microsoft Outlook Integration

Coinciding with the launch this week, a free Windows Live Local plugin for Microsoft Outlook hit the streets that integrates maps and driving directions into your calendar items and appointments. The must have feature here is the automatic buffering of a meeting’s reminder based on estimated travel time!

 

Traffic

Lots of coverage has focused on Live Local being the first major mapping site to offer traffic flow data drawn right on the streets as an overlay. Slick indeed, but when you add a layer of real-time Traffic Cameras for a region, you suddenly have an indispensable tool that you’ll bookmark and use everyday. Check to see if a traffic cam Collection already exists for your city and if not why not be the first to create it. Your entire city will thank you!

 

Collections and Live Favorites

Collections are just what they sound like – a grouping of stuff on your Scratchpad that you want to save together. From a list of restaurant recommendations that your friends have told you about, to a Collection of your best hikes in Italy. Collections are easy to create and share, and with the integration we’ve added for Live Favorites, it’s also easy to keep track of Collections sent to you by friends that you want to recall later. Lets say they send you this Collection of Beach videos from TurnHere.com. In the viewer is an ‘Add to Favorites’ link that will add a permalink for the Collection to your live Favorites. You can then view all of your faves from within Live Local by going to the ‘Collections -> Favorites’ menu.

 

As you can see, we packed a lot into this release.  Give it a try and let us know what you think. Your feedback will shape the next release, just as it has these past three. And for the coders reading this, all of the details of the latest map control and API can be found on Alex Daley’s blog so you can get started building all of this goodness into your own applications..

 

 

---Chandu Thota, Steve Lombardi and the entire Virtual Earth Team

 

Going Places: Accelerating Search in Academic Research

1:36 pm - June 2, 2006 in Live Search

We on the Search team want to congratulate the 12 winners of the Microsoft Live Labs "Accelerating Search in Academic Research” Awards.

Researchers from 36 countries submitted proposals for research to advance the field of search.  The 12 winners will receive grant money from Microsoft Live Labs and access to a set of MSN Search query logs in order to push forward our understanding of the Internet, search, and online social behaviors.

 The results of the research we’re funding are intended to be totally open to the public.  We’re encouraging the awardees to publish what they find in peer reviewed journals and at conferences.  Nothing about this is proprietary.  It’s our gift back to the research community.

 

Proposal

 Principal Investigators

Affiliations

Country

 Combining Econometric and Text Mining Approaches for Measuring the Effect of Online Information Exchange

 Panagiotis Ipeirotis - Anindya Ghose

 New York University

 USA

 Discovering and Using Meta-Terms

 

 Bruce Croft

 University of Massachusetts Amherst

 USA

Deepening Search: From the Surface to the Deep Web

 

 Kevin Chang

 Univ. Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

 USA

Entity and Relation Types in Web Search: Annotation, Indexing and Scoring Techniques

 

 Soumen Chakrabarti

 IIT Bombay

India

 Incorporating Trust into Web Authority

 

 Brian Davison

 Lehigh University

 USA

Mine Query/Click Log for Collaborative Internet Search

 

 ChengXiang Zhai

 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

 USA

 Predictive Exploitation of Click-Through Knowledge

 

 Alistair Moffat

 University of Melbourne

 Australia

 Social Search: Bringing the Social Component to the Web

 

 Gerd Stumme

 Knowledge and Data Engineering Group; University of Kassel

Germany

 Statistical Machine Learning for User Modelling

 

 Zoubin Ghahramani

 University of Cambridge; Carnegie Mellon University; University College London

 United Kingdom

 The Truth is Out There: Aggregating Answers from Multiple Web Sources

 

 Amelie Marian

 Rutgers University

 USA

 Vinegar: Leading Indicators in Query Logs

 

 Eytan Adar - Brian Bershad - Steven Gribble

 University of Washington; CSE

 USA

 VISP: Visualizing Information Search Processes

 

 Lada Adamic - Suresh Bhavnani

 School of Information; University of Michigan

 USA

 Each researcher, along with their proposal, submitted a budget which was used to determine one–year grant awards of between $30-50,000.  They’re also getting access to more than 15 million real-user queries with click through information,along with an increased query quota for use of the MSN Search API.

What’s important to know is that the search query logs they will be studying have been carefully scrubbed to be completely anonymous – there’s no information about who issued a query.  In addition, we’ve filtered the query terms themselves to remove credit card numbers, phone numbers, social security numbers and email addresses.

To support the researchers, the Search team and Microsoft Research staff took extra effort to make sure the data was clean, ensuring both customer privacy is protected while academic inquiry is preserved.  Researchers are under strict license in using the data, which also protects customer privacy.

We haven’t decided yet whether this RFP program will be awarded next year, but if you’re interested in other funding opportunities with Microsoft, keep checking back here:

http://research.microsoft.com/ur/us/fundingopps/default.aspx

--Ramez Naam, Director of Program Management, Search

 

Going Places: Accelerating Search in Academic Research

1:36 pm - June 2, 2006 in Live Search

We on the Search team want to congratulate the 12 winners of the Microsoft Live Labs "Accelerating Search in Academic Research” Awards.

Researchers from 36 countries submitted proposals for research to advance the field of search.  The 12 winners will receive grant money from Microsoft Live Labs and access to a set of MSN Search query logs in order to push forward our understanding of the Internet, search, and online social behaviors.

 The results of the research we’re funding are intended to be totally open to the public.  We’re encouraging the awardees to publish what they find in peer reviewed journals and at conferences.  Nothing about this is proprietary.  It’s our gift back to the research community.

 

Proposal

 Principal Investigators

Affiliations

Country

 Combining Econometric and Text Mining Approaches for Measuring the Effect of Online Information Exchange

 Panagiotis Ipeirotis - Anindya Ghose

 New York University

 USA

 Discovering and Using Meta-Terms

 

 Bruce Croft

 University of Massachusetts Amherst

 USA

Deepening Search: From the Surface to the Deep Web

 

 Kevin Chang

 Univ. Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

 USA

Entity and Relation Types in Web Search: Annotation, Indexing and Scoring Techniques

 

 Soumen Chakrabarti

 IIT Bombay

India

 Incorporating Trust into Web Authority

 

 Brian Davison

 Lehigh University

 USA

Mine Query/Click Log for Collaborative Internet Search

 

 ChengXiang Zhai

 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

 USA

 Predictive Exploitation of Click-Through Knowledge

 

 Alistair Moffat

 University of Melbourne

 Australia

 Social Search: Bringing the Social Component to the Web

 

 Gerd Stumme

 Knowledge and Data Engineering Group; University of Kassel

Germany

 Statistical Machine Learning for User Modelling

 

 Zoubin Ghahramani

 University of Cambridge; Carnegie Mellon University; University College London

 United Kingdom

 The Truth is Out There: Aggregating Answers from Multiple Web Sources

 

 Amelie Marian

 Rutgers University

 USA

 Vinegar: Leading Indicators in Query Logs

 

 Eytan Adar - Brian Bershad - Steven Gribble

 University of Washington; CSE

 USA

 VISP: Visualizing Information Search Processes

 

 Lada Adamic - Suresh Bhavnani

 School of Information; University of Michigan

 USA

 Each researcher, along with their proposal, submitted a budget which was used to determine one–year grant awards of between $30-50,000.  They’re also getting access to more than 15 million real-user queries with click through information,along with an increased query quota for use of the MSN Search API.

What’s important to know is that the search query logs they will be studying have been carefully scrubbed to be completely anonymous – there’s no information about who issued a query.  In addition, we’ve filtered the query terms themselves to remove credit card numbers, phone numbers, social security numbers and email addresses.

To support the researchers, the Search team and Microsoft Research staff took extra effort to make sure the data was clean, ensuring both customer privacy is protected while academic inquiry is preserved.  Researchers are under strict license in using the data, which also protects customer privacy.

We haven’t decided yet whether this RFP program will be awarded next year, but if you’re interested in other funding opportunities with Microsoft, keep checking back here:

http://research.microsoft.com/ur/us/fundingopps/default.aspx

--Ramez Naam, Director of Program Management, Search

 

Check out the new Active Search for Windows Live Mail Desktop!

1:08 pm - June 6, 2006 in Live Search
(Betsynote:Yes, I know it's a mouthful of a label! But it's pretty cool!)

Our friends over on the Mail Desktop team have been experimenting with ways to bring search right into a user’s inbox experience. Imagine you’ve received an email about the Arlo Guthrie show coming up later this summer...Live Mail Desktop’s Active Search would present search results about this show, as well as sponsored links offering perhaps a chance to buy tickets or read a review of the concert.

 

Check out the new Active Search for Windows Live Mail Desktop!

1:08 pm - June 6, 2006 in Live Search
(Betsynote:Yes, I know it's a mouthful of a label! But it's pretty cool!)

Our friends over on the Mail Desktop team have been experimenting with ways to bring search right into a user’s inbox experience. Imagine you’ve received an email about the Arlo Guthrie show coming up later this summer...Live Mail Desktop’s Active Search would present search results about this show, as well as sponsored links offering perhaps a chance to buy tickets or read a review of the concert.

 

Live for answers

8:37 pm - June 7, 2006 in Live Search

We’re getting a ton of great feedback on Windows Live Search.  One of the most common requests is to build the instant answers already available on MSN Search.  We hear you and are working hard to get them all in.  In fact, we just recently launched our first batch - instant answers for news and local!

 

The news instant answer will appear on searches for topical news stories.  Keywords are identified algorithmically, updated every few minutes.  It’s impossible to predict which ones will work when you read this, but iraq and george bush are pretty safe bets.

 

We can also show the top local listings right on our web results page.  This is great when you are looking for a phone number or address of a local business.  You just need to type a category or business name along with a location (city, city/state or zip).  Try our instant answers to find an edison, nj dentist or seattle pizza places.

 

Looking for other kinds of instant answers?  Found a problem with one we already have?  Please send us your feedback.  We’re listening.

 

---Jamie Buckley

PM, Instant Answer Team

 

 

Betsynote: Thanks to Darren's feedback, we adjusted the link.  It should work now. Thanks Darren!!!!

 

Live for answers

8:37 pm - June 7, 2006 in Live Search

We’re getting a ton of great feedback on Windows Live Search.  One of the most common requests is to build the instant answers already available on MSN Search.  We hear you and are working hard to get them all in.  In fact, we just recently launched our first batch - instant answers for news and local!

 

The news instant answer will appear on searches for topical news stories.  Keywords are identified algorithmically, updated every few minutes.  It’s impossible to predict which ones will work when you read this, but iraq and george bush are pretty safe bets.

 

We can also show the top local listings right on our web results page.  This is great when you are looking for a phone number or address of a local business.  You just need to type a category or business name along with a location (city, city/state or zip).  Try our instant answers to find an edison, nj dentist or seattle pizza places.

 

Looking for other kinds of instant answers?  Found a problem with one we already have?  Please send us your feedback.  We’re listening.

 

---Jamie Buckley

PM, Instant Answer Team

 

 

Betsynote: Thanks to Darren's feedback, we adjusted the link.  It should work now. Thanks Darren!!!!

 
 
 
 
 
 
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