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LAS VEGAS, Nv April 2, 2008 -- Today, Yahoo! Inc. unveiled Yahoo! oneSearch 2.0, a new
version of its
award-winning mobile search service. Key enhancements will allow users
to initiate searches faster using text or voice. Yahoo! also plans to
provide greater relevance through richer, more detailed search results
by opening up Yahoo! oneSearch to publishers to integrate content,
simplify search input with Search Assist and voice-enabled search, and
make search instantly accessible on the idle screen of many phones.
These innovations build on Yahoo!'s strategy to become the starting
point for the most mobile consumers.
"With
the launch of Yahoo! oneSearch in 2007, we revolutionized mobile search
by re-creating search specifically for the mobile phone, focusing on
answers, not just Web links. In just over a year, we signed 29
partnerships with carriers across the globe, covering more than 600
million consumers under contract," said Marco Boerries, executive vice
president, Connected Life, Yahoo! "With Yahoo! oneSearch 2.0, we are
fundamentally changing the way consumers use the Internet on their
mobile phones."
Opening Yahoo! oneSearch: Better Answers, not just Web Links
Yahoo!
took a major step forward in enhancing its popular Yahoo! oneSearch
service by previewing plans to open up mobile search results to
publishers and developers across the Internet. By enabling publishers
to integrate relevant content into the Yahoo! oneSearch results, it is
more likely that consumers will be able to find exactly what they're
looking for. Opening up Yahoo! oneSearch will:
Turn web
search results into answers - the usefulness of the results increase as
more actual content is returned versus traditional web links
Unlock the power of the Semantic
Web - results integrate more helpful content, much that otherwise is not usually surfaced in search results
Provide more relevant content - consumers receive richer information, into which they can dive deeply
For
example, whereas today's search results for "Italian restaurants"
includes information such as addresses and phone numbers, open results
could also include information from restaurant booking companies
displaying the number of available reservations. Or, as another
example, search results for "London" might provide transit schedules
from public transit providers such as upcoming arrival and departure
information.
By opening up its results, Yahoo! oneSearch will
enable enhanced discoverability for publishers, providing them with
control over how their content is presented in the mobile search
results page and how it reaches the consumer. With an open search
model, Yahoo! oneSearch is designed to connect consumers directly with
their content right in the search results and generate more traffic to
the publisher's content or site.
Open search results are expected to debut with initial partners in Q2 2008.
Yahoo!'s Mobile Search Assist - Making Search Input Easier
Yahoo!
oneSearch is simplifying mobile search by taking the pain out of typing
search queries on mobile phones. Yahoo! oneSearch with Search Assist
provides:
Faster and easier input - reducing the time it takes to enter in your search query.
Predictive text completion - as you begin to type, Search Assist
surfaces the most common search queries in real time that match the
letters you have submitted so far. As soon as you see a query that
matches what you were typing, select it and your results are returned.
For instance, a consumer searching for information about "Hillary
Clinton" can just type "hil" and search assist will instantly suggest
"Hillary Clinton" along with "Perez Hilton," "Hillary Duff" and the
other most common search terms containing those letters.
Contextual recommendations - Search Assist is intelligent enough to
recommend more refined results than your initial query. For example, as
you type in "Apple," Search Assist may recommend links such as Apple
iPhone, Apple iPod, or Apple stock price.
At launch, Search
Assist is available for the iPhone and is expected to become available
on additional AJAX-compatible devices over the coming months.
Voice-Enabled Yahoo! oneSearch - the Simplest Way to Search
While Search Assist is easier than typing,
talking is easier yet. To make that possible, Yahoo! is partnering with vlingo, a leading speech-recognition company.
With
the voice-enabled version of Yahoo! oneSearch, consumers can search for
anything, including flight numbers, locations, Web site names, local
restaurants, and more, by simply speaking. For example, a search query
like "N-C-Double-A" instantly returns a rich set of results
highlighting the latest tournament scores, upcoming game times, and
breaking news. Whereas most mobile voice recognition systems are
specific to vertical categories such as local listings, Yahoo!
oneSearch with Voice lets consumers perform "wide open" searches -
returning relevant results for practically every kind of query.
Consumers
do not need to follow prompts and think about how to say a mobile
search; with Yahoo! oneSearch they simply speak whatever they are
looking for and have access to instant answers.
Key Features Include:
Wide-open voice-enabled mobile search - Speak anything and get relevant results returned through oneSearch.
Personalizes to your voice - Voice-enabled Yahoo! oneSearch adapts to your voice the more you use it.
Multi-modal input - Allows users to switch between speaking and typing
at any time, enabling consumers easy access to refine queries.
Available
beginning today for select Blackberry devices including the 8800
series, Curve, and Pearl in the United States, the new voice-enabled
Yahoo! oneSearch can be downloaded from http://m.yahoo.com/voice. Over the coming months, the product is expected to support additional devices and become available internationally.
Idle Screen Search - Easier for Consumers to find Yahoo! oneSearch
Yahoo!
is not only making it easier to enter a search query with Search Assist
and voice input, but it also plans to make it easier to access the
search box. Yahoo! today also previewed an innovative idle screen
search service that makes it easier to search on your phone by
integrating the search box right into the main screen. The idle screen
will give users one-click access to Yahoo! oneSearch and the internet.
Searching will be easier and faster, too -- no need to open your
browser; simply search (using text or voice) and get the answers you're
looking for. This idle screen solution is expected to roll out in Q2
2008.
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