The search giant is examining ways to extend its reach by delivering
information to people that do not use search engines. Google is also
looking at ways to deliver information to your mobile device about
things you would not search for otherwise, but would be of interest to
you.
This goes beyond Google Now or the billions of searches on
Google every day. This is part of Google’s master plan to “organize the
world’s information and make it universally accessible.” In order to
do this, Google needs to find out our “hidden needs” and then use
creative sampling methods to serve them.
Google has been working
with about 150 people on an experiment where users are notified on their
phone from Google, “What did you want to know recently?” several times
each day. The answers provided helps the company determine how it might
deliver information that you would never think of searching for. This
is known as the Daily Information Needs Study.
The research is
not complete, but coupling this research with other contextual data,
such as GPS and other phone information is expected to enable Google to
provide a new class of service, beyond Google Now, or Siri Thinks Ahead.
It would be able to preemptively answer questions. The research will
attempt to find all that is “unGoogled” (if that is possible). Time and
analysis of the patterns of information may provide a paradigm for
Google to adopt a whole new way to handle search.
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