Yahoo launches Axis 'search browser'
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Yahoo's Axis browser delivers thumbnail images instead of text for search results.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Yahoo launches Axis, a "search browser" with a focus on mobile
- Axis returns search results as thumbnails of the actual Web pages
- Yahoo currently has about 16% of the Web search market
- Google and Microsoft's Bing also are working on innovations
Axis, the company announced late Wednesday,
is a stand-alone app currently available for Apple mobile devices like
the iPhone and iPad and on desktops as an add-on to established browsers
like Explorer, Firefox, Chrome and Safari.
Yahoo special project
director Ethan Batraski wrote on the company's search blog that "with a
mobile-first focus," the company "set out to completely re-think and
re-design how users search and browse the Web."
The result was Axis, a
visual-rich tool that aims to combine searching and browsing into one
experience. On mobile devices, a query returns thumbnail images of
actual Web pages instead of a list of links. People can use the
touchscreen to scroll and choose a page.
Early reviews have been
positive for the mobile version of the tool, which addresses the rising
percentage of time Web users spend accessing the Internet on phones and
tablets.
"Mobile is where the
action is, so it makes sense that Yahoo threw the bulk of its
development love into the tablet and smartphone versions," wrote CNET's Rafe Needleman.
"On the iPad, Axis is simply a great browser. The integrated search
feature is intuitive, and being able to move through search results
without having to go back to search makes sense. After only a few
minutes using it I thought, Why hasn't Google done this yet? It's that
good."
A pull-down feature lets
users flip back and forth between a Web page and their search results.
It also features search bookmarking and integration with Pinterest.
Users can also integrate
Axis among multiple devices, saving a personal homepage and searches on
phone, tablet and desktop computers. The tool's main page also shows
"trending" searches at any given time.
On the desktop version,
Axis appears as a small search box in the bottom left corner of the
browser window, allowing people to keep using whatever browser they
like.
The unveiling of Axis
comes as Yahoo is trying to jockey for position among the big three of
Web search -- Google, Microsoft's Bing and Yahoo Search.
Google controls about 64% of the search market, according to March numbers from Experian Hitwise. Yahoo (which is powered by Bing) had about 16% of the market, while Bing itself accounted for another 14%.
E.B. Boyd, of Fast Company, writes
that the release of Axis marks a new charge in the browser wars, as all
three companies work to revamp, and redefine, Web search.
Boyd wrote:
"The three leaders in
this space have each realized that the conventional paradigms for
search, architected over a decade ago when bandwidth was low, few people
used the Web for more than research, and almost all computing was done
at desktops, no longer work in an age of mobile apps, multiple devices,
big data, and ever greater expectation on the part of the consumer that
working online is about getting things done, not just perusing
documents."
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