Kumo email

As you may have heard, Microsoft is now internally testing a new search engine codenamed "Kumo." Here's the text of the internal email announcing this to Microsoft employees yesterday:

From: Satya Nadella

Sent: Monday, March 02, 2009 4:18 PM

To: Microsoft - All Employees (QBDG)

Subject: Announcement: Internal Search Test Experience

The Search team needs you. We've been working hard to improve our search service and want to share the progress we are making with you. We are launching a new test program called kumo.com for employees to try and provide feedback. Kumo.com exists only inside the corporate network, and in order to get enough feedback we will be redirecting internal live.com traffic over to the test site in the coming days. Kumo is the codename we have chosen for the internal test.

In spite of the progress made by search engines, 40 percent of queries go unanswered; half of queries are about searchers returning to previous tasks; and 46 percent of search sessions are longer than 20 minutes. These and many other learnings suggest that customers often don't find what they need from search today.

We believe we can provide a better and more useful search experience that helps you not just search but accomplish tasks. During the test, features will vary by country, but you'll see results organized in a way that saves you more time. An explorer pane on the left side of results pages will give you access to tools that help you with your tasks. Other features like single session history and hover preview help accomplish more in search sessions.

Your Next Search...

To get started, visit kumo.com or click one of the samples below to see how it's possible to find the right results more easily:

As employees, you are some of our most informed users and our toughest critics, and we highly value your input and feedback to help us build a better service. You have been an important voice in our efforts, and the feedback you've sent us since the company meeting has been amazing.

When you visit kumo.com, at the bottom right corner of the each page you'll see a feedback badge. We ask that each time you use the test site, click the feedback badge and take a moment to answer four quick and simple questions. Feel free to reach out to give us extra feedback directly on our blog and by mailing (an internal alias). For answers to common questions make sure to see our FAQ.

We are committed to rapid innovation and improvement. Please give the test site a try, rate the results and let us know what you think.

- Satya

CNET also has an interesting screenshot of Kumo:

The big question, of course is ... who cares? Can Microsoft ever really regain lost ground in this market? I don't think they can, to be honest. And I'm wondering if continued investment here isn't just a huge waste of time.

Discuss this Article 10

kenmcnamee
on Mar 3, 2009
Microsoft should just buy lmgtfy.com. http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=taylor+swift
subzerohitman721
on Mar 3, 2009
Interesting. Hopefully Microsoft can up its Search Engine Game. I for one do not use Live Search period.
yipcanjo
on Mar 3, 2009
Strangely enough, I've actually started using Live Search more these days....but not because of the "Cashback" or other such things. Rather, it's the splash images they've begun using that have pique my curiosity -- and others as well, I've noticed! They look nice, and I find myself wanting to see what "today's picture" is going to be. It brought me back to Live Search, and that's a big deal. Now that I'm back at Live Search, I'm noticing that the search results are very good -- or, perhaps, that Google's are getting worse. I don't know. There are just times when Live Search gets me the info that I need, whereas Google does not.
Josh_Miller
on Mar 3, 2009
Why? Why not just improve Live search? Next they'll be pushing Kumo email addresses and pushing people to use Kumo Spaces and Kumo Mesh.
DavidR91
on Mar 3, 2009
They still haven't caught onto the fact that a lot of users use Google because it is a clean, ultra-slim search engine. I don't give a shit about stupid extra services or background images on the engine itself - I want a search box, and I want my results. The search engine is not the destination itself
aemarques
on Mar 3, 2009
@DavidR91: Google is not (only) about being clean - it is (a lot) about one word and one word only: "relevance". It's true that when it appeared, the clean interface was also relevant, because all of us were using dial-up access and a clean page loaded mor fast. But that is not important today. What is important is that Google searches are (still are) more relevant. However (and here is were I disagree with Paul) if/when someone (Microsoft or otherwise) comes with an algoritm that returns more relevant results, people will turn its back on Google very, very fast. I know I will. Why? Because BG (Before Google) I used Lycos, Yahoo, Altavista, NorthernLight (remember?), HotBot and whatever was faster and/or more relevant to me. And yes, it can happen - again.
Dipsh t Admin
on Mar 3, 2009
I gotta agree here with aemargues. I was a died in the wool Altavista user, and it worked exceptionally well for it's time. However, I tried out this new, at the time, "Google" thing and have used them almost exclusively ever since. The Live Search image search is great, but the web results have generally been better for Google. And on Firefox with the CustomizeGoogle extension, it is even cleaner. If such an extension was made for other search engines, I would be more than willing to utilize them more often.
robertsjoe
on Mar 3, 2009
Kumo will have no affect on Google. No one cares about Microsoft search.
puzder
on Mar 3, 2009
I have found that Live search actually gives better searches. the focus on local results is huge, and the image results are much more accurate than Google. Google is the comfort zone, but its okay to try something new. Personally, I am glad that MS is continuing to innovate in this space. Where Paul would have a 1 search engine internet, MS innovating and trying something new keeps everyone ont heir toes. Kudos to MS for their efforts.
puzder
on Mar 3, 2009
@aemarques: Fact.

Please or Register to post comments.

IT/Dev Connections

Las Vegas
September 30th - October 4th

Paul ThurottYou'll have the opportunity to experience:
• 120 Technical
Sessions
• Networking with Peers
• Expert Speakers


Come See Paul Thurrott & Mary Jo Foley in Person!

Register Now

Office 365 InfoCenter

Get the latest insight and info from Paul

Read Now!

What I Use