Live Search home page redesign

I received an email from Microsoft today noting that they had redesigned the Live Search home page, but navigating there, I didn’t see a difference. Ah. I’m in Ireland currently and the changes are US-only at the moment. Here’s the Live Search blog post about the redesign:

Today we're releasing an update to the Live Search home page that received positive feedback from customers in trials last month. The new design features background images that will change frequently, augmented with what we call "hotspots." These interactive areas highlight parts of the image and help you explore search results related to the highlighted area. Users who have tested this new home page have found it both engaging and a great place to start a search.

New images and hotspots

In our release last spring we laid the foundation for this page. In this home page release we've added background home page images that we'll change regularly and hotspots that click through to great search results. Hotspots gleam to the user when the page first loads then fade into the image. Users can discover them again by moving their mouse over them, revealing details about the image and a link to a related search result. To ensure that users can start a search immediately, our base page loads first with the images and hotspots loading quickly afterward. Users on a broadband connection may not notice the two steps. Today we're releasing the new home page in the U.S. only, with more markets to follow in the future.

A great place to start a search

Our goal for the home page is to find the best way to enhance users' sense of discovery, surprise, and delight while balancing engineering realities for a great user experience.

Extensive user research and exploration of many concepts with our customers pointed us in the direction for this design. We want the page to be a great place to start a search and also to intrigue and inform as well. We think hotspots will help users discover parts of Live Search they might not know while not distracting from the core purpose of the page — searching.

We think the new design is a great start, but there's more to come, with lots of interesting directions that we'll be exploring in our next releases of the home page.

Chris Rayner, Senior Product Manager, and Zach Gutt, Senior Program Manager
Live Search User Experience team

Zach? Zach Gutt! I know Zach, but I had no idea he’d moved over to the Live side. (He at one time worked on ISA Server and Mark Minasi and I did a few road show events with him a few years back.) Anyway...

Discuss this Article 5

weedmonk
on Jul 30, 2008
I'm surprised at how quickly it loads despite the eye candy.
dgrisman
on Jul 30, 2008
This is a nice page for Live Search, and surely an alternative to Google. Google's been trying to let users customize their iGoogle homepages with various art, but I have not been impressed with any of the looks I have achieved. I probably need to give Live Search more attention since putting all of your querying into one engine isn't wise (should Google fail someday--anything's possible). Plus, Live Search may be at a disadvantage since it's not used as much as Google. Machine learning should improve the quality of query results. The more people use a search engine, the better it should get in retrieving appropriate and relevant information.
subzerohitman721
on Jul 31, 2008
Its going to be very hard for me to get go of Yahoo, but I'm still not satisfied with Live Search. A lot of the searches aren't as accurate in my opinion as I get with say a Yahoo or a Google. Perhaps if they'd sharpen it up. I'll keep checking on it but I'm not sold yet on Live Search.
johnbaxter
on Jul 31, 2008
I have now seen the Live Search page (Google is my default), and I do find it attractive. I haven't played with a hotspot, although I did notice the presence of one. I may switch defaults on my Vista laptop at least for a while (the first part of that is clearly Microsoft's intent, and it's even working on me). I prefer the stark Google pages (being one of those who remember that the "T" in "HTML" and the first "T" in "HTTP" stand for "text". (I would starve as a web "designer" as no one would hire me.) But I do see the attraction of the new Live Search pages. (For about 10 years I've quoted designer in the context web designer.)
gorath
on Jul 31, 2008
@ Johnbaxter. are you suggesting that web designers don;t actually 'design' webs? :-p

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