Friends, Technology, Web2.0 - What I am reading

    [Home] [Recent] [Site Map]

   

Google Gets Trendy

Google today launched an improvement to their Trends service, Hot Trends, which lists the top 100 break out searches of each day. These are not the top searches, but the ones that deviate the most from their normal search pattern.

Clicking on a trend leads to a page that includes news, blogs, and web searches in an attempt to explain why that search term might be as popular as it is. For example, today "bubonic plague" checks in at #70 because yesterday"s news story about a capuchin monkey at the Denver Zoo dying of the disease. The results are, of course, not always perfect.

For example, this week"s XM radio outage story takes up six different spots on today"s Hot Trends list. It would probably be more useful if Google"s algorithm attempted to group related searches into a single topic (or at least gave that option). Also, as Duncan Riley of Techcrunch points out, the very odd term"legless chihuahua" appeared in two spots on yesterday"s trends list (though apparently spurred by a news story about, you guessed it, legless chihuahuas that made its way across the wires over the weekend).

Other oddities appear across today"s list. The #14 search, for example, is "2004 world series champs" -- which, as an Ameican baseball fan like myself knows, is the Boston Red Sox, but the trends page for that term shows no recent news or blog posts that would have caused that specific search rather than the more common search for the team"s actual name. Further, the searches appear to be coming out of Houston, Texas and Louisville, Kentucky, hardly bastions of Red Sox fandom. And why that would out rank #19 "whosarat.com" which was featured in a front page New York Times article this morning and widely reported across political blogs, is something of a mystery to me.

Google"s Hot Trends is essentially like Yahoo!"s list of "Buzz Index Movers" which lists the day"s top search gainers. Though Yahoo!"s list doesn"t give as much information as Google"s, it appears to have less peculiar listings upon first glance. That is perhaps because it is edited by humans. Strangely, there seems to be little overlap between the two lists.

Hot Trends could, of course, be very useful for Internet marketers and researchers studying how information flows and spreads across the web. It would be great if Google would offer API access to the service, especially with an expanded data set that included more frequent updates and a largest list of terms.

The search term "chihuahua puppies," of the legged variety, appear"s on Yahoo"s list of top decliners today, down 97%. Maybe Paris Hilton switched search engines overnight.


>>Source Link
>>Blog: Read/WriteWeb
>>Publish Date: 5/23/2007 8:00:59 AM
>>Keywords: search list

Related Posts
>>Top 500 Search Engine Keywords Of The Week #
    Jump directly to this week"s list of the top 500 most frequently searched keywords.
>>Top 500 Search Engine Keywords Of The Week #
    Jump directly to this week"s list of the top 500 most frequently searched keywords.
>>Top 500 Search Engine Keywords Of The Week #
    Jump directly to this week"s list of the top 500 most frequently searched keywords.
>>Adding a List of Keywords #
    My business partner is developing our site and wants to put a list of keywords at the bottom of some of our shop pages (i.e. below the text) in the hopes that this will get the search engines to notic
>>Search Engine Advertisers" Wish List #
    In his latest ClickZ column, Kevin Lee has compiled a Search Engine Wish List -- changes that search engines could implement to make PPC search advertisers" lives easier. The first installment include
>>California Home to Quarter of Top 100 Alt Search Engines #
    The Library House blog has done a geographic analysis of Charles Knight"s Top 100 Alternative Search Engines list. After a bit of Web research, Library House was able to find out where 94 of the 100
>>Google, Yahoo Respond to Click Quality Council Guidelines #
    Last week, the Click Quality Council issued a list of 8 Principles of Click Quality that its members feel are necessary to deliver adequate quality in pay-per-click advertising campaigns. I spoke to
>>Poll: *Really* Alt Search Engines #
    Charles Knight, Read/WriteWeb"s search engine authority, has provided another list of weird search engines. We"re interested in getting your opinion on this, as a bit of weekend geeky fun. So which o
>>Google News adds feature from Google Blog Search #
    Google Operating System shows some screen shots that it calls, "Another Step towards Google News - Blog Search Integration." Adding a feature in the left sidebar may or may not be a prelude to integr

Other Posts:
>>Second Brain: Organizing Your Information Chaos
>>Flickr: Strong On Content & Community, But Commerce Needs Work
>>The Future of Ask.com: Search? How About Advertising
>>Zoho Launches Notebook Beta
>>Overview of the Identity Landscape
>>EMI Acquired For US$6B - Digital and Online Strategy to "Accelerate"
>>eBay Startup Sales - Going, going, gone...to the geek in the back!
>>Facebook Getting Spacey?
>>Amazon Gets Tough with Zlio
>>The Online Advertising Bubble: DoubleClick, aQuantive Deals Over-Priced?
>>Read/WriteWeb Blog Network Launches With last100.com
>>Thanks Sponsors


Month Archives:

Top Tags:
Company & Product Profiles Internet Technology Google Search feature column Business and Technology letter analysis WebApp咨询 Search Headlines comment application 业界信息 Startups news Web2.0 Google/SEO 业界动态 未來趨勢 產業策進 創投 創業案例 Yahoo 互联网络 deal widget 国际政治 Web 2.0 News & Ideas


@2007 All rights Reserved