Posted by manticor | Under Draw - No Points Awarded
Tuesday Jan 27, 2009
Today I decided that since I never seem to have time to make it to the Apple store, I might just buy a case for my iPhone online. (Apparently the case for an iPhone 2G is incompatible, but that’s another story.)
So with that goal in mind, I searched for “iphone 3g case leather clip” (without quotes). I was hoping to find a leather iPhone 3G case with a belt clip. That’s pretty much what I found, but Live also decided to give me links to “Top Videos” related to my query. See below:

Search for "iphone 3g case leather clip"
This makes me wonder if Live is actually just taking the word “clip” and deciding that all queries with that word will be linked to videos… But why wonder when you can test?
Luckily, when I searched for “belt clip”, Live did not think I meant anything video related. (Oddly, when I searched for “snl clip”, Live did return videos, and Google did not.)
In the end, both engines offered a bunch of good links, and related ads. Both of them served my needs, and for that, this one gets chalked up as a draw.
Still, Google seemed to know that I was in shopping mode, and Live did not.
If you’re wondering how the iPhone case story ends, I have not made a purchase as of yet. All of them I’ve seen looked pretty worthless.
Posted by manticor | Under Point Google
Thursday Jan 22, 2009
I’m a Perl coder. Sort of. I’m still learning. That’s why I search for syntax examples every so often. I’m looking for an explanation of how things worked. Well, recently I searched for “map $_ => $_” (without the quotes), some Perl syntax I’d seen written somewhere else. I was hoping to find some information about the “map” function, and how it would interpret that particular set of input.
The results were very disappointing. Live Search returned a map of Redmond (where I conducted my search), and offered nothing related to Perl syntax in its results. I shouldn’t be surprised, this has been a problem before.
Here’s what I got:

map $_ => $_
It looks like Live is completely ignoring special characters, and is using the presence of “map” in the query as its exclusive trigger to show instant answers. But of course, I didn’t search for “map” at all…
Google returned some Perl related results, although they weren’t entirely useful. Still, at least there my actual query hit the server.
Posted by manticor | Under Point Google
Friday Jan 16, 2009
While studying for my Psychology class, the textbook made a claim that most people could not remember all the details on a penny, even though they’d seen them thousands of times in their life. Of course, I disagreed, and did what anybody would do. I sketched what I could remember, and then I did a search.
I decided to use the main search because it’s more accessible– I don’t have an image search plugin for my Firefox search bar. So I entered “penny” and I was off.
I was pleasantly surprised to find that Google was already sure that I was there to see pictures of pennies. I’m not sure how they knew, but they were right. Here’s what I saw:

Search for penny
So why doesn’t Live do this? Is it just the lack of universal search functionality that Google has implemented? Or do they also lack the data and/or logic to determine that many people searching for “penny” may be interested in seeing pictures?
* Disclaimer: I say that many people searching for “penny” are probably interested in seeing pictures, but I don’t know for sure. Maybe Google is wrong, and I’m also a fluke…
Posted by manticor | Under Point Google
Thursday Jan 15, 2009
In the course of my day I was asked a question about the right syntax for Adcenter to insert the Match Type into the destination URL.
Somebody asked me if this looks right:
http://www.domain.com/trackingurl?kw={keyword}&match={MatchType}
I answered that it looked right… but I wanted to make sure, so I searched for {matchtype} adcenter insert. Here’s what I got:
Search for {matchtype} adcenter insert
I was fully expecting to see examples of this syntax right within the snippets of the search results, giving me the only confirmation I needed. Alas, Live had not a single reference to the bracketed word, while Google had numerous examples.
Posted by manticor | Under Draw - No Points Awarded
Wednesday Jan 14, 2009
…until now.
I thought it would be fair to highlight that if you were to compare Live to Google every time you search, as I do, then you would find that they often tie, rather than one set of results being clearly superior.
Example query below:
![maximum-roth-ira-contribution Search for [maximum roth ira contribution]](http://rabidwombat.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/maximum-roth-ira-contribution-searchvote-300x185.png)
Search for maximum roth ira contribution
I would wager that this kind of tie is fairly common for many queries. Unfortunately for Microsoft, a tie in relevance does not convert Google users, nor increase loyalty ofcurrent users.
This one’s a draw.
Posted by manticor | Under Point Google
Monday Jan 12, 2009
So the other day I had a song stuck in my head. As it turned out, it was a song that I liked. The trouble was, I didn’t know the name of the song, or the artist that wrote it. It had been months since I’d heard it, but I wanted to hear it again. Luckily I had just upgraded to the iPhone 3G, so I could now download the song from iTunes even though I had no WiFi available.
Except I didn’t know the name of the artist, or the song title. BUT, the words of the chorus kept echoing in my ears: “Come back to me, it’s almost easy.” So like any good surfer, I tried searching for those lyrics in order to determine the artist name, and song title.
Using my trusty Firefox toolbar, I performed a search for: come back to me it’s almost easy. Here’s what I got:
Blam! Thanks to Google, now I know the both the artist name and the song title. I was sorely disappointed to find that Live returned nothing related.
But this got me curious… surely with such a large index they’ve got to have the same page as Google does. So I decided to search again for the same thing, only with quote marks: “come back to me it’s almost easy”. Here’s what I got:
Much to my surprise (and chagrin), Live indeed had the page indexed, they just failed to rank it properly. If it was outside the index, at least there would have been a good reason for not showing it the first time, but alas, it should’ve been there.
It looks to me like Live is not defaulting to phrase match, which I see as a major problem.