Google has updated its desktop search
tool with an automated sidebar that learns your interests as you surf.
Google Desktop 2 is available for download
here and gives users the ability to
search their own PC and the web simultaneously. It also includes an intelligent
sidebar that presents topics likely to be of interest and monitors RSS feeds.
Looking at the user's habits allows the software to filter the information in
the sidebar feature, limiting the need for manual configuration.
The sidebar's 'web clips' delivers updates from websites that were recently
visited based on the site's RSS feed, eliminating the need for the user to sign
up. Another feature called 'Quick view' offers links to websites that are often
visited.
"You can think of it as a personal web assistant that learns about your
habits and interests to identify and present web pages, news stories, and photos
that it thinks you will be interested in," said Marissa Mayer, director of
product management for consumer products at Google.
Other improvements include a scratch pad to record notes, news and local
weather reports. An Outlook toolbar has also been added to allow users to search
their emails using Google technology.
The company is also keen to get developers involved and has published a
set of application programming
interfaces for the sidebar. One of the first to be published will add a 'To
Do' list to the sidebar and others are available
here.
The sidebar works in a similar way to the widgets that are offered through
Yahoo's
Konfabulator or
Apple's
Dashboard. Widgets are small applications written in JavaScript that present
users with data from the web.
Tom Sanders contributed to this report from California.
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