Bing: Beginning the Next Phase of Image Search

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

    Bing: Beginning the Next Phase of Image Search


    Posted: 19 Sep 2014
    At Bing, we’re constantly striving to make your search experience better. In order to do this, we spend a lot of time examining what you’re trying to accomplish. When it comes to image search, we know that when you conduct a search you’re either looking for a specific image or you’re looking to browse and explore across a range of different topics. We refer to these primary intents as hunting and exploring.

    Often you’ll start hunting and end up exploring or vice versa. On average, people do two searches and view about 6 images. With this in mind, we look at how queries are entered, how many images are viewed, how far down you scroll and whether or not you use filters to better understand whether you’re a hunter or explorer and in turn how we can make the experience easier.


    At a high level, here are the three ways that we try to make your image searches more successful.
    • Images: Regardless of whether you’re hunting or exploring, making sure that we have high quality and relevant image results is our top priority. You can read more about how we do that here.

    • Suggestions and alternate content: If you’re scrolling down the page and not clicking on images, we reason that you’re probably not finding what you’re looking for. To help, we have a powerful and continually maturing set of search suggestions and collections to help you visually refine, explore and change topics.

    • Actions: Actions are a set of features that we have introduced to help you, well, take action. This includes things like our filters that help you refine a result set by letting you sort by source or size. We also have features like image match which lets you upload an image and we’ll retrieve identical or similar sets of images. We’ve also made it easier for people who like assembling images on Pinterest to do that more easily with a one-click pin feature.
    In each of these areas, we are working hard to improve the capability and quality that will enable us to ship new and improved features more quickly as well as enable new scenarios that we hope will surprise and delight you.

    This week we’re rolling out the first step on this path: a new user experience that provides a foundation for us to better meet your needs. The new experience is visually rich and adapts based on your query, resolution and interaction. It looks great across devices, its touch friendly and is also extensible enough to support the direction we’re heading in.



    Looks and feels great across devices and screen sizes

    Our set of search suggestions and alternate content has grown and improved over time, for example we recently added Pinterest board search. At the same time, people increasingly access Bing from a wide array of devices and screen resolutions with and without touch. This evolves our old experience which struggled to cleanly support new content, different resolutions and input methods.

    Now you’ll notice that image results will expand to the full width of your screen with exploration suggestions being placed dynamically according to your screen resolution. This means an uncluttered first page where images are the hero. You’ll also notice that images have higher fidelity and are cropped and altered less to better inform your click.



    The experience is great with touch. On your Windows 8 device or iPad, try swiping through one of the inline carousels (more on these later) or clicking on an image and swiping your way through more. Everything is touch friendly, responsive, fast and fluid – look out for a post next week detailing Bing’s touch and iPad friendly features. These improvements will soon come to Kindle and Android tablets as well.


    We now have one cohesive, touch friendly experience across desktop and tablet and will be improving it more over time. Our mobile experience has already gone through similar changes and will feel very familiar to you after using this experience – check it out on your Windows Phone, iPhone or Android.


    Refinements and exploration just got easier

    Our refinement and exploration suggestions and Pinterest board search have always been among our most popular features and have remained a big focus for this release.

    We will now intelligently place the right content in the right place according to your query, screen resolution and device inside carousels that you can swipe or click through to see more.

    As we began testing this experience with users, we found that many wanted an always available way to refine their search or find suggestions. To meet this need, we’ve introduced a mini-header that slides in after you scroll down. It’s designed to take about 10% of your screen to ensure it doesn’t detract from an immersive image search experience but still provide you with everything you’d need to change query or topic.



    The suggestions that we display in the mini header will change as you scroll through the inline carousels to give you access to what you last saw. You can always click the button on the right to rotate through the content — the dots represent the each available set of content in the order they appear on the page.

    Finally, we recently released a new hover experience and you may notice that we have now begun showing a link with a search glass icon for many images.



    We’ve noticed that people often want to learn more about or see more images like an image they’ve found but struggle to formulate the right query to do so. To fix this, we now give you a suggested search link in the pop-out.

    In the example above, we have a lot of beautiful results for ‘National Park’ but the 2nd image may seem like the perfect place to visit next. Now you can simply hover on it, see that it is from ‘Yosemite National Park’ and click through to see more images of Yosemite.

    All together, these improvements will allow us to surface all the rich and relevant content you love and continue to experiment with more, without cluttering the main image search experience regardless of device or resolution.

    When will this be released?

    The experience will begin to roll out in stages to all desktop browsers and tablets in all markets in the coming weeks with Kindle and Android tablets following very soon after.

    We’ll be looking out for your feedback and how you use the product and will be working continuously to respond to it and improve the experience over time.

    - The Bing Image Search Team
    Source...
    Brink's Avatar Posted By: Brink
    19 Sep 2014



  1. Posts : 3,904
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
       #1

    Bing is slowly catching upto Google, however i think many People will use google.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 20,583
    Win-7-Pro64bit 7-H-Prem-64bit
       #2

    Bing is my search first search Image or what ever
    It's usually does not fail
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 2,047
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64-BIT
       #3

    Use Google, Bing I think will hog my computer up (Since FireFox was always a CPU itensive application)
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 20,583
    Win-7-Pro64bit 7-H-Prem-64bit
       #4

    Bing desktop might but Bing as a website uses nothing more than any other search webpage ?
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 757
    Win10 Pro 64-bit
       #5

    Google started a lame "Safe Search" feature a while back that cannot be totally switched off. If Bing doesn't saddle their image search engine with similar restrictions, it could be a real alternative to Google.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 263
    Windows 7 Home Premium x64
       #6

    OvenMaster said:
    Google started a lame "Safe Search" feature a while back that cannot be totally switched off. If Bing doesn't saddle their image search engine with similar restrictions, it could be a real alternative to Google.
    Google's safe search can't be totally switched off? How is that? How do you know it's not totally off?

    I just asking because I wouldn't want to miss any important pictures.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 20,583
    Win-7-Pro64bit 7-H-Prem-64bit
       #7

    I believe either safe search and yes Bing also has a version of it too the user needs to be signed in to that search before it's activated

    Any censorship is a bad thing spencer1,
    Start in one way and expand in others just for the word of safety
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 3,904
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
       #8

    I think the only time i have used bing, is when i install something and forget to untick the box
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 757
    Win10 Pro 64-bit
       #9

    spencer1 said:
    OvenMaster said:
    Google started a lame "Safe Search" feature a while back that cannot be totally switched off. If Bing doesn't saddle their image search engine with similar restrictions, it could be a real alternative to Google.
    Google's safe search can't be totally switched off? How is that? How do you know it's not totally off?

    I just asking because I wouldn't want to miss any important pictures.
    Google No Longer Allows You to Disable SafeSearch, and That Makes Google Search Worse | WebProNews
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SafeSearch
    https://productforums.google.com/for...c/DW5PQCBIwA4J
      My Computer


 
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

  Related Discussions
Our Sites
Site Links
About Us
Windows 7 Forums is an independent web site and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Microsoft Corporation. "Windows 7" and related materials are trademarks of Microsoft Corp.

© Designer Media Ltd
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:57.
Find Us