Search occupies this wonderful moment in a user's day where it doesn't even really break along demographics, right?
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Search is not just an activity or a destination. It's becoming more integrated and more of a platform.
I think as more people use the phones to access the Internet, they have a lot less patience for trying to find things on the search engines. That is because you need to figure a lot of things out for search to work.
One thing we should all understand is that we are brutally honest with search engines. You show me your search history, and I'll find something incriminating or something embarrassing there in five minutes. We are more honest with search engines than we are with our families.
It turns out a human being in two, three or four hours can build a search result that's much better than Google, Yahoo or Ask.
I think that ultimately over time we really should strive for a place where most information is available online and is searchable.
If we become increasingly humble about how little we know, we may be more eager to search.
I think that we're all continually searching for who we are, and that's ever-evolving and changing.
We get better search results and we see more appropriate advertising when we let Google know who we are.
People hate searching.
The largest issue with search is that we learned about it when the web was young, when the universe was 'complete' - the entire web was searchable! Now our digital lives are utterly fractured - in apps, in walled gardens like Facebook, across clunky interfaces like those in automobiles or Comcast cable boxes.