Plus Microsoft also has a lot of money and talent and have been in the search business a very long time. Bing still sucks. Windows Live Search sucked before it, and MSN search before that. There’s no guarantee Apple could meet or beat the threshold of being at least as good as Google, only that they could, technically, if they wanted to, develop their own, and then they would be the ones the DOJ is going after over the default search engine in Safari (not to mention the punks on the EC would probably find some new law to craft targeting Apple, so it had really better be worth the investment if they were ever going to build a search engine because the price for doing so is going up).
If I were to form a search habit today I don't think I would grade Bing lower than Google.
Google has gotten way worse and Bing way better.
Bing seems to respect the user's querries more too.
Apple Maps is sometimes nicer to use than Google Maps, but also was developed because at one point Google refused to give Apple turn-by-turn navigation, which would make it hard to sell iPhones as a phone with equal GPS capabilities as Android. There isn't really a search function that Apple needs and does not get via Google.
Bing is actually really really good these days, but was it worth the investment? I can understand that Microsoft want some of that R&D money back, but I really wish they would have kept focus on Windows and taken the high road and made it better, more secure, more private and then thrown Bing in Googles face without the ads and tracking, just to prove that "the big boys" make money on selling actual products, not their users. Sadly that wasn't the world we got, at least they resell Bing to more privacy focus companies.
Maybe Kagi proofs that "search" could also be financed by a premium subscription? Or being a system service which is subsidized like Siri? But I think the ad-model is the most easiest/profitable for search so there is always a pull to it.
https://appleinsider.com/articles/22/06/15/apple-ad-business...
The whole wanting a 100% Apple ecosystem isn't something I think many a clamoring, except perhaps the few insane hardcore Apple fans. Also currently the alternative is pretty much locking yourself into a Google ecosystem and that's worse.
I guess I kind of understand the motivation, but it seems so wasteful.
And if their founders become multi-billionaires, they all also start a space rocket company.
I use a strict adblocker, so finding what I'm looking for on the Google search results page is actually quite easy for me. I recommend checking out uBlock Origin[0] if you haven't already.
[0] https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock
Edit: You.com is a mildly interesting product, but not what I'm looking for at all. It has more ads than Google, and the default is to send my query to OpenAI and wait for it to spit some text out. No thanks
I don't actually really know why. There is nothing technically that makes me hesitate. When my trial was over, and I stared at the form for my credit card I kinda went "nah I'm good. I'll go back to google for now, i can switch when i really need to". I never really needed to.
Lots of cool functionality like:
Lenses: Allows you to run a search to prioritize certain domains to give you a particular "lens" to view it through.
Personalized results: Allows you to give additional weight or decrease the weight of certain domains.
Search Bangs: Shortcuts for executing the search somewhere else like Reddit, Wikipédia, Google, etc.
I decided to pay for it not because of the ads or privacy or anything else but because it allows me to make "search" work better for my needs.
Is this true, and if so, in what way?
> Google Docs uses cutting-edge features first (or only) found on Chrome.
Such as?
(I haven’t been a Google user for over six years, but back then neither of these were true, to my knowledge—if anything, Gmail worked better on Firefox due to significantly lower resource usage—and I can’t imagine what could have changed. Google Meet I’d understand, working properly depends on I think it’s WebRTC stuff Firefox still hadn’t shipped last I heard, but nothing that would be relevant for Gmail or Google Docs leaps out at me.)
I know I’ve heard at times of Google doing inappropriate user-agent sniffing and sending a degraded experience unless your browser claims to be Chromium, but I don’t think that’s reasonable grounds for saying it works best on Chrome, when it’s deliberate/malicious (organisational malice even if no other form) and works just fine in other browsers if they just pretend to be Chromium in their UA string.
Google has pestered and bullied and underhandedly bundled people into installing Chrome, but through most of the time they’ve made any claims about it, they’ve simply been lies, plain and simple. (Most commonly, they made a claim that was true at first, but were still making the same claim years later when it was no longer true but rather the converse in some cases.)
> Is this true, and if so, in what way?
I don't know about Gmail, but Google Translate won't let me use speech functionality in Firefox.
Tangential: Microsoft Teams mostly works in Firefox, but they have some arbitrary limitations: I can't call someone via Teams or pick up the phone if someone calls me via Teams. But I can make a video conference with someone who isn't at work, and the person I need to speak to. Or just use the iPhone app.
I'd expect similar things to be "broken by design" in Gmail.
Speech output works fine here (Firefox, Ubuntu 23.04). I remember needing to install some kind of system speech synthesis feature on my OS to get web speech to work, though, because Firefox doesn't have one of their own like Chrome.
As for speech input: Firefox doesn't implement the recognition part of the Web Speech API (demo here https://mdn.github.io/dom-examples/web-speech-api/speech-col...). In fact, every implementation is one with a browser prefix (https://caniuse.com/speech-recognition) so it's no wonder Firefox isn't supported yet.
As for Teams: Microsoft doesn't care about the 3% Firefox users they get and they simply don't test, that's my conclusion. Back when Teams simply threw up a "your browser is not supported" the whole thing worked 95% if you spoofed the user agent and the modifications to fix the rest weren't all that hard (Firefox has some audio input/output implementation differences).
Google later even refused to say what the competitors were paying for that rank, so they probably just overbid themselves for a while now.
Note that they do this for Android, too.
Google is going to capture most of Safari's market share with Chrome. Users know Chrome, they use it on desktop, it's convenient to use it on mobile too.
> Refocus on Android.
With the iPhone market being what it is in the US, I don't see Google letting that just go.
> Apple’s Search Engine
Honestly, I think they just might do that. They have been moving the "service" direction for some time.
> Chromium competition
Microsoft would have made competition for Chrome if they didn't drop their own engine in favour of Chromium.
The more cynical view.
New generation uses mobile before they even know desktop exists. Mobile first is real.
And by new generation I don't mean toddlers. I mean college freshmen.
For example another company could run google search on example.com and give let's say percentage of that revenue back to Google?
The pricing isn't public AFAIK, but a revshare like you suggest seems unlikely.