Search:



The Web

Rediff








Home > Business > PTI > Report

Google begins work on speech search

October 13, 2004 18:47 IST

Internet company Google has been working on speech and multimedia content search on the Internet, but believes that text search will continue to be dominant in future.

"We believe text will remain dominant for many, many years," Google co-founder and President (products) Larry Page told reporters on Wednesday at the company's India R&D centre in Bangalore.

Page and Sergey Brin (who heads technology), the two founders of Google, are on their first visit to India. They are confident that their India team would build 'great products' for the world.

Google has set up in Bangalore the 'mirror image' of its Mountain View office in the United States, with about 10 people, and is 'hiring aggressively.' The company officials, however, would not say how much money would be invested or how many people would be recruited at the company's Bangalore and Hyderabad centres.

"We were too late ourselves, (we would have) preferred to do it sooner. But there are only so many things we can do at once," Brin, who joined Page while studying at Stanford University and worked on the project that became Google, said.

Google India R&D Centre co-head Lalitesh Katragadda said Google scientists were working on an 'expanded image search', besides a demo lab, using speech search.

His colleague, Krishna Bharat, who is credited with inventing Google News, said they had begun working on understanding the nuances of Indian languages to make possible internet search in east Asian scripts.

Brin said the company had been continuously refining Google search and has felt the need to do more work in improving the rankings.

"Search is good business and it is a very competitive business," he said, adding that Google technology was better than rival search engines.

Page said additional features were to be added to Gmail, Google's free e-mail service, which is presently being offered on invitation, before making it available to more users.

"We are focused on seeing how we can enhance user experience. We need to add more features," Brin said, adding that the effort was to enable internet users easy scaling without hitches.

Google is to announce its results later this month, the first after it became public in August when it raised $1.67 billion in an innovative Dutch auction method.



Article Tools
Email this article
Top emailed links
Print this article
Write us a letter
Discuss this article









© Copyright 2004 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.











Copyright © 2004 rediff.com India Limited. All Rights Reserved.