Internet search giant Google will be going in for one of the biggest revamps of its search engine, something which would enable users to search information up to 70 per cent fresher than the current algorithm.
The new indexing system, dubbed 'Caffeine', aims to provide the largest selection of Web content ever offered on Google, says The Age.
It processes many hundreds of thousands of pages in parallel every second, taking up nearly 100 million gigabytes of storage in one database.
Google search veteran Amit Singhal said that their main aim was to improve user experience. "As the Web is moving forward, freshness is becoming critical and we have worked a lot on this. Starting tomorrow, our users will see 70 per cent fresher results in Google's search results," he said. "In our world, users come first and, with Caffeine, we will observe our user search experience getting much better, much fresher."
Talk of Caffeine has been around since last year when Google switched it on for a limited number of beta testers but today it will make its debut across all of its data centres.
The new indexing system, dubbed 'Caffeine', aims to provide the largest selection of Web content ever offered on Google, says The Age.
It processes many hundreds of thousands of pages in parallel every second, taking up nearly 100 million gigabytes of storage in one database.
Google search veteran Amit Singhal said that their main aim was to improve user experience. "As the Web is moving forward, freshness is becoming critical and we have worked a lot on this. Starting tomorrow, our users will see 70 per cent fresher results in Google's search results," he said. "In our world, users come first and, with Caffeine, we will observe our user search experience getting much better, much fresher."
Talk of Caffeine has been around since last year when Google switched it on for a limited number of beta testers but today it will make its debut across all of its data centres.
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