So when I first started talking
Posted: Sun Dec 22, 2024 8:09 am
The final thing is that, in terms of personalization, Apple have a potential advantage here too because with the federated search approach, Apple can do what I call fully authenticated personalization. If you do a recipe search for a schnitzel recipe on Google, you'll get some personalized results, but it will be from the web index. If you do a schnitzel recipe search on your device, this federated search approach will allow Apple to look into your "private" databases.
If you've got the Recipe Keeper app, it will see, oh, yes, you've got a taiwan business email list schnitzel recipe in the app. I'm going to pull that out. It might see that your mom sent you a message on Facebook about the best way to make schnitzel, so it will pull that out. This is stuff that Google can't do. Google can't look behind the curtain into your "private" databases. Over the last few years, I think Apple have been playing a slow game, laying the pieces to move towards this mobile native sort of experience.
about this research in mid-2022, at the SearchLove Philadelphia conference, I predicted that Apple would move the search field onto the iOS home screen in order to try to change user behavior and push them towards doing this mobile native sort of search rather than having users go into a web browser to do a search. Then a couple of weeks later, Apple announced they were doing exactly that, and that rolled out in iOS 16.
If you've got the Recipe Keeper app, it will see, oh, yes, you've got a taiwan business email list schnitzel recipe in the app. I'm going to pull that out. It might see that your mom sent you a message on Facebook about the best way to make schnitzel, so it will pull that out. This is stuff that Google can't do. Google can't look behind the curtain into your "private" databases. Over the last few years, I think Apple have been playing a slow game, laying the pieces to move towards this mobile native sort of experience.
about this research in mid-2022, at the SearchLove Philadelphia conference, I predicted that Apple would move the search field onto the iOS home screen in order to try to change user behavior and push them towards doing this mobile native sort of search rather than having users go into a web browser to do a search. Then a couple of weeks later, Apple announced they were doing exactly that, and that rolled out in iOS 16.