Danny Sullivan of the Search Engine Watch journal has a blog post entitled Google Worried About Microsoft's Browser Advantage? What Advantage? where he writes
I am nauseatingly exhausted by idea that Microsoft will conjure up some
magical method of yanking people into its
MSN Windows Live
Whatever You Want To Call It search service via the Windows operating system
or the Internet Explorer browser. Microsoft has failed for years to be
successful in this, which is why it's amazing anyone would still believe it.
In the
longer version of this post for Search Engine Watch
members, I revisit
the tired facts in more depth:
- How search has been integrated into Windows and Internet Explorer since
1996 but failed to help Microsoft.
- How even when MSN Search was made the default choice by 2001, Google still
rose in traffic share.
- How putting the search box into the "chrome" of the browser doesn't
necessarily mean Microsoft will have a major win this time.
- How search via toolbars still remain the minority of the way searches
happen.
Meanwhile, skip past the business aspects. What about the consumer issue of
choice? The New York Times writes of Google's preferred solution:
The best way to handle the search box, Google asserts, would be to give
users a choice when they first start up Internet Explorer 7. It says that
could be done by asking the user to either type in the name of their favorite
search engine or choose from a handful of the most popular services, using a
simple drop-down menu next to the search box. The Firefox and Opera browsers
come with Google set as the default, but Ms. Mayer said Google would support
unfettered choice on those as well.
Sure, I can get behind the "give people a choice from the beginning" idea.
But if Google wants Microsoft to do that, then Google should make it happen
right now in Firefox, which pretty much is Google's surrogate browser. If this
is the best way for a browser to behave, then Google should be putting its
weight on Firefox to make it happen. And Google should also ensure it does the
same with Dell, where it has a
partnership
that I believe makes it the default search engine on new Dell computers.
There definitely has been a bunch of interesting commentary on this topic. Check it out on
tech.memeorandum.