Microsoft Bing Is Officially Live
June 3rd, 2009 by Darrin Widick
Though it was actually available yesterday, today is the official launch of Bing, Microsoft’s evolution of its Live Search and – perhaps – its final attempt to become a major player in the search space. If Bing fails, a marriage with Yahoo or Twitter or some similar entity would have to be the next step (and it may be anyway).
Nonetheless, Bing has been deployed – and we think it is better than the Live Search engine previously offered by Microsoft. Not everyone agrees. And that’s the purpose of this post. Let’s take a look at what Microsoft says about its new product, and what some industry experts are blogging about.
Microsoft says that their research indicated that 72% of searchers thought the SERPs (search engine results pages) were disorganized, and that half of their search queries on any engine failed to meet expectations. So Microsoft set out to create a “decision engine” that helps folks complete tasks and make decisions.
For example, Microsoft says, data told them that 43% of people do healthcare research via search engines. So Bing is designed to “provide you with faster access to meaningful health information, including content from trusted sources such as Mayo Clinic and the American Cancer Society.” A query on “epileptic seizures” brought up results divided into three or so results under these separate categories: News, Medication, Causes, Tests, Diagnosis and Images.
Read more about Bing on the Microsoft at the DiscoverBing.com Web site.
What are others saying? Search Engine guru Danny Sullivan weighs in with a long, long review at Search Engine Land and a companion piece about the State of Search. Here’s a forum discussion at Webmaster World and the Wall Street Journal weighs is with an article and a blog post from All Things Digital.




Meta tags keywords used to be the be-all, end-all for website search engine optimization. Create a page, stuff a bunch of relevant (and irrelevant if you wanted) words into the keyword meta tag and, like magic, you ranked well in the fledgling search engines.