Posts tagged with 'Google'

Shaking up the online property market

By Mru Kodali on 16 March 2010

Recent news that Tesco and Google may be gearing up to launch property websites could be a wakeup call for letting and estate agents across the UK and can only be good news for the user experience in this sector.

Sites like Rightmove.co.uk are already pretty well established in this space so building market share won’t be a breeze. However, both Tesco and Google are trusted names in the UK and Google already offers property search in the US and Australia, so it should be reasonably easy to port this offering across. Tesco has tried to do this in the past, but had to pull out due to legal challenges from estate agents, but now the Office of Fair Trading has recommended reforms to this industry which will allow the entry of players like Google and Tesco.

Tesco seems to be taking advantage of this by launching a website called iSold which lets people sell their home for a flat £999 fee. Moves like this have the potential to revolutionise the way property is sold in the UK and estate agent take-up may not be a crucial factor, as it could pave the way for increasing numbers of private sales.

Concerns about hidden problems and the plain unfamiliarity with the process tend to be the barriers to private sales at the moment. But the credibility and trust that may come with big names of Tesco and Google, along with detailed guidance for sellers, could alleviate these issues. Either way, user experience will be key and Google will likely focus on this. As a result, others may eventually have to focus on this as well to continue to compete.

If these developments take place, house buyers/sellers and renters could benefit from not only greater choice at lower costs but hopefully a higher bar set for user experience.  Making selling and buying homes easier is not just a great thing for consumers but may well act as an instrument for a quicker economic recovery.

Photo credit: I See Modern Britain via Flickr / Creative commons

Phasing out IE6 support - A late present for developers

By Brigitte Simard on 4 February 2010

The debate has been going on over the last year or so about the continual support for Internet Explorer 6 – Should it stop or shouldn’t it. Finally this weekend, Google announced that it will begin to phase out support for IE6 as it identified the browser as vulnerable in the recent cyber attacks on Google in China. So it seems we have these attacks to thank for this.

Let me explain – As a developer, IE6 can cause all manner of issues and extra work, and when Microsoft announced last year that it would support it for at least another 5 years, I’m sure I wasn’t the only developer whose heart sank! To support IE6 when developing websites means a lot of extra effort, not to mention the fact that we can’t implement more up-to-date techniques without providing an alternative version for IE6 users.

Aside from this, IE6 has security flaws which haven’t gone unnoticed and it seems hackers made the most of these and were confident enough to attack Google.

So, this announcement from Google is welcomed by me and the rest if the developer community I’m sure, and it seems that now pressure is mounting for the browser to be phased out completely. Can we finally hope that that IE6 will be a thing of the past?

Google’s new phone in its new store: A User Experience view

By Mru Kodali on 8 January 2010

Screenshot of Google phone websiteGoogle’s launched its own branded phone (with HTC) after plenty of speculation in the mobile and business worlds. The move, however, came through its new e-commerce store, which was more of a surprise. As a User Experience enthusiast (and practitioner) I couldn’t help but investigate how Google tackled the customer experience  of their new online offering. Expectations are high given that Google’s notorious for copious research on making their services user-friendly.

I haven’t yet got my hands on a Nexus One phone so I checked out a 3D tour in their new online store. The store followed Google’s familiar minimalist look and feel and the pull tag just wanted to be clicked. The ‘feel’ option intrigued me - how was I going to know how it felt? It was a neat way of demonstrating the phone’s scale in relation to your palm but perhaps ‘Fit’ would’ve set my expectations better as I didn’t know any more about its tactility.

The weight option left me a little dissatisfied. I don’t know about you but I’ve never carried 53 pennies in change so couldn’t quite figure out how much this phone weighed or indeed how it compared to others on the market without leaving their site (as a slave to the metric system ounces meant little to me). A conversion calculator here would have helped; turns out it’s roughly 133 grams. Now, it may well have been a business decision not to offer comparisons with other phones but all this did was send me traipsing round the internet looking for comparison tables, not the best experience in my view.

The screen display looked impressive, it even offers a magnifying glass to see how pixel perfect it is. But I was hit with jargon here - AMOLED display. I had no idea what this meant, presumably new technology that made it better. But with no contextual help, I was off looking elsewhere again.

Accessories…doesn’t that mean things you can buy in addition to the phone? Apparently not…they’re features (such as noise cancellation and camera) that come with Nexus One. Hmm…interesting choice of words there.

All in all, I came away disappointed with the store’s labelling and navigation (or the lack thereof, if you discount the back button on most of its pages), and surprised that it wasn’t under Google’s perennial Beta. Perhaps the search giant has fallen prey to its own user experience bar set so high but I suspect the store wasn’t tested as rigorously as it could’ve been.

The caveat being of course that this store is intended for American audiences so aspects like weight in ounces may not pose an issue and perhaps our cousins across the pond have a higher propensity for marketing-ese than we Brits do. Let’s see whether and how Google localises its store when the phone’s available in Europe.

Google aims to give local councils an online boost

By Philip Webb on 19 August 2009

Our recent local council website usability report found that many local council websites still have a lot of room for improvement when it comes to usability. However, it seems that Google now wants to help local councils with their online offering with its Local government resource centre.

google-local-government-resource-centre

Offered in partnership with Directgov, LG Communications and the Society of IT Management (Socitm), Google’s resource centre offers a variety of online tools designed to help local government organisations to:

  • Make their websites easier to find
  • Improve the user journeys on their websites
  • Improve efficiency and reduce website costs
  • Build revenue through their websites
  • Help local business use digital to their advantage

The resources on offer such as Google Analytics, Website Optimiser, AdWords and AdPlanner certainly have the potential to be useful to local councils, but the question is whether the decision makers will see the value in and also get over any fear of using such an abundance of web-based tools.

Time will tell, but one thing’s for sure - the opportunity to save money through the resources on offer, and the strategic partnerships Google has developed for this venture could just swing its widespread adoption in the local government sector.

Apple blocks Google Voice app for the iPhone. What next?

By Mru Kodali on 4 August 2009

iPhoneGoogle Voice is a free new Internet telephony service that lets users screen, block and make calls, get voicemail transcripts, place conference calls and more. Sounds like a pretty handy app to me (shame it’s US invite only at the moment). But Apple has decided that it’s one app they can do without and blocked Google Voice on the iPhone - a move that seems motivated by competitive protectionism. The US Federal Communications Commission (a communications watchdog) seems to think so too as it’s now launched an inquiry into just why Apple banned Google Voice.

It’s about time someone looked into these seemingly more common exclusionary tactics and stood up for us, the consumers. After all a free market is about choice and surely Apple, with arguably one of the most popular phones ever to be released, can deal with a bit of healthy competition. Interestingly, this comes at the same time as Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google is resigning from the Apple board of directors because Google is increasingly moving into Apple’s space of operating systems (with Chrome) and telephony (with Android).

And now there’s a case of Apple trying to bribe a girl and her father to keep stum about an exploding iPod with an offer of a refund (which one would expect in the event of a device exploding in any case!). So is Apple, once only known for cutting edge and cool design, turning into a soulless corporate? We’ve seen Microsoft behave similarly with its exclusionary tactics and an attributable change in its brand perception. Google, the other tech biggie, has so far managed to stave off such a decline in image but for how long.

What disappointed me most about Apple’s move is that it comes at a time when we’re living through a recession that’s brought business ethics into serious question (in the financial sector at the very least). And Apple’s audacity in thinking that such a move would go unnoticed and/or without repercussion is simply astounding.

Is the tech sector going the same way that finance has in the past? I sincerely hope not as I for one have always thought of the tech sector as a refreshingly innovative space with humane workplaces and solid ethics. Is my continued optimism and belief in tech naive? Is this instead a taste of things to come?

Photo credit: William Hook via Flickr/Creative Commons