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Ask Jeeves Developing Wireless Search Service

Company would join Google and Yahoo in offering search capability for mobile devices.

Juan Carlos Perez, IDG News Service

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Looking to provide yet another way for users to tap its search capabilities, Ask Jeeves is developing new wireless search services to be launched this year, according to a company executive.

Unlike competitors such as Google and Yahoo, Ask Jeeves currently doesn't offer a way for users to access its search engine via mobile devices, but that will change at some point before the end of 2005, said Daniel Read, Ask Jeeves's vice president of product management.

"In search today you have to offer several access points to provide a good search service for consumers, so we believe we have to be there in wireless search, and we'll be coming out with a mobile product this year," Read said.

Although Google, Yahoo and others have rolled out wireless search services, Ask Jeeves believes this segment of the search market is still in its early days, Read said. In developing its wireless search services, Ask Jeeves will focus on providing very specific information to queries and not try to replicate the conventional Web searching experience, given the nature of wireless communications and devices, he said.

Viewable on a Handheld?

"A lot of search players have put traditional Web search on to wireless devices, but most of the Web pages you want to go to aren't rendered properly on a wireless device screen. So we're looking at rolling out specific search services for the wireless device," he said. For example, information that Ask Jeeves likely could make available from its search arsenal to wireless devices includes local business listings and maps, Read said.

"It's a very complex market," he said. "There are lots of different players involved. At the moment we're working out all the different strategic ways of looking at all those relationships and making sure we form the right partnerships and create ultimately products that are compelling for consumers. That's what really matters."

Beyond wireless searching, Ask Jeeves also has in the works a search service focused on digital music, he said. The Oakland, California, company believes there is a place for search engines in this market as users increasingly need help finding and retrieving music files on different platforms, such as the Web and mobile devices. "It's an area we're looking at actively," Read said.

The current challenge in the digital music market is resolving users' desires to have flexibility and not be tied to a specific device, application, or service with the vendors' attempts to keep users in one place, Read said. For a search experience to be fruitful and satisfying, users must feel that the results are comprehensive and were gathered impartially, he said. "If we're going to provide a music search experience, we need to bring those kinds of values to it," Read said.

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