Google Chairman Eric Schmidt said during the panel "The Future of the Digital Economy" at the World Economic Forum that "the Internet will disappear," replying to a question
about the evolution of the Web. He meant to describe the integration of
search technology into operating systems and applications that gives access to answers without going to a search engine and typing keywords into a box to retrieve information similar to Google Now and
Microsoft Cortana.
"There will be so many IP addresses because of IPv6, so many devices, sensors, things you are wearing, things you are integrating with that you won't even sense it; it will
be part of your presence all the time," Schmidt said. "Imagine you walk into a room, and the room is dynamic. And with your permission and all of that, you are interacting with the things going
on in the room."
Vodafone's CEO Vittorio Colao agreed with Schmidt. He along with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, and Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg
were on the panel.
A Disappearing Internet
Microsoft has begun to make the Internet disappear on mobile, and soon desktop. It doesn't mean search engines will
vanish, but they will become less important in a world where information gets pushed rather than pulled to the user. In Windows 10, scheduled for release later this year, Microsoft's personal
assistant Cortana will have a space in the toolbar on desktops running the Windows 10 operating system. Those running Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 operating system will have the option to upgrade for
free during the first year
Bing continues to become an increasingly intelligent fabric powering a variety of experiences across Microsoft, from Insights for Office and Kinect voice on Xbox, even Apple Siri, and Apple Spotlight, a system-wide desktop search feature for OS X
and iOS operating systems. Bing also has a partnership with Amazon for Kindles and Fire. "It's a larger reflection on taking search out of the browser box, and bringing it into new experiences
that's not only shaped by what, but how people search," Ryan Gavin, GM of Search at Microsoft, told Search Marketing Daily. "Bing is the brains behind all of that."
If Cortana
can't directly answer a question, the user ends up on a Bing search results page. Ads come along with that page. "The way we think about search in the future will fundamentally change; today, it's so
1995 …, you launch a browser," Gavin said. "Being able to talk to a computer in your kitchen and ask questions without typing a query in a search box will enable some very different search
innovation."
Intent signals will become clearer. Advertising and content marketing will become more precise. Searching for zoo hours might really mean how someone can plan a fun day with their
kids. It will let search technology gain a greater understanding of intent. Natural language and speech lets you do that."
How Cortana Works
Technology in Cortana responds to
real-time events, pushing information to the user based on information stored on the phone, for example. The request might occur on smartphones or desktops, but the processing occurs on a server in
the cloud. The user interaction even comes back down from the cloud server to the user interface on the device. This means Cortana can work with any device that connects to the cloud or servers
connected through Internet accesses. Knowledge Graph, speech recognition, language and query understanding, and relevance are called a technology stack that makes up Cortana.
Microsoft
recognizes the audio and processes it into text before passing the text into the Bing system. Natural language queries are processed a little different than keyword queries, explains
Mike Calcagno, director of engineering, who is spearheading many of search and Cortana efforts. "We generate results using the standard pattern that we use to generate relevant results for Bing,"
he said. "The architectural patterns are similar on how Cortana understands and processes intent vs. how Bing understands queries and processes intent. The models are different and data sources are
different."
Since Cortana doesn't live on or belong to a specific device, the technology could work on any Internet-connected gadget. "She's an entry point to a set of services, said
Calcagno. "In the near future we make the Windows phone and PC work great together."