Google hints at impending Caffeine launch

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

NEWS

Google says Caffeine, the next version of its search-engine infrastructure, will soon be available to a wider audience, offering technology designed to deliver faster and more accurate results.

The company has provided no specific launch date, but says Caffeine should be fully deployed early in 2010.

"The reason we are not rolling it out completely before the end of the year is because we know that for lots of webmasters the holiday period is extremely important, especially if they are in any way retail-based. We don't want them to have to worry about it in the lead-up to the holidays," Google spokesman Anthony House told ZDNet UK.

In a blog posting on Tuesday, Google principal engineer Matt Cutts said Google was ready to move to the next stage of the rollout by going live with Caffeine at one of its datacentres. "This means that a small percentage of Google's users will benefit from the technology behind Caffeine in their regular searches," Cutts wrote.

The first sign of Caffeine's impending appearance was a message on the Caffeine sandbox page, where developers and the public have been previewing the technology and leaving comments.

In the brief message posted at the sandbox address on Tuesday, Google said Caffeine would soon be available to the public. "We believe Caffeine is ready for a larger audience. Soon we will activate Caffeine more widely," the message said.

Google said the sandbox was no longer needed and was now closed. "But we appreciate the testing and positive input that webmasters and publishers have given," Google said.

In August, Google revealed that a large team had been working on Caffeine, which it described as a secret project to produce the search giant's next-generation architecture.

Caffeine looks unlikely to alter the familiar look of Google search, but will work in the background, improving the engine's index size, indexing speed and accuracy. Unlike Google's regular updates to its search technology, the new engine represents a significant change in part of the company's search infrastructure.

House said Caffeine represents an overhaul of the search-infrastructure backend. "Most consumers won't notice a difference. It shouldn't affect large numbers of webmasters, but that's why we launched it in a sandbox form — so that any unanticipated consequences could be flagged early," House said.

As well as offering benefits in terms of search quality, Caffeine will allow Google to make more innovations more easily. "If we do upwards of 400 algorithm tweaks a year, part of the idea behind Caffeine is that it will be easier to implement those tweaks," House added.

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

Jonathan Hassell

You can find more information on BS 8878 by Jonathan Hassell its lead-author at http://www.hassellinclusion.com/bs8878/ The page includes a...

9 hours ago by Jonathan Hassell on BSI publishes first British web accessibility standard
servermanagement

Thanks for this list. Now I know, what to include on my system to make it more functional.

9 hours ago by servermanagement on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
1000092626

What if it's a 4 car household? The point is, more bandwidth = more things you can do simultaneously, like streaming HD video in one room of the...

10 hours ago by 1000092626 on Virgin Media beats 100Mbps schedule, hikes prices
Gary Burton

No point whatsoever increasing broadband download speed. unless ever server on the net has access to massively up rated throughput. The worlds...

11 hours ago by Gary Burton via Facebook on Virgin Media beats 100Mbps schedule, hikes prices
Random_Error

They're also increasing their TV package prices, whether to help fund this or not.

12 hours ago by Random_Error on Virgin Media beats 100Mbps schedule, hikes prices
Techs UK

How can you set it up wrong to intermittently connect? Should I be asking for more pay? Outlook/Exchange is a breeze.

16 hours ago by Techs UK on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
JamesCheese

And how much did Microsoft pay you for that article?

16 hours ago by JamesCheese on Time for an evil umpire: Google, Microsoft & privacy
JamesCheese

"But how many times have you seen someone make a video call from a tablet?" I do myself a lot. "How often have you seen someone hook up a tablet...

16 hours ago by JamesCheese on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
k0tcs3

I have to disagree with this article. Maybe there is a cultural difference between the US and UK, or maybe your network of friends is less...

16 hours ago by k0tcs3 on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
filthylooker

My thoughts are that there's some space for change in the business world for tablets as destop replacements. I'd contend that the tablet has a...

19 hours ago by filthylooker on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
emrahatilkan

Adobe did not dropped AIR development. It was Flex.

20 hours ago by emrahatilkan on Flash 11 and AIR 3 get a release date
dd2

Company called Synergix ( www.synergix.com ) has a fix for the offline folders issue experienced by Win 7 users. And you can check out...

20 hours ago by dd2 on VPNs, offline files and the simple Windows 7 fix; sometimes
Neil Lawther

I think all your above points are increasingly more invalid. The android ecosystem is open and evolving and maturing day by day. developers are...

21 hours ago by Neil Lawther via Facebook on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
David Meyer

That really is what the European Commission is telling me. To give a precise quote: if a member state turns down the agreement, "ACTA will stay a...

1 day ago by David Meyer on ACTA's EU future in doubt after Polish pause
MyProffs Proffs

Apple devices are back online in German, take the down, no put them back...

1 day ago by MyProffs Proffs via Facebook on German iPhone, iPad sales temporarily banned
Fat Matt

AAAAAAAAWWWWW MAAAAAAANNN, I spent nearly a grand on my pc now it's gonna be completely outdated.

1 day ago by Fat Matt on Clever on-off switch for graphene. Transistors next?
Vanessa Deagan

I completely disagree with this article. I believe the reason why Google are not successful in the tablet space is because of two reasons: 1....

1 day ago by Vanessa Deagan via Facebook on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
servermanagement

Bravo Infiniserv! Virtual Private Server looks promising and very useful for companies who can't really afford a expensive cloud computing software.

1 day ago by servermanagement on Infiniserv launches Linux-based UK cloud
oneoffreader

Agree with Thinklog, Voice and video talk has been a key feature between all my friends who also use tablets.

1 day ago by oneoffreader on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it
Thinklog

Thank you for your article. However, Sir, I must disagree. I regularly use my iPad to make video calls via Skype, and I see no reason to claim that...

2 days ago by Thinklog on Apple and Amazon's tablet rivals don't get it