{"id":178,"date":"2006-10-14T09:08:20","date_gmt":"2006-10-14T16:08:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/wapreview.com\/?p=178"},"modified":"2008-10-09T09:08:41","modified_gmt":"2008-10-09T16:08:41","slug":"new-mobile-search-engines","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wapreview.com\/178\/","title":{"rendered":"New Mobile Search Engines"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"AskAsk.com<\/a> and Telestra, Australia’s largest mobile operator, both launched new mobile search portals this week.<\/p>\n

Ask’s offering features a web search that searches the full web using Ask’s own search engine. The results are transcoded<\/a> for mobile usability by a white label version of Skweezer (review<\/a>). It works well most of time, but for some reason, Ask’s transcoded pages don’t have the message and link ” Page optimized for mobile device, click here<\/a> to view without Skweezer. ” <\/small>that appears at bottom of every page when you use Skweezer.net. That link is very important both for usability and for encouraging the growth of the mobile web. Often when reading mobile Bloglines or Gmail (which both transcode all linked sites), I’ll click a link in a post or an email that takes me to a mobile site rather than a PC one. With Gmail, there’s a link to escape out of the transcoder and see the site as it’s supposed to look on a mobile device. On Bloglines (which like Ask is owned by IAC\/Interactive<\/a>) there is no way to escape the transcoder – which like all transcoders tends to butcher a good mobile site.<\/p>\n

Besides web search, Ask’s mobile search offers;<\/p>\n