It's Not Just You: Google Added Annoying Icons To Search On Desktop (theverge.com) 70
Kim Lyons, writing for The Verge: Google added tiny favicon icons to its search results this week for some reason, creating more clutter in what used to be a clean interface, and seemingly without actually improving the results or the user experience. The company says it's part of a plan to make clearer where information is coming from, but how? In my Chrome desktop browser, it feels like an aggravating, unnecessary change that doesn't actually help the user determine how good, bad, or reputable an actual search result might be. Yes, ads are still clearly marked with the word "ad," which is a good thing. But do I need to see Best Buy's logo or AT&T's blue circle when I search for "Samsung Fold" to know they're trying to sell me something? Google says the favicon icons are "helping searchers better understand where information is coming from, more easily scan results & decide what to explore."
If you don't care for the new look, Google has instructions on how to change or add a favicon to search results. Lifehacker also has instructions on how to apply filters to undo the favicon nonsense.
If you don't care for the new look, Google has instructions on how to change or add a favicon to search results. Lifehacker also has instructions on how to apply filters to undo the favicon nonsense.
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On second thought, never mind, continue on.
As for the favicons, how long before sites start copying those of the big ones. This is an ugly mistake by google.
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Just wait until you're about 41,5 years old and suddenly overnight in need of a pair of glasses to read full-width webpages on a 5"phone in portrait mode. The same moment you realize the advantages of that 22" monitor taking space in your room.
When done that, consider the 40 plussers in the 90's that had to do with 10"CRT to make the internet what it is today, and cheer for them.
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AltaVista, here we come! (Score:2)
Is everyone else ready for the mid-to-late nineties retro search party?
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I do remember when "a clean interface" is why people liked Google, back in the early days when they weren't much better than the competition in other ways.
Seems they're no longer the lean, hungry company all these years later. Par for the course, I guess. MBAs eventually ruin everything.
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You aren't kidding.
I have an old Gmail account loaded into my IMAP client. Haven't accessed the Gmail web interface in a few years, and even that was just long enough to enable logins with a third-party client. Today I had the misfortune of loading Gmail in a browser and couldn't believe it; it's like they're stuffing a whole operating system onto the page. There was a chat pane, something about phone calls, various widgets that apparently were assimilated from Hangouts, a drop-down menu to switch between s
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I struggled for years, turning off each new thing. But even with every option to suppress the clutter enabled, it still gets worse every year. Seems like they're trying to squeeze all the can out of email, as people spend less time looking at it as the years go by. Damn; it was good once.
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This is an actual story on The Verge? (Score:4, Insightful)
Google adds favicons on web searches, and it is the end of the world? Grow the fuck up. No one will even care a week from now.
Feature Creep (Score:3)
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Re: Feature Creep (Score:1)
Yeah, but Google isn't nearly as good at searching the internet as it once was.
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2005 vs 2020: Google search 'ganja'
2005 Nice and clean: https://pasteboard.co/IQwtCCO.... [pasteboard.co]
2020 Very cluttered: https://pasteboard.co/IQwuhv3.... [pasteboard.co]
Google desktop results are looking more and more like the atrocious garbage that is google search on mobile. It's so bad on mobile that I honestly struggle to find the actual real results amongst all of the crap that google decides I need to see.
Is there a google purified version?
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You getting all butthurt in 2020 about a site using javascript when half the web doesn't work without it. I like that site because it's easy and minimalist. Show me a better site or STFU.
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That's not inherently a bad thing. We have the processing power now, it would be a shame not to have "features". The thing is you need to consider each and every feature individually. Some are great, such as filtering of results with metadata or autocomplete of search results during typing, some are less great (favicons).
ads (Score:5, Insightful)
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It also makes you look at icons more than URLs and your eye catches icons that you recognize better - more juice for the big players, aggregators, more centralization of the web.
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Ad Hiding [Re:ads] (Score:1)
But that's if you are looking for content from a few specific sites. If you are doing general searching, then it's harder to visually separate out ads because before you only had to distinguish between blocks that started with "Ad" versus blocks that had no identifier. It was a Boolean decision. Now you have to visually parse lots of icons and distinguish them from "Ad". It's probably not a coincidence that the icons are the same size a
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It makes it harder to tell at a glance what is an ad and what is not. No doubt they A/B tested it and got more ad-clicks this way.
Except that Ads have their own favicon, one that says "Ad" on it in bold black letters.
I think you've been smoking some of Amsterdam's finest.
I like the icons (Score:2)
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Yeah, the graphic design on the DDG results page is well done enough that the icons just don't clutter up the page. Admittedly, it's a bit subjective. I think DDG has gotten a little bit worse over time, clutter-wise, but their search results got a lot better so I'm happy with it.
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Icons? Not as bad as UNDERLINE BREAKAGE!!! (Score:1)
When I look at the "Reply to This" link above this text box where I'm typing, I wonder "Is that a single link? Or, might it be three fucking links?" As in, a link for "Re", a link for "l", and a link for "to This".
The underline no longer indicates the link. Google broke the Internet. Again.
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Because a scam site can't just clone a favicon too?!
Yahoo doesn't do this (Score:5, Interesting)
I actually switched my browser search to Yahoo, and it works just as good with no clutter. The layout is much better and looks better in a wide screen. There are more results per page also. I think Google's golden days are gone, they've got there hands in so many markets the can't do search right anymore
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Oh man, I had forgotten that yahoo search even existed.
I find your ideas intriguing and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
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You don't need to visit the main page in order to use their search function. [yahoo.com]
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Visual clutter (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't see any value or additional information that the icons bring to my browsing experience. It's just more fucking visual clutter and a longer load time.
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I just switched to Bing... g*d help me (Score:2)
I just switched my default search engine to Bing. I never thought this would happen... Google is about to implode.
Me too (Score:2)
Google just gives random shit unless you wrap quotes around what you want. The icon clutter was the last straw. Sad to say but Bing works better.
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I know right!?!?! I saw those fav icons and I couldn't help but ram a giant fist shaped dildo up my ass
FFS -- WTF is wrong with you people? It's just a favicon, and if anything it helps my identify the content producer at a glance before I read the title or summary. But to you it's a nervous breakdown inducing act of blasphemy
Little icons, the horror! (Score:4, Funny)
Seriously?
Userscripts and stylesheets to the rescue... (Score:1)
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I mostly like them, but a lot of the favicos are of mediocre quality that ugly up the results.
But I think a big thing from this is we're going to see sites use much better high resolution favicos.
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Which reminds me (Score:2)
I need to check my google scraper. See how its getting on.
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Re: This isn't the first time they've been this du (Score:1)
"If creatives aren't creating, then why are they employed in the first place?"
Nepotism, mostly
``Google says the favicon icons ... (Score:2)
''
So Google users are suddenly being confused by the blurb underneath each result (who knows... maybe most Google users are unable to read nowadays) and need the enticement of a corporate logo to decide whether to click through? Just an excuse to download more crap into my browser burning bandwidth and adding more clutter to my browser cache. Innovation at Google, nowaday
Userstyle/userscript (Score:1)
I made this stylish/greasemonkey/tampermonkey set of styles. https://userstyles.org/styles/... [userstyles.org]
It's Not Just You (Score:2)
They did one thing right (Score:1)
At least they are small. The fad had been big and fat and full of white space to allegedly "help finger-based UI's". But the mouse is still here.
"Bootstrap" should be renamed "Bloatstrap".
Bing did this, too. (Score:2)
Bing did this, too.
Even though I like Bing, WTF?!
Quicker recognition (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a lot quicker to recognize something by an icon than it is to read a caption. Icons have been a staple UI element in computers for just that reason. Imagine how difficult it would be to use a smartphone launch screen without app icons, just application names.
If you Google for "google", you'll probably recognize the YouTube link by its icon before you even get to the label.
I'm fine with this change. It'll help me quickly identify which site a search result belongs to if I'm used to seeing it pop up from other searches I've made quicker then reading the page title or domain name to help me zero in on useful results quicker.
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This is exactly why hieroglyphics replaced alphabetic writing systems.
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It's a lot quicker to recognize something by an icon than it is to read a caption.
Which is great if you're looking for results by website. But if you're doing that, why not go to that website in the first place and use their search function, or search with inurl:websiteIlike.com
If you're interested more in which website a result for text belongs to you may want to look into something called observer bias.
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hot garbage (Score:2)
My eyes find this new format appalling, and so I'm trialing a search engine other than AltaVista or Google for the first time in twenty years.
What people don't seem to be paying attention to is that in order to fit all this extra clutter, the snippet lengths appear to have been abruptly curtailed (it's hard to A/B with Google, because I have no access to last week's version).
I was hugely dependent on rapidly scanning the snippets to decide which links to click through. I could always check the URL easily en
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