AI has been getting all up in our search results for a while now, with dubious results. While Google's AI Overviews feature had a rocky reception—what with it recommending you drink urine and all—it's not the only search engine that's been experimenting with a good dose of AI on its search pages.
Microsoft introduced LLM-powered chat answers to Bing early last year, and now it's started experimenting with a «new generative search experience» for a small percentage of user queries (via The Verge). Some users searching for the query «What is a spaghetti western», for example, are now greeted with a page that not only puts an AI box front and center, but adds sourcing information for the AI result underneath, squeezing the more traditional search results list off to the side.
Being based in the UK, I had to engage a US-based VPN to trigger the page, as it appears to be geo-dependent at the time of writing. This is a test page, after all, but it's more than a little disconcerting to see traditional search results relegated to a sliver of info on the side of the page to make room for a sizable AI boxout.
The new design devotes a lot of page elements to citing its sources, with clickable boxes proving that it grabbed its info from reputable sites and entries underneath linking to them more directly.
Still, the main list of results you were actually likely looking for is pushed off into a side frame—with only two to three lines of text under each giving a brief description of the data it referenced from your search.
Aside from the AI domination, the page itself is visually messy in a way that seems to distract the eye, rather than draw attention to the thing you were actually there to discover in the first place—the relatively simple answer to what spaghetti westerns are, and perhaps some examples of highlights of the genre.
Microsoft says the new page combines the foundation of Bing's traditional search results with «the power of large and small language models». While
Read more on pcgamer.com