Post by account_disabled on Feb 27, 2024 5:10:28 GMT -5
The buying a house youre probably a millennial sorry content marketing joke. Finally video snippets are a special class of Featured Snippet with a large video thumbnail and direct link dominated by YouTube. Heres one for Who is the spiciest memelord Im honestly not sure what commentary I can add to that result. Since theres currently no way for a video to appear on Google Home we excluded video snippets from the rest of the study. Google has also been testing some hybrid Featured Snippets.
In some cases for example they attempt to extract a specific answer from Kazakhstan Phone Number the text such as this answer for When was written Hint the answer is not For the purposes of this study we treated these hybrids as text snippets. Given the concise answer at the top these hybrids are wellsuited to voice results. From the .K questions with snippets I selected excluding video but purposely including a disproportionate number of list and table types to better see if and how those translated into voice. Why only Because unlike desktop searches theres no easy way to do this. Over the course of a couple of days I had to run all of these voice searches manually on Google Home.
Its possible that I went temporarily insane. At one point I saw a spider on. Fearing that I was hallucinating I took a picture and posted it on Twitter I was assured that the spider was in point of fact not a figment of my imagination. Im still not sure about the halfhour when the spider sang me selections from the Hamilton soundtrack. From snippets to voice answers So how many of the searches yielded voice answers The short answer is . Diving deeper it turns out that this percentage is strongly dependent on the type of snippet Text snippets in our K data set yielded voice answers of the time. List snippets.
In some cases for example they attempt to extract a specific answer from Kazakhstan Phone Number the text such as this answer for When was written Hint the answer is not For the purposes of this study we treated these hybrids as text snippets. Given the concise answer at the top these hybrids are wellsuited to voice results. From the .K questions with snippets I selected excluding video but purposely including a disproportionate number of list and table types to better see if and how those translated into voice. Why only Because unlike desktop searches theres no easy way to do this. Over the course of a couple of days I had to run all of these voice searches manually on Google Home.
Its possible that I went temporarily insane. At one point I saw a spider on. Fearing that I was hallucinating I took a picture and posted it on Twitter I was assured that the spider was in point of fact not a figment of my imagination. Im still not sure about the halfhour when the spider sang me selections from the Hamilton soundtrack. From snippets to voice answers So how many of the searches yielded voice answers The short answer is . Diving deeper it turns out that this percentage is strongly dependent on the type of snippet Text snippets in our K data set yielded voice answers of the time. List snippets.