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January 26, 2004 12:00 AM

Search This, Google: Microsoft Adds Free Toolbar, Pop-Up Ad Blocking to IE

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   Like Netscape before it, tiny Google has awakened a sleeping giant. Today, Microsoft unveiled a free MSN Toolbar add-on for the dominant Internet Explorer (IE) Web browser. The MSN Toolbar looks almost identical to the Google toolbar, which provides searching, pop-up ad blocking, and other functionality. Even the MSN Toolbar's download page looks almost identical to the Google toolbar download page. Analysts have been touting Microsoft's secretive moves into Google's search dominance, and the State of Massachusetts recently cited the danger to Google as the rationale behind its new investigation of Microsoft. But until today, the software giant has made few public moves against Google. But, like a lumbering military machine, Microsoft has now fired the first salvo in what could eventually be a multipronged attack on the lucrative Internet search market.
   "The MSN Toolbar enables people to easily access their favorite services regardless of their online location," Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft's corporate vice president for MSN Personal Services & Business, said. "By offering innovative services like the Highlight Viewer tool and seamless access to world-leading communication services like MSN Hotmail and MSN Messenger, we're helping people be more efficient online."
   Predictably, the MSN Toolbar provides quick access to several MSN services, including Hotmail, Messenger, My MSN, MSN Search, and MSNBC.com. But more MSN integration is coming in the future, Microsoft notes. "Google is really focused on just the search capability," Lisa Gurry, an MSN group product manager at Microsoft, said. "Certainly we'll be looking at all of the assets that we have within MSN as options for the toolbar."
   The toolbar also adds pop-up ad blocking, a feature for which IE users have been clamoring for months. (Microsoft is also adding pop-up ad blocking to the IE 6.0 update it will ship as part of Windows XP Service Pack 2--SP2--at mid-year.) And a new Highlight Viewer feature visually highlights words or phrases for which users have searched and presents search results in a small Highlight Viewer window, which floats over to the side in IE when users select the Highlight button.
   In related news, Microsoft's MSN unit is on a roll after years of rocky financials. In the most recent quarter, MSN sales rose 19 percent to $546 million, thanks largely to advertising strength and paid searches; in the previous quarter, MSN earned $58 million in its first profitable quarter ever. Microsoft's eagerly anticipated MSN search service will debut sometime in 2004, the company reiterated this week.
   The test version of the MSN Toolbar is available to users in North America. Microsoft will roll out the Toolbar worldwide in April.

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Comments
  • Mike
    8 years ago
    Feb 04, 2004

    It's great to see that there are still plenty of "Microsoft Haters" out there to validate that Microsoft is on the right track. It absoulutely true that Microsoft doesn't invent every idea, in fact great ideas are driven by the community and the needs of end users. Microsoft as a company has the right and obligation to continue to improve the services they provide, this is the essence of a free market. Improve, "Innovate" or become Irrelavant, even if it means providing capabilites similar to the competition.

    The fact is, that search engines & search technologies are fundamental components of the internet, and just make good busines sense. If you think Microsoft should ingnore this fact because someone elese got there first, then you my friends need to get a reality check.

    Google will continue to improve & innovate, otherwise their competition Microsoft or Yahoo or unknown will pass them by. The same goes for any product or services company including Microsoft.

    By the way I don't hear anyone complaining about free Star Office, which is using the exact same business approach as IE used back in the early 90's. If Star Office catches up to MS Office, and provides users what they want and need for free, then MS office will surely become irrelavant as the number one most used piece of software in the world.

  • Beano Macrozania
    8 years ago
    Feb 03, 2004

    Unless Microsoft can make their search engine actually work I dont think Google has anything to worry about. And the comparison to Netscape doesnt really fit, since Google is free and by far the best at what it does.

    Google's crown will be safe for a long time to come. But you cant say the same about 'Internet Explorer', since the competition was killed off its been largely innovation free. Now more than ever they really need to get moving on catching up to Mozilla Firebird, which has become incredibly powerful even in its incomplete state.

    The battle with Netscape never really ended I guess, thanks to the beauty of open-source its came back with a vengeance. While only behind IE in a few areas, it far surpasses it in many others. Microsoft better get on the ball with those ad/popup removal & blocking features, or when v1.0 of Mozilla Firebird hits they just might get left in the dust.

  • Mike
    8 years ago
    Jan 29, 2004

    "Microsoft's eagerly anticipated MSN search service will debut sometime in 2004, the company reiterated this week."

    Eagerly anticipated? - MSN is famous for its irrelevant search results. The website is also harder to use and bloated with unnecessary graphics.

    Google is very lightweight, its fast, its innovative, and it returns accurate results. Aside from anti-competitive practises, MS cannot hope to compete on a technical or R&D level.

  • Jim
    8 years ago
    Jan 28, 2004

    I've always admired how microsoft steals other's ideas, calls them their own, and calls it innovation. It seems they've done it again with the google, er MSN toolbar. You know, you don't hear of Microsoft doing this very often anymore. Could it be that there aren't (m)any ideas left to steal?

  • anthony
    8 years ago
    Jan 27, 2004

    Microsoft has to protect its investment. The most popular software in the world.
    Similarity doesn't mean copying. The more protection Microsoft provides the users the better for the operating system.

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