Yahoo will introduce on Wednesday several new features in its Search
BOSS application development platform intended to make it easier for
programmers and Web publishers to adopt and use.
Search BOSS,
which developers use to create custom search engines on top of Yahoo's
infrastructure, will now offer a "self-service" platform for which developers can sign up online, log into their account and start using in a matter of hours.
Until
now, that process was much more cumbersome, involving the drafting of a
custom contract, which had to be signed on paper and submitted for
approval, which in turn could take weeks or months to finalize.
"The
goals we're aiming for with this self-service platform is agility,
flexibility and creativity," said Shashi Seth, Yahoo's senior vice
president of search and marketplaces, in an interview.
Search
BOSS, which stands for Build Your Own Search Service, currently is used
by thousands of developers whose applications generate about 100 million
search queries per day.
In addition to the new self-service
platform, Search BOSS will now let developers host their search
applications on Yahoo data centers, whereas before they needed to
procure their own servers. BOSS Hosted Search is free of charge and
available now.
Yahoo is also introducing Site Search, a feature
that automates and streamlines the creation of a website search engine,
which visitors can then use to find content on its web pages.
Another
new feature is BOSS Shortcuts, which generates suggestions for other
content a website visitor might be interested in based on the topics of
the articles and pages he's reading.
Site Search and Shortcuts are now available in limited form, with general availability scheduled for later.
Also
new is an expansion of the capabilities of the Search BOSS API
(application programming interface), including a simplification of the
process to sign up for and access Yahoo ads to run with Search BOSS
applications. Developers get a slice of the ad revenue generated by
their applications' ads.
Earlier this year, Yahoo established a
fee structure for Search BOSS</a>], including a top-tier option,
called Full Web, which includes result links to general Web pages,
images and news articles at a cost of US$0.80 per 1,000 queries.
Also
available is a a less expensive tier, Limited Web, which draws its
results from a smaller index that isn't refreshed as often as the one
Full Web uses, and costs $0.40 per 1,000 queries. Yahoo also offers
developers options for an image-only index ($0.30 per 1,000 queries) and
for a news article-only index ($0.10 per 1,000 queries).
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