How To Search Apps For Android

Without search engines there would be no internet, because people simply wouldn't know where to go or what sites to visit, so it’s no surprise that search technology has invaded the world’s app stores too. All the big names are present in Google Play, although some interesting smaller apps promise a handful of unique features too.

We review six search apps below. As usual, all are free in the Google Play store, and all were tested on a phone and a tablet running Android 4.3 Jelly Bean.

Bing



The first thing to strike those using Microsoft’s Bing app will be the wallpaper images, which are carried across from the Bing website and greet users when they start the app. This makes using Bing a unique experience. Google has its doodles. Bing has its wallpapers. Tap the screen and four zones are indicated. Tapping these reveals trivia or whimsy about the image, and tapping a download button at the bottom right even lets you set the high-res image as your launcher wallpaper. The app works equally well on both tablet and phone too.

However, nice wallpaper doesn’t necessarily make a good search app, and to access the search function you need only tap in the search field that remains present at all times at the top of the screen. Instead of typing you can also tap the microphone icon to speak your search term, and recognition is reasonably quick and accurate about as accurate as any modern speech recognition, anyway.

Once a search term has been entered, results appear instantly in the main window and look much like the Bing website. The app includes its own browser engine so that any results you tap open instantly within the same app window. The browser is basic but simple: you can create bookmarks, for example, and a primitive browser tab system is implemented that isn’t particularly easy to use. Other useful functions offered include the ability to save a screenshot of the site to the photo gallery and to share the URL in question in the usual way using the Android Send system. What’s curiously lacking is any ability to open the site in your regular browser or, for that matter, any other browser.

Tapping the Bing menu button at the top left of the screen reveals a handful of other functions, including the ability to jump straight to a weather report for the local area (based on the fuzzy geolocation of your IP address and not, alas, your device’s GPS hardware). You can also jump straight to special sections of Bing, such as Images, Trends (popular searches), News. Maps and Gallery (previous wallpaper images).

Signing in with your Microsoft ID will let you sync bookmarks between devices and browsers. The tantalizing Bing Rewards system lets you earn points for each search you make, which can then be traded in for prizes, but unfortunately this is only open to US residents at the moment.

This is a nice app overall, but we’re not sure there’s enough here to convert even the most reticent Google user. The bolt- on gimmicks are all well and good, but none actually relate to search technology. It’s with search results, both in quality and presentation, that the innovation should be taking place.




DuckDuckGo



DuckDuckGo is rapidly gaining prominence as perhaps the only serious threat to Google’s virtual monopoly, and it’s doing so by inverting Google’s rules: whereas Google wants to gobble up every scrap of data you generate, DuckDuckGo promises never to track you and to entirely respect your privacy. It still shows adverts, but these are based simply on the search term you type and not your past browsing habits or Gmail messages, as with Google and indeed many other search outfits.

However, the DuckDuckGo app isn’t just a search app. Its full title is DuckDuckGo Search & Stories. This is an app with a schizoid personality. One half is a content aggregator, which is to say the app raids popular websites to grab the juiciest headlines and stories. These sites include Ars Technica, Reddit, Life Hacker, Digg, The Verge and others. There’s nothing that complicated going on the headlines are simply presented on the opening screen of the app, and tapping any of them takes you to the site to read the full thing (within the app itself, which includes a built-in browser). The link can be shared in the usual way, saved as a bookmark within the app or opened in another browser installed on the system. The app also includes a Readability mode that can make some web pages easier to digest by cutting out extraneous page elements such as navigation toolbars.

However, at its heart the app is a search tool, and typing a search term into the field at the top of the screen will show the results within the app itself. Tapping any of the results opens it for viewing in the app, although open the Settings menu and you can switch to always opening links in your favorite browser, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox. This makes 100% sense yet is not found in most of the other apps here, which prefer to keep you within their walled gardens.

Searches can be boosted by DuckDuckGo’s proprietary !bang syntax, by which you can limit searches to particular sites or interest areas by specifying a particular letter or word after an exclamation mark. Details can be found at duckduckgo.com/ bang.html.
Alas, a few things are missing compared to other apps reviewed here. There’s no voice search feature, for example, although this is perhaps of limited use in real life how many times have you heard anybody dictate a search to their phone or tablet rather than type it? Exactly.

This app provides a nice little taster of DuckDuckGo, and the content aggregation provides a good reason to keep it in the memory on your device. Recommended.


Yahoo Search



This is primarily a phone app. It’ll work on a tablet but only by pretending the device is a phone by forcing you to hold it in portrait orientation and making on-screen items like buttons and text very small. Therefore we focus on the phone experience here.
The first thing to strike us about the app is its simplicity. Once started, all you see is a search field at the top of the screen. There’s no wallpaper, as with Bing, and no news stories, as with DuckDuckGo. You can type your search or tap the microphone icon to dictate it, in which case speech recognition is identical to all other types of speech recognition on mobile devices: reasonably accurate and reasonably fast.

A list of search results appears in the app window, and tabs at the bottom let you look through web, image and video results. Tapping on any result opens it within the app itself, which has a primitive browser built in. Unfortunately, while you can share the URL in various ways, such as an email message or via DropBox, you can’t select to open the site, image or video in a different browser installed on the system. To escape viewing the site, you must tap the Done button or tap your device’s back button (if it has one), which will take you back to the results.

Tapping the menu icon at the top left lets you sign into Yahoo in order to log your search history for use elsewhere (although it’s not accessible within the app itself), but there appears to be no other benefit to signing in. The Settings menu also lets you switch instantly to any other Yahoo apps you have installed on your device.

Options within the actual Settings dialogue box include the ability to set Safe Search, so you don’t get any unpleasant entries polluting your search results, and the ability to
deactivate the aforementioned search history feature. You can also clear your search history.

While simplicity might be key to an app’s success, there just isn’t very much within this app to justify using it. With apps we look for innovation clever tricks that make using a particular service more intuitive or fun. There isn’t any of that here.

Perhaps the biggest negative factor is that Yahoo search results nowadays are provided by Microsoft Bing. Yahoo is no longer a search engine and hasn’t been since 2009. In other words, you might as well use the Bing app, which has more features and looks a whole lot better.


Izik



It’s hard to know where to start with this app. First there’s the app’s title, which in the grand tradition of edgy innovation leaves the user unsure how to pronounce it: is it izzik, as in indigo or eye-zik, as in Isaac? Then there’s the app’s tagline:

‘Take search for a joy ride.’ We’re guessing the term joy ride has a different meaning in the US, where this app originates and doesn’t imply scooting around a council estate in an XR3i.

Then there’s perhaps the most astonishing fact: this is an app designed for tablets. It works just fine on a phone, but in the world of Android, the idea of giving tablet first bite of the cherry is virtually unprecedented. This isn’t just talk either, and the app makes good use of gestures, as well as increased screen space. Search results appear under various category headings, including Looking For, Top Results and Images, although others might appear depending on the search term. Search for Abraham Lincoln, for example, and History and American History headings will appear too. Each category is shown as a horizontal strip above or below the others, and using the pinch-to-expand gesture on any result expands an excerpt from the site for quick viewing.

Tapping the site opens it for viewing in the main app window, and although the app’s listing within Google Play claims you can then share the page with others, we couldn’t find any such options. Nor was there an option to open the page in a different browser or even copy the URL, so you can do so manually. When searching for images, you can’t save the image to your photo collection. All you can do in lzik is view stuff, which is very limiting.

Upon running for the first time, the app installs an always visible blue SEARCH icon at the right of the screen. This sticks around even when you’re running other apps, and tapping it expands an Izik search bar. We’re not entirely sure this is a good idea, but it can be turned off within the app by opening the app menu by tapping the top left icon. Also on this menu you can see trending search terms, although in our tests these were all preceded by ‘non_us’ a remnant of some kind of filtering system we’re not supposed to see, perhaps, but another indication that not much testing has taken place outside the US.

lzik’s clever presentation of data under category headings works very well but only with well-rounded and somewhat hackneyed search queries. It’s a great app to use for homework assignments, for example, or finding out about Lady Gaga. However, it’s less useful if you’re trying to find out the valve timings on a 1992 Vauxhall Corsa. For that kind of thing, Google is still king.


Super Search



Out in the wilds of the Google Play store, it can sometimes feel like the Windows shareware scene circa 1995. Enthusiastic developers release apps to scratch an itch, and the apps aren’t always pretty but they work to a fashion. Super Search is a typical example. Coming out of the Simple Game Studios in Pakistan, the app’s intention is to provide instant access to most of the major search engines, as well as instant searches of popular sites like Linkedin and Wikipedia.

At the most basic usage, the user types a search term and then selects a site from the drop-down lists below in order to initiate a search. Once you do so, you’ll be bounced out to your favorite browser app to view the results, but nothing magical has occurred. What you see is what you’d get if you simply visited the site yourself and typed the term into the search field.

However, the app’s strength lies in Multiple Search Mode. Here you can type a search term and select from more than one search engine or website. You could search Bing at the same time as you search Sky News and Wikipedia, for example. The results are then shown within the app itself as a series of sites that are stacked on top of each other. Tapping any result in the pages you see then opens it in your usual browser.

It’s not hard to fault this app. It can’t be used in portrait orientation, for example, so you’ll have to hold your phone horizontally if you wish to use it. But perhaps the biggest crime is that the app is really a desktop app in terms of design, with a desktop way of thinking. Ticking off selections from big long lists of sites isn’t how things should be done on tablets and phones.

However, the core functionality is present and it works: if you want to be able to search several sites at once and look through the results very quickly indeed, then this app can’t really be beaten.


Disconnect Search



Online privacy is one of the biggest issues of our age, and search engines are some of the biggest privacy abusers. You pay for sites like Google not using money but by giving them unadulterated access to your personal data.

Disconnect Search aims to get around this data theft by using virtual private network technology to let you search anonymously. In other words, in addition to avoiding tracking cookies, the site hides your all-important IP address from the search engine too. This way, there’s no way of tracking you, although we have to assume that the Disconnect Search app itself is discreet and doesn’t track what you’re up to.

The app is actually very basic and little more than a front- end for the disconnect.me website once you’ve typed a search query, you’re bounced out to your favourite browser, where the result will be ready and waiting. We assume that the search query is sent via a secure connection to the disconnect. me website, where the results are fetched for you.

The site defaults to searching Google, but a drop-down box at the top lets you switch this to Bing, Yahoo, DuckDuckGo or Blekko. A search widget is also available as part of the app and can be revealed in the usual way by scrolling to the widget list in the app drawer. This cuts out the app entirely and lets you send search terms straight to disconnect.me.

There’s not much more we can say about Disconnect Search. It’d be nice to be able to select your search engine before tapping to search, and perhaps to set one as default too, but this is hardly a big problem when 99% of us still use Google. Viewing results within the app itself might make for speedier searching process too, but jumping out to your favourite browser hardly takes a long time.


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