- Google has just launched a new search application for Windows
- It comes with an integrated search tool that can quickly find your files
- He is currently experimental and is not available for everyone
I use Windows 11 and MacOS Tahoe in my daily life, and comparing them allows me to see how they accumulate against each other. An area where Windows is far behind is research (especially now that Apple has highlighted the spotlight), and if there is a guaranteed aspect to get your hair pulled when you use the Microsoft system, that’s it.
But hope is on the horizon. It does not come as a Microsoft update which corrects the poor quality search tool of Windows, but in the form of a Google application which picks up the relay instead. Indeed, Google has just published a new experimental application which brings the company’s research prowess to your office.
As described in an official blog article, the Google app has arrived on Windows, and it has an integrated research function that can scan your applications and computer files installed to locate what you are looking for. Its research can also cover Google Drive and the web too, in case you are not only looking for something on your PC, while the Google Functionality includes you can search, search and translate anything on your screen.
Putting Google’s research skills to use on your computer already gives me the hope that it will surpass the Windows search tool (although it would not be difficult). But the icing on the cake is the way you invoke Google’s search box: by pressing the Alt and Space keys together.
Who imitates the macOS control control shortcut, which launches the similar projector search tool, and offers you a combination of easy to receive keys that you can mention anywhere and each time you need it.
Promising
I grew up so sick of the ugly research tool of Windows that I have abandoned for a long time, and instead, I now use an application called everything.
This indexes your readers and stops the search results in real time when you type, and its power and its ease of use have made it one of my favorite essential applications. The problem, however, is that everything seems and feels quite dated, and it can take some time to load because it indexes all new modifications.
I hope that the Google Desktop application can one day replace everything on my PC, giving me a Mac type search tool which is simple to throw but deeply powerful.
That said, the Google application is an experimental offer at the moment, so it may not be without its just parts and quirks. It is also only available via the Google search program, which is not available for everyone – Users based in the United Kingdom cannot yet use it, for example.
However, it seems that the application has a lot of promises. If he can provide a more competent alternative to the integrated Windows research tool, I am absolutely for that.