Er, at least some of that is folks like me who read a language or two that isn't English.
Posted by Dorothea Salo at June 24, 2004 01:16 PMBreak it on down now. [take me to the bridge! all right!]
Posted by PF at June 24, 2004 02:14 PMDoes that really mean that half of all searches are in languages other than English, or half of all searches are conducted using non-English interfaces? I sure as heck don't switch interface languages every time I switch the search language. You can't temporarily switch interfaces: Google will change your default.
So I conduct all my searches--English, Russian, French or other--from one non-English interface(you can guess which). Close to half the Google searches that hit my page come from non-English interfaces. It's fun to follow the referrer log links and end up in a backwards-seeming Hebrew interface or a squiggly Thai one.
So the question is, do searches conducted in English from non-English interfaces equal or exceed searches conducted not in English from English search interfaces?
Posted by Qov at June 24, 2004 06:36 PMQOV, you can see the most frequent searches conducted in each language on this page.
Posted by Kerim Friedman at June 24, 2004 09:40 PMI'd like to know more about that statistic. My guess is that it's referring to the language of the interface, not the language of the search terms. Determining the language for a single word (or two or three) would be a difficult problem, since many sequences of characters make words in more than one language -- not to mention that typos are pretty frequent. Besides, a great many searches would be for names or other words that can't be classified as belonging to a particular language.
Posted by keith at June 26, 2004 10:23 AM