Mobile Live Search Gets Lost
Tuesday, April 28th, 2009I ran across a post about Microsoft’s mobile Live search and thought I’d give it a test drive (I’m usually a late adopter). Kind of funny, kind of sad.
I decided to make it easy by dialing in and asking for services in San Luis Obispo since that’s a pretty well-known town (unlike Morro Bay which no one outside of CA has ever heard of). After going through a minute or so of introduction, instructions, and options, the voice-activated system took me through a quick menu to find the kind of business I wanted to find — ‘restaurants’. It asked me what kind of restaurant I wanted, and I said ‘california’ — no answer to that one. So I tried ‘wine country’ and got the same response, and decided to let the system tell me what my options really are: pizza, chinese, fast food, mexican, italian. That’s a hip pocket survey of American culture right there isn’t it?
I chose Italian and we started down a numbered list — you choose by saying the number at any point. I listened and tried #3 and got the response it didn’t have that option, and would you like to hear the list again? So this time I picked ‘one’ and it clicked, giving me my options for ‘unna avola’ which I think means Buona Tavola, including one option to get directions.
The system did recognize ‘Morro Bay’ and it basically clicked on my home address as well! I registered the home address and then asked for the directions: after a few seconds, Live search announced it couldn’t find the directions at this time, and re-opened the main menu. Square one.
By this time, I would have been half way into SLO and in the usual cell phone dead spot just north of the Cuesta campus. I gave up. A good idea but not well executed. I’m sure this is hard to do technically speaking, but when it doesn’t work well, people will leave for other systems.

