Azure Search Overview

November 15, 2016

I know that Microsoft is a world leader in search and retrieval. Look at the company’s purchase of Fast Search & Transfer in 2008. Look at the search in Windows 7, 8, and 10. Look at the Microsoft research postings listed in Bing. I am convinced.

I did learn a bit more about Azure Search in “Microsoft Azure Search and Azure Backup Arrive in Canada.” I learned that search is now a service; for example:

Azure Search is Microsoft search-as-a-service solution for cloud. It allows customers to add search to their applications using REST API or .NET SDK. Microsoft handles the server and infrastructure management, meaning developers don’t need to worry about understanding search.

Here are the features I noted from the write up:

  • Query syntax including Boolean and Lucene conventions
  • Support for 56 different languages
  • Search suggestions for auto complete
  • Hit highlighting
  • Geo spatial support
  • Faceted navigation just like Endeca in 1998

The most interesting statement in the write up was in my opinion:

Microsoft handles the server and infrastructure management, meaning developers don’t need to worry about understanding search.

I love that one does not need to understand search. That’s what makes search so darned fascinating today. Systems which require no understanding. I also believe everything that a search system presents in a list of relevance ranked results. I really do. I, for example, believed that Fast Search & Transfer was the most wonderful search system in the world until, well, the investigators arrived. Azure is even more wonderful as a cloud appliance thing that developers do not need to understand. Great and wonderful.

Stephen E Arnold, November 15, 2016

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