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You're more likely to use your smart phone to search for information about sexually transmitted diseases and mental health issues, but searches on serious conditions like diabetes and cancer are still coming from desktop and laptop computers.
Those were among the findings in a study released by Healthline Networks for the top searches on its health information site in 2011. Chlamydia was the number one query for mobile device users, while cancer was the top search from desktops and laptops.
Healthline, a leading provider of intelligent health information services, today announced two additions to its stable of medical search tools: TreatmentSearch, the first treatment search application for the web, and DocSearch, a recommendation tool for recommending specialists based semantic parsing of symptom or health condition information. Other Healthline tools include SymptomSearch and DrugSearch. The integrated suite of Healthline Clinical Applications is now available on Healthline.com.
Live.com, Microsoft's personalized start page, has just been upgraded with some impressive new features. Live.com program manager Sanaz Ahari sent me details of the release this evening. It was good timing, because earlier today I'd been using the old Live.com and having trouble! The new features are:

New-look Live.com - note the pages
Live.com program manager Sanaz Ahari told me the team has put a lot of effort into improving the "first run experience" of users. Live.com is being seen by Microsoft as the starting page of Windows Live as a whole, as well as being a great customizable homepage with the user at the center of their experience. Also this release sees the integration of the new Windows Live Search, which is another sign of the importance Live.com is assuming for Microsoft.

Windows Live search - with the infinite scroll bar
Sanaz noted there has been a lot of work done under the hood - on the infrastructure. live.com was built on the start.com incubation infrastructure and with this launch, said Sanaz, "we’ve deployed a scaleable, geofederatable, higher performance backend which we’re looking forward to growing in to."
New gadgets
There are also a host of new gadgets that have been introduced into Live.com. According to Sanaz they are:
All in all, this is a big improvement by Live.com. It's game on to the other personalized homepages out there!
TechCrunch has obtained screenshots of the as yet unreleased Google Calendar, called CL2. The leak came via Google's closed beta of about 200 participants. Apparently CL2 is a long way away from launch, but there are some meaty details in Mike's post.

CL2 looks to be a very strong product from Google (which has by no means been a given over the past year). Plus it seems to me that Google's much-anticipated Web Office Suite is well on the way to becoming a reality!
Microsoft has just released (or is about to) a series of new products: Windows Live Search Beta, Windows Live Toolbar Beta and the next version of Live.com. Details on my ZDNet blog.
One thing of personal interest to me is that a former Read/WriteWeb sponsor, web research product Onfolio, has been acquired by Microsoft and integrated into the Windows Live Toolbar. Congrats Onfolio!
I'll be testing out the new version of Live.com asap. I've actually been struggling with it half the day today, along with PageFlakes and Google Personalized Homepage. They are all unwieldy to use currently. For example half the Live.com gadgets I downloaded didn't work properly. It's early days for these products, but the user experience for all of them leaves a bit to be desired. So I'm keen to see what improvements Live.com has made...
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