Amazon Adds Pictures to Yellow Pages

By Ed Oswald | Published January 27, 2005, 12:56 PM

If Amazon has its way, soon your mouse will do the walking through a virtual tour of 10 major U.S. cities.

Call up a local business in one of those cities on Amazon's A9 Yellow Pages, and it will not just give you the phone number and address. Alongside the listing will be a picture of the business with an option for "block view" that displays adjacent storefronts.

"It's like taking a virtual stroll around the block," said Udi Manber, A9's CEO. "We believe this is going to expand the user experience significantly."

Analysts agree that Amazon needs to do something with A9 in order to make it a viable search engine. Last month, the site had a paltry 819,000 visitors, ranking it 30th among search engines. Compare that with Google, which saw over 71 million unique visitors, and one can see A9 has quite a bit of ground to make up.

A9 will have photographs available of businesses in the following cities: New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Atlanta, Denver, Dallas, Seattle, and Portland. More cities will be added later in the year, the company says.

Revenue from A9 does not come from listings, as Amazon allows businesses to list themselves in the directory for free. However, increased usage could help Amazon's bottom line as most of the money made from search engines these days comes from text-based ads related to users' search queries.

View comments by with a score of at least

PDC 2009: What have we learned this week?

There was the freebie that no one will forget, the heebie-jeebies courtesy of Scott Guthrie, and a teensy bit clearer picture of how this cloud thingie should work.

Live report: Will Google Chrome OS change Linux?

The mysteries of just what Chrome OS is, and how much of an operating system it truly is, may be resolved today.

PDC 2009: Microsoft cares about Web browser performance

The effort to give users of the world's dominant Web browser the impression of quality, is a personal one for the man who leads that battle.

Nokia re-affirms its commitment to Symbian, sort of

Maemo won't necessarily be replacing Symbian in the Nokia N-Series, but that's definitely a place where it will be found.

E-book readers will be in short supply this holiday season

E-readers are hot this year, and a lot of compelling new products have been released, but are there enough electrophoretic displays to go around?

Sony looks to finally open a single storefront for downloads

Sony has had many different download portals for movies, music, e-books, and games, and now it's looking to make a single shop for all of it.

Tuning out the tablet: Time to give the endless speculation a rest

Wide Angle Zoom: Wishing and hoping and thinking and praying....won't put an iTablet on the market.

Five improvements for IT managers in 2010

If businesses are to improve their efficiency for next year, they need to stop and reassess the basic tenets of their job.

AOL's spinoff from Time Warner to shed 2,500 jobs

As AOL moves toward become an independent company again, it will cut nearly a third of its workforce.

Gartner: SMS-based money transfer will be bigger than mobile browsing, search

Gartner issues its predictions for the 10 things our phones will be doing in 2012.

Don't forget to upgrade to Firefox 3.6 beta 3 today

Mozilla has released the latest beta its Firefox 3.6 browser software, just over one week after beta 2.