Bing starts serving AMP pages as Google prepares to reduce its control
Enlarge / Bing on a mobile device showing the AMP-powered carousel and an AMP story served from Bing's cache. (credit: Microsoft)
Microsoft's Bing search engine has started showing AMP pages to mobile searchers in the US. Pages using the proprietary tech will now be prominently displayed in search listings on the mobile website. Previously, Microsoft made limited use of AMP in some of its mobile apps but didn't use it on the Web.
AMP ("Accelerated Mobile Pages") is a project spearheaded by Google to improve the performance and embeddability of mobile content. It imposes tight restrictions on the scripting that pages can use, and it performs special handling of embedded images and media. To do this, Google uses a number of proprietary extensions to HTML, and AMP content all gets cached. Google serves AMP pages from its own servers, Bing uses Microsoft's servers, and Cloudflare also has an AMP caching service.
Though there is widespread acknowledgement that AMP is addressing real problems-the abundance of trackers, advertisements, and client-side scripts makes many webpages bandwidth-heavy and slow to load-many within the industry are unhappy at the proprietary, Google-controlled extensions, regarding them as anathema to the open Web.
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