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This screen grab taken from Google, shows Google Inc.'s Instant Search introduced Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010. Google is accelerating its search engine by displaying the results as soon as users begin to type in their requests. (AP Photo) NO SALES
This screen grab taken from Google, shows Google Inc.’s Instant Search introduced Wednesday, Sept. 8, 2010. Google is accelerating its search engine by displaying the results as soon as users begin to type in their requests. (AP Photo) NO SALES
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Getting your player ready...

SAN FRANCISCO — Google stepped on its Internet-search accelerator Wednesday by adding a feature that displays results as soon as people begin typing their requests.

The change, called “Google Instant,” is the closest the 12-year-old company has come yet to realizing its founders’ ambition to build a search engine that reads its users’ minds. The achievement wasn’t lost on Google co-founder Sergey Brin, who jokingly told reporters that the company’s lightning-quick computers are morphing into the “other third” of people’s brains.

“I think it’s a little bit of a new dawn in computing,” Brin said Wednesday.

The shift means Google users will begin to see an ever-evolving set of search results appearing on their computer screens, potentially changing with each additional character typed. That means a satisfactory set of results could take just one keystroke.

As an example, a person who types “w” in Google’s search box could see the weather results in the same area as where the request was entered. The Associated Press

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