Nice effect!<p>In this, the motion and positioning are somewhat arbitrary/random. (Well, later query results pile on top like sediment, but it does not otherwise appear that the acceleration/velocity or start/end positions are indicators of result type, relevance, etc.)<p>My guess is that with the rising ease of animation on the web, motion (and changing scale/rotation/etc) will increasingly be used as a <i>substantive</i> indicator -- not just a transition or flourish. It will give extra hints of the underlying values or data structure. For example, the most relevant search result might wiggle a little... or results that tilt or vibrate in varying directions might subtly hint at ranking according to a secondary scale.<p>Of course this can be overdone to the point of obnoxiousness... but sprinkled in, maintaining a high data-motion ratio (like Tufte's data-ink ratio), such animated text will seem natural to the screen medium.