Have you seen the new tafiti search engine yet?

August 21st, 2007 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Innovations | 3 Comments »

Note: You will need to install Silverlight in order to use tafiti.  (included)

The first thing you notice about tafiti is the very plain homepage. Here’s tafiti.

Just a sheet of ruled paper for a search box.  But type in your query and hit enter…

and you’ll see your web results in the center of the page, and this little “lazy Susan” in the bottom left corner.  Click on the RSS icon, and you get feeds about your topic.

Click on the tiny picture frame icon, and you get images…

Click on the book, and you get books (that you can search inside!).

Click on the newspaper and you’ll get all news items on your topic.

And here’s the “piece of resistance,” click on a tree icon, and instead of a boxed tag cloud, you get a “tag tree.”  Move your mouse to a leaf, and a text box opens. 

The good news is that tafiti is brought to you by the same people that created Ms. Dewey – MSN.

The bad news is that tafiti is brought to you by the same people that created Ms. Dewey – MSN.

In other words, the graphics for tafiti and Ms. Dewey are state-of-the-art; they’re very slick (and slow to load!). But in both cases it quickly becomes apparent that the results are just the same old MSN results.  It’s like an expensive slipcover on an old sofa, it looks great – until you sit on it.

You see, with KoolTorch, Quintura & KartOO, and Kosmix, the dramatically different  interfaces are not just window dressing, they are both novel and -this is the key- functional.  Clustering and Visualization and Categorization don’t simply look nice, they also let the user do something new.

I am not the first to say this, but this is why Ms. Dewey and tafiti will eventually fade away, because the novelty will eventually wear off like a Christmas toy in March.  Once your buddies say, “Oh yeah, we’ve seen Ms. Dewey,” why go back?  Once everyone has seen the “tag tree,” they will lose interest in it. 

Just remember the “Big 3″ U.S. automakers.  After a certain point, each new model started to look pretty much like last year’s model.  The more massive a company becomes, the less innovative it becomes, too.  It’s hard to do figure 8’s in a cruise ship!  Innovation comes from the start-ups (read: Japanese imports). 

For me, it’s still the Alternative search engines that keep me glued to my laptop.

I hope you enjoy tafiti, and I think you should try it out. 

But tomorrow I’ll show you something else…

What’s in a name?  Well,  apparently “tafiti” means “to do research” in Swahili! 

333 Alternative Search Engines in 333 Seconds!

August 21st, 2007 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Innovations | No Comments »

Is it possible?  A look at almost every alternative search engine logo that we have covered since we started AltSearchEngines on June 1st in 333 seconds?

It’s not only possible, the total number of search sites on this YouTube video is actually 462. But the Grand Total of web applications that they show you is 5,000! 

You just have to see it to believe it.  You can also go straight to SimpleSpark.

The question is, how many can you recognize at the speed that they fly by?

The World’s First Intuitive Search Engine!

August 21st, 2007 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

How the Derelict Search Engine Works

The world’s first intuitive search engine that finds what you really need.

Many people are amazed and thrilled when they first unleash the massive power of searching using subconscious queries. We have been conditioned as a society to pay far too much attention to our conscious minds and its needs. It is often a breath of fresh air when we begin to understand the needs of our own inner selves.

The Derelict Search Engine does away with the entire concept of conventional search engines. In conventional searches, a user makes a conscious effort to search for information on a particular term or phrase. The search engines do a decent but inadequate job of sifting through millions of pieces of information in order to provide useful results.

The Derelict Search Engine takes the term or phrase that your conscious mind is using and uses a modified form of remote viewing to determine the actual question that your subconscious is seeking to answer.

I tried three random searches, but they were so freakishly accurate that I just had to stop!

Please, don’t use derelict unless you’re prepared to face your subconscious!