Beating Google?

May 17th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Guest Authors | 1 Comment »


With thanks to Guest Author Mark Cuban

Is there anything more fun than sitting around, growing your hair, drinking a Bud while listening to Jethro Tull and pondering how to change the balance of power in the search world and unseat Google?

Better search? Too subjective. Better monetization? After the fact. Better User Interface? Will we know it when we see it? A new and different search? Semantic? Human powered? We won’t know till we know.

But what about the Google Index, all the websites that are indexed by Google What is it worth to be in the Google Index? What would you, as a website owner require in order to remove your site from the Google Index and no longer be available when someone does a google search?

It should just be a matter of dollars and cents and sense, shouldn’t it?

How many websites would have to recuse themselves from the Google Index before Google Search was negatively impacted?

Mahalo.com thinks it needs to support the 25k most common search terms in order to be successful. What would happen if MicroSoft or Yahoo or a MicroHoo went to the 5 top results for the top 25k searches and paid them to leave the Google Index?

A theoretical maximum of 125k sites, but with overlap, probably closer to 100k or less, times how much per site on average?

The math starts to get interesting. At $1,000 per site average times 100k sites, thats only $ 1 Billion Dollars. The distribution would obviously favor the larger sites, so of that billion dollars, would the top 1k sites take 500k each and the remaining 99k split the rest?

Given the stakes, why stop at $ 1 Billion Dollars ? Would the top 1k most visited sites take a cool $1mm each, plus a committment from MicroSoft or Yahoo to drive traffic through their search engines to more than make up for the lost Google Traffic. After all, once consumers realized that Google no longer had valid search results for the top 25k searchs, that traffic would most likely go to MicroSoft and Yahoo.

And why we are at it, why not require that these 100k sites switch from Googles Publisher Network to Yahoo’s or MicroSofts? It would start to earn back the $1 Billion paid out very quickly.

On top of that, in order to grease the skids even further, why not issue advertising credits to the sites that switched off Google? Its soft dollars, that would sweeten the pot and drive more traffic.

IN essence, its no different that any other content aggregation play. Its paying for content . But, It would take some big ones to go for it and see if it worked. However, without question, every search engine has some number of core sites, that when removed from its index , destabilizes the value of its search.

The question is how many? What would it cost to get that number of sites to turn Google off and stay off, and would the traffic created as users switch from Google more than compensate for the cost?

Or would Google recognize the risk and jump in and offer more to websites to stay?

Sure would be interesting to find out.

NextBio – A Life Science Search Engine

May 17th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Reviews | No Comments »


Q: What is NextBio?

A: NextBio is a life science search engine that enables researchers and clinicians to access and understand the world’s life sciences information. With NextBio, in just one click you can search through tens of thousands of study results with billions of data points spanning across different experimental platforms, organisms and data types. NextBio also searches across millions of publications to help you find new articles pertaining to your query. NextBio’s search engine makes massive amounts of disparate biological, clinical and chemical data from public and proprietary sources searchable, regardless of data type and origin, and empowers scientists to quickly understand their own experimental results within the context of other research.

The Demo Video is here.

RushmoreDrive, Black Community Search Engine

May 17th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Reviews | 1 Comment »

Just what is RushmoreDrive?

Launched in April, RushmoreDrive is a search engine for the Black community. They deliver a blend of mainstream search results plus a layer of more relevant search results influenced by the Black community. “RushmoreDrive is where the Black community goes to find the best search results.”

At RushmoreDrive you will also find a feature-rich job networks community where members can create a professional profile, find job opportunities, and create job networks online. RushmoreDrive’s job networking tool will help members unlock the power in their professional connections. RushmoreDrive News enables the Black community to find news headlines from the entire World Wide Web, including well known Black media, blogs and countless relevant online voices, as well as recognized mainstream news sources.

RushmoreDrive is the starting point and the destination for its users to find what is most relevant to the Black community. The video link is on the top of the homepage.

Yandex Search improves its search algorithm

May 17th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Global, News | 1 Comment »



Yandex today released a new version of search on www.yandex.ru; the testing period on the engine lasted a month. The final version takes into account feedback from thousands of users of the search engine.

The new updated version of Yandex’s search program, named “Magadan”, has many improvements. The number of ranking factors has doubled; the new search technology can now quickly rank the most relevant web pages first, without making the user wait until it finishes scanning all pages.

Yandex.Search can now understand abbreviations and transliterated words. For example, the improved algorithm will show relevant results for the [IE] query, including those pages, which do not contain the actual abbreviation, but have the words “Internet Explorer” instead.

The [ford] search query retrieves web pages that have this word both in Latin and in Cyrillic. The renewed system can also process queries, which have some additional characters, such as in [Europa+] or [C#].

Yandex.Search can find the right websites even if the user’s query had typos. Every day the new Yandex search detects typos in 2.5 m user queries and offers correctly spelled variants. One million typos get corrected automatically.

Yandex’s new search index was expanded to include over a billion pages of non-Russian web resources.

The next version of Yandex’s search engine will have the name of “Nakhodka”, which continues the tradition of giving names of Russian cities to new versions of the search program.

Source: HitSearch