Twing has Saved Searches, Buzz Graphs, & More!

July 15th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
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Twing, a powerful new search engine dedicated to finding information within forums and communities, today announced it’s taken the ‘beta’ label off its logo. “Initial response to our product has been great and after making changes based on feedback along with adding new features, we feel the product is ready for prime time,” say General Manager Kevin Shea.

Twing has recently added more features for members and non-members alike. “We’ve added a handy Saved Search feature so users can now easily keep track of their favorite searches and get updated results,” says Shea. “Additionally, a useful and fun tool is our new Buzz Graphs feature, which allows visitors to see the popularity of various terms within the online community space, as well as refine terms by category and share the results with colleagues. Typical web users might find the results fun and interesting. For brand managers, it’s a valuable tool offering insight into what’s being said about products and companies.” Twing is also in the process of adding a variety of tools for Forum Owners as well.

The key thing to know about Twing, according to Director of Product Management Scott Germaise, is that, “Twing.com searches across real conversations between real people in the forum space. Forum search can now take its place next to blog search as an important tool for users to seek out and participate in online social spaces.” According to Forrester’s North American Social Technographics Online Survey, Q2, 2007, those who read online forums account for 28 percent of US Consumers – even more than blogs, which account for 25 percent. In terms of participation, 18 percent contribute to online forums, whereas only 14 percent comment on blogs, with 11 percent maintaining their own blog.

“Online forums are an established – yet growing – medium people have been using even prior to blogs and social networks,” says Germaise. “But those who seek out online discussions to ask questions, seek and offer advice and so on haven’t had an effective means to seek out these spaces until now. Our goal is to help people find appropriate venues to participate in discussions by providing both a forum search and a directory resource.”

In addition to Twing’s multiple search options, the site offers advanced filtering and sorting tools so people can effectively search forums in ways not available until the advent of Twing.com. The company also seeks to build even more awareness of the online forum space. Twing.com is easily used by entering search terms to quickly locate specific discussions and/or topics. Visitors can register – for free – to become a Twing.com member, participate in Twing.com’s forums and take advantage of current and upcoming personalization options.

Former Yahoo! Local GM Paul Levine Joins Zvents

July 15th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
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Zvents, a local search and advertising network featuring event listings to promote local businesses, today announced that Paul Levine, Vice President of Marketing of AdBrite, has joined Zvents’ board of directors.

“We’re very pleased that Paul has joined our board,” said Ethan Stock, Zvents CEO and co-founder.  “Paul’s considerable experience in local search and local advertising will help us enhance user satisfaction and merchant adoption across the Zvents Media Network.  Paul’s years leading Yahoo!’s local efforts and his current position at AdBrite give him unique insights into search, advertising, and consumer behavior within a local context.”

Zvents is a local search and advertising network of hundreds of web and mobile partners featuring event listings to promote local business. Using unique technology that enables location- and time-based search for businesses and events, Zvents helps millions of people find local businesses and discover things to do.  Thousands of local merchants use Zvents’ free and paid listings products to submit local events and activities, thus promoting their businesses and providing unique and hard-to-find local content to users throughout Zvents.

Zvents connects local businesses with millions of monthly users in diverse categories including music, movies, restaurants, sports, retail shopping, and community.  The company aggregates rich business and event information from web sites, user-contributed content, and 3rd party sources, and integrates high-quality partner editorial content with its search index.  The company is a leader in local search relevance and is the main sponsor of the open-source Hypertable project.

Cognition gets funds for Semantic NLP technology

July 15th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
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Cognition has completed an institutional and individual financing round totaling $2.7 million.  Investors include Draper Associates  Tim Draper), Fingerhut Ventures, and a personal investment by the company’s  CEO, Scott Jarus.

Cognition Technologies, based in Los Angeles, has developed the revolutionary Semantic Natural Language Processing (NLP) technology, which adds word and phrase meaning and understanding to computer applications, enabling them to be more human-like in their processing of information.  Cognition’s Semantic Map, the underlying technology developed over the past 23 years, is the largest and most extensive in existence.  Applications and technologies which utilize Cognition’s Semantic NLP™ technology  are positioned to take full advantage of Web 3.0 (the Semantic Web).

Cognition Technologies has changed the NLP paradigm through its unique and complete combination of a complete semantic map and linguistic elements to optimize semantic understanding: Morphology – The various forms of word, e.g. singular, plural, tense Syntax – The grammatical structure, e.g. verbs, nouns Semantics – Word and sentence meaning, augmented by synonymy and taxonomy Spelling – The various ways words are spelled (or misspelled).

It’s a Done Deal. Twitter Acquires Summize.

July 15th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Guest Authors, News | No Comments »



Summize – A Brief History by Jay Virdy
It’s with great pride that I officially confirm Twitter’s acquisition of Summize.  The rationale for this transaction from Twitter can be found here.  I’ll outline my motivation to sell our beloved Summize, talk about our experience soup to nuts, and recognize the players who made this deal possible.

Our passion for designing search applications brought us three co-founders, Abdur, Greg, and myself, together back in 2000. After years of building and launching dozens of highly scalable systems serving millions of users, in 2007 we set out to create our own new vertical search engine to help people find opinions and attitudes on the Web.

At Summize, we assembled a small, quirky, but highly efficient and experienced team to build a powerful platform to extract user opinions from blogs and review sites.  Dr. Abdur Chowdhury, our cacographic Chief Scientist, applied machine learning techniques to understand how users express sentiment using common words and polarizing phrases (e.g., when someone says “nice” it isn’t necessarily in a positive sense).  Dr. Eric Jensen, our first hire and perpetually caffeinated VP of Development, built the complex underlying data engine.

In 2008, we discovered Twitter as a source of the most timely and relevant opinions on trending topics.  We immediately embarked on a plan to develop the best Twitter search and discovery application to serve the Twitter community and burgeoning Twitter ecosystem.

Summize – Nuts & Bolts
Excited by the potential of a realtime Twitter search, we unleashed Matt Sanford, a web crawling wizard, ops extraordinaire, measurement zealot, and foreign language nut, to shift his attention from blogs to microblogs, and to Twitter in particular.

Matt scurried the raw nuggets of data to Mike, an even bigger nut and a master juggler who to this day claims to have juggled SEVEN balls simultaneously.  Mike, who responds well to donuts, just happens to be a C++ and Java guru so he churned out fancy beautified code to parse tweets, thread disparate conversations, and pluck out highly accurate and meaningful trending topics from the Twitter public timeline. The latter task is a really, really tough nut to crack, so it required a helping hand from our nutty professor Adbur Abdir Abdur aka “El Hefe.”

Mike pipes the data into our database for Eric, who spends two hours a day either making the perfect cappuccino or walking 28 blocks to find it.  But Eric’s also a self-acclaimed IR wunderkid who can speak in SQL and can invert, convert, revert, subvert, and even evert relational databases and inverted indices to do exactly what he wants.  (Ok, I don’t know what that means, but that’s exactly the point). He wrung every bit of performance possible to deliver an awesome realtime indexing and query engine.  He also implemented hyper-geospatial proximity search during one of his coffee breaks.

Greg, our CTO, the “Pixelator”, who frequently confines himself in his basement to align a single pixel to achieve ultimate perfection that only the enlightened can discern, also maintains this riveting blog.  He once wanted to rename Summize “tweird”, so that tells you a lot about him.  I do admit he’s pretty good at UI design (no surprise here as I taught him everything he knows, including how to manage geeks), assembled all the pieces and served up an elegant user experience for the Twitterati to marvel at.

The bottom line?  In a nutshell, Summize nailed realtime conversational search right out the gate.

Summize – Twitter’s Missing Manual
Summize revealed the true power of Twitter and its thriving community.  Right from our home page you can “see” what people are talking about at this moment via our trending topics.  We tamed the Twitter public timeline by bringing some order to the chaos.

Type any query into Summize to “listen in” on conversations on practically any topic.  What do people think about Hancock?  What’s the buzz on Dark Knight or the new iPhone?  What site is down?

It’s now effortless to find your taste neighbors and to connect with like-minded people worldwide.  Simply search on keywords that interest you and start following.  Experience conferences vicariously and monitor breaking news events as they unfold.

The “Aha! moment” for us was tracking what people are saying about Summize itself.  We have been glued to summize.com nearly 24×7 since launch.  For the first time we could listen, respond, and engage with our customers in realtime.  This revelation was game changing for all of us.  There is great potential for companies to get involved with their user base the way we and others like Zappos, JetBlue, Comcast, Southwest have.

Twitter and their investors understood the potential of Summize, hence the marriage between the two startups.  There is a perfect technology fit, vision fit, and cultural fit as mentioned in the Twitter blog.

The acquisition enables Twitter to fully harness the core search, filtering, and discovery technology built by the extraordinarily talented Summize team.  All five Summize engineers will be joining Twitter.  I will continue as a consultant for a short period of time and then move on to spend more time with the family, of course, and eventually sprout another killer startup here in lovely Northern Virginia, a thriving hotbed for Web 2.0 companies (and, as Abdur would say, I am a cereal entrepreneur now).