Scour – As Human as Search Can Get

September 4th, 2008 by Guest Author
Posted in Innovations, Reviews | 3 Comments »

Many search engines credit themselves as being “Social Search Engines,” but many of them fail to incorporate the actual humans in the socializing aspect. We are often forced to communicate through robots who relay our searching “actions” and “preferences” to other humans. This leaves me to ask, why can’t we just talk to other humans directly?  Well now we finally can with Scour, a new and rare Social Search Engines that actually allows us humans to communicate through our own words while we search.Scour’s social focal point lies in its comment system which allows users to comment on search results and also to rate one another’s comments. Users can also vote search results up or down, determining how high or low the results should appear on the page. Additionally, there are already a surprisingly great number of comments for many of the search terms. The only problem as of now is that most of them are fairly simple, but that is expected since the system is still fairly new. Nevertheless, Scour has the potential to grow and become a search engine powerhouse for useful user generated suggestions and reviews. And as it grows I am sure the comment system will evolve and undergo tweaks which will make it far more practical. For example, currently the comments are not listed by highest ranked, but instead by whichever comment is the oldest.  A little modification would allow users to actually see the good comments and ignore the useless ones.Scour also offers users points for commenting and voting, and these points translate into Visa gift cards. The only problem is that it would take about a year to actually get the $25 gift card. However, this doesn’t matter because I wouldn’t go to this website simply for the cash reward. The main reason I would use Scour would be for the human interaction and the true social atmosphere it provides. Unfortunately, I feel as if the reward system is not allowing the community to grow as much as it can. The reason for this is because in order to comment and gain points a user must quickly register a username. Now, even though it takes no more than 30 seconds to sign-up, the overall concept of registering simply does not go over well with most people. That is why I believe that opening up the comment system to non-members and those that are just passing by would help build the social community and generate more content. The reward system can stay for those that want to use it, but the comments should be open so people can experiment and contribute.

Overall, Scour is one of the few search engines that truly lives up to its name as a “social” search engine. With a couple minor tweaks this concept could become a very useful searching tool that would allow users to truly communicate with one another about the websites they visit.Sasha notes:After contacting Scour in order to ask about future changes, I learned of several modifications which will soon take place to further improve the social experience. One of them being, as I had hoped, that the comment sorting system will soon allow the users to select their sorting preferences. Scour also pointed out that the open comment system idea has been played around with, but it will most likely remain where users would have to quickly create a user name. By Sasha Lahijanian

Will it go ’round in Circos? Search by personality!

September 4th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Innovations, News | No Comments »

Circos’ mission is to let anyone find knowledge that’s on the Web quickly, easily, and accurately. Our search engine helps you find precisely what you’re looking for by tapping into what people are saying across the Internet.  Source: Circos

Most search engines today return thousands of web pages to you – that may or may not contain the information you need. Circos returns a personalized guide of trustworthy answers to your search requests rather than links to Web pages that might contain an answer. For example, if you want a luxurious, relaxing hotel in San Francisco with in-room DVD players, Circos returns only hotels that fit your description.

The results receive letter grades for each criterion in your description, and you can validate each result with the actual customer opinions that made up the grade.

Advertisers also benefit from Circos’ focus on giving brands exposure in the right context. Instead of having to bid to get attention, Circos ensures that brands appear in front of consumers for the right reasons and at the right time. Circos was founded in 2006 and is privately funded by a team of successful entrepreneurs and investment bankers. We’re based in San Mateo, CA and have a development center in Singapore.

Alt Search Engine EveryZing Aids New Orleans

September 4th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Alts, News | No Comments »

With hurricane Gustav bearing down on the Louisiana coast, Entercom Communications’ award-winning WWL AM/FM (http://www.wwl.com) in New Orleans deployed EveryZing’s ezSEARCH solution to capture live broadcast content and transform it into on-demand podcasts with full-text search, enabling residents to search for hurricane update information and retrieve broadcasted information to stay abreast of the latest storm information.

In addition to deployment across multiple Entercom properties, EveryZing’s hosted, white-label solution was able to be quickly deployed with little technical effort from station employees.  The EveryZing solution automatically captures the radio broadcast and generates full-text, time-stamped output, enabling users to search for and jump to the precise moment in the broadcast containing their search terms such as “Orleans Parish Evacuation,” etc.

“For media companies, high-quality original content is their most valuable asset,” said Tom Wilde, CEO, EveryZing.  “The EveryZing solution unlocks and leverages the value of this content and makes it discoverable across the Web’s ‘Search Economy.’  In the case of WWL, making potentially life-saving content easy to find and navigate highlights the power of our patented capabilities.”

Search millions of conversations with Samepoint

September 4th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in In Beta, News | No Comments »

In Beta for the past two months, Samepoint has been tracking millions of conversations, taking place across hundreds of thousands of the most influential blogs and social media sites. User-generated discussions are typically not indexed by major search engines, such as Google, as they do not reside on static pages.

Samepoint converts these discussions into web pages, or permalinks, and organizes them by topic being discussed. Users can save searches as RSS alerts and create their own comment feeds or subscribe to pre-defined feeds on popular topics of the day.

“As an aggregator, we are able to serve as the nexus where these conversations meet, providing a common point, or same point, of all discussions on a specific topic,” explained Richard Krueger, samepoint Chief Conversations Officer.

Conversational search represents the next wave in search technology, as user-generated content becomes an increasingly important form of online expression. But conversational search is more than searching Twitter. We want to provide consumers and marketers with a real-time pulse of people’s point of view on any topic that’s being discussed.

“Conversational search represents the next wave in search technology, as user-generated content becomes an increasingly important form of online expression. But conversational search is more than searching Twitter. We want to provide consumers and marketers with a real-time pulse of people’s point of view on any topic that’s being discussed,” added Krueger.

In addition to Twitter, samepoint searches comments on popular social news sites, such as Digg and Delicious, video sites such as YouTube and Truveo, reviews from Amazon and Yelp, discussion boards from Yahoo, and many more popular services.

Source: PRWeb

Dear Google: “What are Semantic Annotations?”

September 4th, 2008 by Guest Author
Posted in Guest Authors, News | No Comments »

Here is a marketing tip for semantic web businesses. Explain in layman’s terms your technologies and services and make those write-ups findable. Ontotext did this well and here they are getting a little press.

Here is how this came about. My editor asked me to take a look at a call for papers on the highly abstruse topic of semantic annotations in information retrieval:

As the saying goes, the semantic web is something we are all trying to get our respective heads around. And here I had to find out in a hurry what semantic annotations are. So one goes to Google and types in, “What are Semantic Annotations?” and the first result was this lucid, edifying, concise, life-saving mini-disquisition on this incredibly arcane topic:

Talk about great PR. It got me to their site. Just think of all the library school students, reporters and mid-level IT purchasing managers who may have been in my place—in need of a quick and dirty tutorial on semantic applications. Just as I harp on the crucial need for developers of Web 2.0 tools to always provide screencasts of their products and services on their homepages, now I will nag Semantic Web eggheads to include in their sites text tutorials. (And while you are at it, make them easy to email to other people and to print out.)

Being curious about the techies at Ontotext who so very helpfully provided the info I needed right on their site, I browsed through their site and read about their products, such as the KIM Platform:

Never hurts to attract the momentarily interested. Small investment of time and server space—write up a primer on difficult stuff and you will win gratitude and maybe even some press.

And a word to librarians who need a quick glance into the workings of these coming technologies. Take a look at the material on this workshop:

These are the kinds of things shaping the brave new world to come for librarians and other information professionals. We have to be ready.

By Hope Leman