Quintura named in Top 10 by PCMag.com

September 9th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Global, News | No Comments »


People say that Google turned ten this weekend. So did Yandex. I wonder what people will say about Quintura (which recently turned three) in seven years from now.

Kyle Monson, editor of PCMag.com (PC Magazine) has included Quintura in the list of 10 search services that find ways to improve on the Google search experience in his story “Search Without Google: Part II“.

Here is why PCMag.com featured Quintura among its favorite alternative search technologies:

“A visual search method rather than a textual one, Quintura uses an evolving tag cloud to let you drill down to the specific topic you’re searching for…”

I found out Quintura being the only search engine of non-U.S. origin in the list of alternative search engines in the article. The list consists (in alphabetical order) of Ask Kids, BlueOrganizer, Ixquick, Powerset, Quintura, Searchme, Silobreaker, Twing, Twitter Search, and Viewzi.

A search engine with 80 per cent accuracy?

September 9th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Global, News | 1 Comment »

By: Avanti Kumar, MIS Asia in InterGovWorld.com

A locally-developed search engine, that uses linguistic analytics instead of keywords, is among the first batch of projects under Singapore government’s Interactive Digital Media Research and Development Programme Office (IDMPO).The project, developed by researchers at the Lab for Media Search (LMS) from the National University of Singapore, uses a question-answering (Q&A) system that aims to provide users with precise answers, rather than a long list of Web pages like other search engines.

This year, the LMS Q&A search engine, will be joined by a new wave of 13 projects proposed by researchers from Singapore tertiary institutions. Some SG$18 million in funding will be provided.

Focusing on the research theme “Co-space”, the projects aim to make explore a new generation of the Internet that is more pervasive, immersive and integrated into people’s lives.

Up to 80 per cent accuracy

LMS Director, Professor Chua Tat-Seng said the Q&A search engine results offer 70 to 80 per cent accuracy, compared to the 20 per cent by typical search engines that use keywords search.

And, when a user keys in a question, instead of just displaying websites with related words, the application will display a list of exact answers. Each comes with the name of the source, date of publication and the Internet address.

Professor Chua said that such a system, with its ability to give answers directly, will do well in a knowledge management space within an enterprise.

Already, the system, together with another that is able to search for video clips on the Internet, has been adopted by US-based television cable company Comcast to help its customers search for programs more accurately. “For instance, the viewers can specify their search into fighting scenes and will be displayed with a search result of shows with fighting scenes,” said Professor Chua.

Mimicking human emotions

Other new IDMPO projects include one that mimics and simulates the sense of touch and other human emotions, to enrich the virtual experience, and another that addresses privacy and trust challenges in virtual worlds.

The latter measures and deduces the trust worthiness of users in the e-commerce space and makes the information available to interested parties. This is done through examination of past behaviors and others’ experiences and interactions with the particular user.

This project addresses the technology’s social aspect, which is often overlooked in many innovations, said Dr John Seely Brown, Visiting Scholar, Annenberg Center at University of Southern California. “This helps bring a level of trust to the Internet,” he said.

Dr Brown is part of IDMPO’s International Review Panel (IRP), which comprises of academics and industry luminaries in the field of new media. The IRP met in Singapore from 1 to 4 September to select the projects, apart from giving their recommendations, the judges felt that the new batch can trump the previous projects.

“I was very impressed to see such a progress since our last meeting in 2007,” said IRP member Professor Dr Jose Luis Encarnacao, Professor of Computer Science at the Technische Universitat Darmstadt and head of the Interactive Graphics Research Group. “The quality of the research is very high and the talent being developed shows a high-level of competence and motivation.”

Text Processing – Passage Retrieval and Question-Answering (QA)

We work mainly on question-answering from open domain (free-) text corpus, mainly in news. Depending on the type of questions, we develop techniques to return precise answers either at the phrase level, sentence level, or as query-focused summary.

Additionally, we are exploring techniques to answer deductive and exploratory questions. While extending the techniques for precise information retrieval, we are also applying them to vertical domains of education and legal search.
Question-Answering

Question-answering (QA) aims to find exact answers to users’ natural language queries, instead of ranked lists of documents as is done in current search engines. It is a major step towards information retrieval instead of document retrieval. Our QA system employs a pipeline structure that consists of several modules to get short and precise answers to users’ questions. It searches for answers at increasingly finer-grained units of: (1) locating the relevant documents, (2) retrieving passages that may contain the answer, and (3) pinpointing the exact answer from candidate passages. The main research focuses of our work are three-fold.

First we search the Web for relevance context information to supplement the often inexact query. In particular, we perform semantic clustering of information retrieved from the Web to induce different facets of queries in supporting event-based QA.

Second, we employ dependency relations, in additional to density-based word matching, to perform passage retrieval at sentence level. We will explore the integration of statistic, dependency and semantic relations in QA.

Third, we develop document concept lattice model together with definitional patterns and human interests model to perform task-oriented summarization.

Our studies on large-scale TREC-QA corpus demonstrate that our approaches are effective in performing factoid, list and definitional QA. Our system has been ranked consistently at second position in last 3 years (2003-2005) in public TREC-QA evaluations organized by NIST, USA. Our summarization system also achieved top position in DUC forum in 2005. Our technology has been licensed by industry to perform precise legal search.

Briteclick Adds Innovation to Search Industry

September 9th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Newcomers, News | 2 Comments »


Briteclick provided its first sneak preview of its new search application at the TechCrunch50 Conference — the premier launchpad for the world’s most promising early-stage Internet companies.  With global search engine usage continuing to flourish as the #1 activity on the Internet, Briteclick has developed an application that simplifies the way people search and complete tasks on the web.

Briteclick, named after the application’s ability to search with a single click, instantly displays multiple sources of useful information in a sidebar, enabling users to access more results in less time, without being forced to leave their current page.  “Briteclick isn’t a search engine.  Rather, it’s a helpful tool that allows people to find information easier and faster,” said Clay Fisher, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer.  “With today’s search engines, there’s a laborious process of clicking from link to link on a search results page, only to be redirected to other websites.  Briteclick removes this process and simply displays the desired content right within your current page with just one click.”

Briteclick was selected from over a thousand aspiring early-stage startups to launch their new products and services at TechCrunch50, one of the Internet industry’s most prestigious events specifically established to unveil the most innovative emerging internet technologies from around the world.  Free, easy-to-install, and easy-to-use, Briteclick is currently in stealth mode, available only in private beta.  It will release its product to the public in a phased invitation-only approach beginning September 9th at www.briteclick.com.

Additional Briteclick Information
Briteclick is a verb. The process of highlighting text, right-clicking, selecting ‘Briteclick’ in the context menu, and launching the Briteclick window is a common example of ‘Briteclicking’

Briteclick is an open platform. Vertical search engines can develop modules that display within the Briteclick window during contextually relevant situations. For example, a health search engine has the ability to create a Briteclick health module that displays their information to Briteclick users when they Briteclick on ‘flu’ or ‘asthma’. Briteclick’s open platform provides vertical search engines with a unique way of reaching their target market and driving traffic back to their website.

Briteclick recommends Michael Wesch’s video The Machine is Us/ing Us and I couldn’t agree more!

Find, follow, and share comments on the web

September 9th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Alts, News, Verticals | 1 Comment »

BackType is a service that lets you find, follow and share comments from across the web. Whenever you write a comment with a link to your website, BackType attributes it to you. We give comment authors a profile featuring all the comments they’ve written on the Internet. If you don’t have a website to use when you fill out comment forms, sign up and use one of ours. Source: BackType

Impessive Imprezzeo about to launch

September 9th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in Newcomers, News | No Comments »

Imprezzeo, an image-based search software company backed by Independent News and Media, launches today, in a move that will transform the image search market. Unlike other image search applications, Imprezzeo simply uses images to search for images, rather than the traditional keyword-based approach.

As a result, Imprezzeo achieves significantly better and more relevant search results because it identifies images that match what the user is really looking for – unlike keyword-based searches that frequently return totally unrelated images. Imprezzeo’s proprietary software is based on an amalgam of content-based image retrieval (CBIR) and facial recognition technologies developed at the University of Wollongong and the University of Queensland in Australia.

Imprezzeo’s technology base can be used in any number of different applications. The primary application is image search – using images to search for other images held in an online digital photo library, an internally-generated digital image collection, an online photo-sharing site or an internet search engine.

Using Imprezzeo, the user can better refine a set of returned images by selecting those which resemble what they are looking for. By analysing the characteristics of the selected sample, the Imprezzeo engine can quickly and seamlessly re-order the results, or indeed the whole image collection, to show the images that best match the sample. The user could even upload images from their own collection to use as the sample. Either way, Imprezzeo delivers accuracy and speed, even when dealing with collections sizes running into millions of images.

This dramatically enhances the search experience for the user, saving time and producing much more relevant search results. It also benefits the content provider – a photo agency, for example – because they will be able to generate more usage and sales by delivering a wider and more relevant range of images; and it assists those agencies in promoting greater loyalty.

In using Imprezzeo, image providers need not abandon their existing search engines and don’t need to change the way they currently search. Imprezzeo has been designed to complement existing search engines by acting as a very powerful refinement tool after any initial image results set has been returned – which is invariably the point at which many users become frustrated and quit their searches.

SOURCE