Search 2.0 vs Traditional Search

Saturday, October 28, 2006
Traditional Search (TSE):
Traditional search engines are based on information retrieval technologies. They implement operations such as boolean queries, proximity searches, text relevance and link analysis.

Examples: Google, Yahoo, MSN, Ask

Search 2.0 (S-2.0):

Search 2.0 is actually third generation search technologies. To explain the generations:
First-generation search ranked sites based on page content - examples are early yahoo.com and Alta Vista.
Second-generation relies on link analysis for ranking - so they take the structure of the Web into account. Examples are Google and Overture.
Third-generation search technologies are designed to combine the scalability of existing internet search engines with new and improved relevancy models; they bring into the equation user preferences, collaboration, collective intelligence, a rich user experience, and many other specialized capabilities that make information more productive.

Examples: Swicki, Rollyo, Clusty, Wink, Lexxe

The Search 2.0 Companies
Search is a multi-billion dollar market and a lot of startups want to be 'the next Google' So lets take a look at what current hot technologies are shaping the future of search.

Swicki

Swicki is a community-driven search engine that allows users to create deep, focused searches on a specific niche. Search results from a Swicki are more focused than a TSE and can learn and adapt automatically, based on the search behavior of the community.
Key Feature: Pattern recognition and Adaptive filtering
How it is useful compared to TSE?: Sometimes, looking for specific information in huge web indexes is so mystifying that users feel lost. Services like Swicki promise to accelerate the evolution of Search, by providing hyper-contextual (to use Mike Arrington's term) search results.

Rollyo

Both Rollyo and Swicki pursue a similar goal: community powered, theme-based search. Rollyo allows users to create and publish their own personal search engines, based on websites they decide to include in their 'SearchRoll'. SearchRoll doesn't replace a TSE, it's just a great way to search your favorite things in your favorite places.
Key Feature: Community-driven Search
How it is useful compared to TSE?: It narrows your search down to only a few trusted sources. A welcome retreat from the current in-your-face information chaos of the web.

Clusty

As the name suggests, Clusty is a clustering engine that groups similar items together - organizing search results into folders. It goes beyond simple search and combines the power of clustering with meta-search (i.e. a search of other searches), to provide a productive and flexible search experience. As well as producing organic web results, Clusty also enables searching of shopping information, yellow pages data, news, blog posts and images.
Key Feature: Result Clustering
How it is useful compared to TSE?: The competition has shifted from crawling the web and returning search results, to adding value to the information that has been retrieved. Clusty has a few advantages over Google:
1) You don't have to come up with your own categories or subjects in order to narrow, or refine, the search.
2) You don't have to rely on Google's perceived emphasis on links.
3) You don't have to guess the keyword, to get to that perfect page you need. Navigate the clusters and sub-clusters, just as you would use eBay, to find that one specific treasure you've been hunting for.

Wink

Using the power of social networking, Wink enables users to tag their favorite results, block irrelevant spam and display the best sites - as hand-picked by other users.
Key Feature: Collaborative Search
How it is useful compared to TSE?: Humans can recognize spam better than any automated filter. Social Search battles search manipulation (i.e. Black Hat SEO) by allowing users to block spam directly. However, one issue is that this system can be easily gamed. But if improved, Wink can deliver a leap in value to Web searchers.

Lexxe

Lexxe does what TSE's already do, but more efficiently. Lexxe is designed to extract short answers on-the-fly, instead of finding the page on which the answer might be located. It emphasizes the processing of language rather than symbols - using the level of words and the meanings associated with them.
Key Feature: Linguistic Search
How it is useful compared to TSE?: Although they claim to be "50% more accurate and relevant than any other search engine, including Google". However, they do have mechanisms in place to determine fairly accurate answers for short questions, compared to Google.
For example: Who was Louis-Nicholas Vauquelin? Compare Google's answer to Lexxe's.
 
posted by Sam at 11:46 AM, |

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