The future of Google Search: Thinking outside the box. 12 June 2012Last updated at 04:17 ET By Leo Kelion Technology reporter Amit Singhal, head of search at Google, talks to Leo Kelion at the company's London headquarters The world's most popular search engine is trying to become more intelligent.
Last month Google announced the introduction of the Knowledge Graph in the US - an effort to improve its results by teaching its servers to understand what the words typed into its search boxes mean, and how they relate to other concepts. It marks a big bet by the firm's head of search, Amit Singhal, who discussed the move with the BBC.
In the past search engines haven't really known what words mean, how are you trying to change that with artificial intelligence? Why The Future Of Search May Look More Like Yahoo Than Google. When Nirvana was cool Rewind to the late 90s.
Almost everything you needed – email, news, sports, stocks, maps and more – was conveniently on one site: Yahoo!. Yahoo! Was the “portal” to the Internet that strived to deliver everything you could ever want on its own properties. The crazy thing is how successful Yahoo! Google and the future of search: Amit Singhal and the Knowledge Graph. Thinking about Google over the last week, I have fallen into the typically procrastinatory habit of every so often typing the words "what is" or "what" or "wha" into the Google search box at the top right of my computer screen.
Those prompts are all the omnipotent engine needs to inform me of the current instant top 10 of the virtual world's most urgent desires. At the time of typing, this list reads, in descending order: What is the fiscal cliffWhat is my ipWhat is obamacareWhat is loveWhat is glutenWhat is instagramWhat does yolo meanWhat is the illuminatiWhat is a good credit scoreWhat is lupus It is a list that indicates anxieties, not least the ways in which we are restlessly fixated with our money, our bodies and our technology – and paranoid and confused in just about equal measure.
That rate of change – of how we gather information, how we make connections and think – has been so rapid that it invites a further urgent Google question. "That's true," Brin concurred. Enterprise Search. Bien choisir un moteur de recherche d'entreprise. 01net. le 29/01/09 à 00h00 ' Les moteurs de recherche ne sont qu'un palliatif à une mauvaise gestion des documents dématérialisés dans une entreprise ', explique, un brin provocateur, Bruno Couderc, consultant en dématérialisation pour Opus Conseil.
En théorie, les documents devraient être suffisamment bien classés et répertoriés pour être accessibles facilement. Les moteurs ne seraient alors utiles que pour retrouver ceux qui ne sont pas structurés ou pour chercher des informations situées hors de l'entreprise. En pratique, les moteurs intégrés aux applications d'entreprise limitent souvent leur recherche à leurs seules données. Comparé à d'autres projets informatiques, le déploiement d'un moteur de recherche s'avère par ailleurs peu coûteux, à la fois en temps et financièrement (durée de déploiement raisonnable, pas ou peu de formation, peu de changement dans l'infrastructure, etc.). Les questions à se poser vont donc de : ' Est-ce que la sécurité est correctement gérée ? Protège Votre Vie Privée! Le seul moteur de recherche qui n’enregistre pas votre adresse IP.
Votre Vie Privée est menacée! Chaque fois que vous utilisez un moteur de recherches courant, vos données de recherches sont enregistrées'. Les principaux moteurs de recherche enregistrent votre adresse IP et utilisent des cookies de suivi pour enregistrer vos termes de recherche, la date et l'heure de votre visite, et les liens sur lesquels vous avez cliqué. Ils enregistrent ensuite ces informations dans une énorme base de données. January 28, International Data Privacy Day 2010 Ixquick, the world's most private search engine, and its U.S. brand, Startpage.com, today announced the release of a new proxy service that allows users to surf the web with complete privacy.
The proxy lets users browse websites safely and anonymously, without passing on any private, personally identifiable information to the websites they view. The Ixquick proxy is a free service that works in conjunction with the Ixquick search engine, available at www.ixquick.com. When users perform a search, they will find a clickable "proxy" option below each search result. When this option is selected, Ixquick acts as an intermediary to retrieve the page and display it in a privacy-protected Ixquick window. Introduction to Nutch, Part 2: Searching. In " part one of this two part series on " the open-source Java search engine, we looked at how to crawl websites.
Recall that the Nutch crawler system produces three key data structures: The WebDB containing the web graph of pages and links.A set of segments containing the raw data retrieved from the Web by the fetchers.The merged index created by indexing and de-duplicating parsed data from the segments. In this article, we turn to searching. The Nutch search system uses the index and segments generated during the crawling process to answer users' search queries.
We shall see how to get the Nutch search application up and running, and how to customize and extend it for integration into an existing website. Running the Search Application Without further ado, let's run a search using the results of the crawl we did last time [prettify]rm -rf ~/tomcat/webapps/ROOT* cp nutch*.war ~/tomcat/webapps/ROOT.war [/prettify] Figure 1.