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Search 2.0 vs Traditional SearchEbrahim Ezzy's influential post defined search 2.0 as search technologies "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."
Human powered search engine Mahalo raising $20M
Mahalo, the search engine that is powered by humans — furiously writing up results on those topics frequently asked by searchers — is seeking to raise a $20 million round of financing at very high valuation, we’re told. We’re hearing Mahalo founder Jason Calacanis wants potential investors to value his company at $175 million, before they invest, which is lofty considering the company reportedly has less than 1.5 million monthly unique users. Valacanis did not respond to a request for comment from VentureBeat. Calacanis has been trying to promote the site with things like Mahalo Daily, a web show with a former CNET host named Veronica Belmont.
The financing round will be the company’s third. Calacanis told the WSJ (no link; subscription required) in May that he raised enough money from investors to last five years, so its not clear why he is raising more money now. [Update I: We’ve since confirmed the fund-raising plans with a second well-placed source. While Mahalo does have enough cash for five years, the company has decided to raise more money for opportunistic reasons; its a good time to raise money, and might consider an acquisition or partnership.] The investors include Sequoia Capital, News Corp., CBS Corp., PayPal Inc. founder Elon Musk, Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban and others.
However, another human powered search engine, ChaCha, just raised $10 million more financing, so Mahalo may be seeking to hold its own.
The Top 100 Alternative Search EnginesJanuary 29, 2007 / 104 comments
Ask anyone which search engine they use to find information on the Internet and they will almost certainly reply: "Google." Look a little further, and market research shows that people actually use four main search engines for 99.99% of their searches: Google, Yahoo!, MSN, and Ask.com (in that order). But in my travels as a Search Engine Optimizer (SEO), I have discovered that in that .01% lies a vast multitude of the most innovative and creative search engines you have never seen. So many, in fact, that I have had to limit my list of the very best ones to a mere 100. But it's not just the sheer number of them that makes them worthy of attention; each one of these search engines has that standard "About Us" link at the bottom of the homepage. I call it the "why we're better than Google" page. And after reading dozens and dozens of these pages, I have come to the conclusion that, taken as a whole, they are right! The Search HomepageIn order to address their claims systematically, it helps to group them into categories and then compare them to their Google counterparts. For example, let's look at the first thing that almost everyone sees when they go to search the Internet - the ubiquitous Google homepage. That famously sparse, clean sheet of paper with the colorful Google logo is the most popular Web page in the entire World Wide Web. For millions and millions of Internet users, that Spartan white page IS the Internet. Google has successfully made their site the front door through which everyone passes in order to access the Internet. But staring at an almost blank sheet of paper has become, well, boring. Take Ms. Dewey A second example comes from Simply Google Artificial IntelligenceA second arena is sometimes referred to as Natural Language Processing (NLP), or Artificial Intelligence (AI). It is the desire we all have of wanting to ask a search engine questions in everyday sentences, and receive a human-like answer (remember "Good Morning, HAL"?). Many of us remember Ask Jeeves, the famous butler, which was an early attempt in this direction - that unfortunately failed. Google's approach, Google Answers, was to enlist a cadre of "experts." The concept was that you would pose a question to one of these experts, negotiate a price for an answer, and then pay up when it was found and delivered. It was such a failure, Google had to cancel the whole program. Enter ChaCha Clustering EnginesPerhaps Google's most glaring and egregious shortcoming is their insistence on displaying the outcome of a search in an impossibly long, one-dimensional list of results. We all intuitively know that the World Wide Web is just that, a three dimensional (or "3-D") web of interconnected Web pages. Several search engines, known as clustering engines, routinely present their search results on a two-dimensional map that one can navigate through in search of the best answer. Search engines like KartOO Recommendation Search EnginesAnother promising category is the recommendation search engines. While Google essentially helps you to find what you already know (you just can't find it), recommendation engines show you a whole world of things that you didn't even know existed. Check out What to Rent Metasearch EnginesNext we come to the metasearch engines. When you perform a search on Google, the results that you get are all from, well, Google! But metasearch engines have been around for years. They allow you to search not only Google, but a variety of other search engines too - in one fell swoop. There are many search engines that can do this, Dogpile Other Alt Search EnginesAnd so it goes, feature after feature after feature. TheFind Finally, almost prophetically, Google is silent. Silent! At least Speeglebot The Last QuestionIssac Asimov, the preeminent science fiction writer of our time, once said that his favorite story, by far, was The Last Question The question for this age, I submit, is… "Can Google Be Defeated"? Or is Google's mission "to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful" a fait accompli? Perhaps the place to start is by reading (or re-reading) Asimov's "The Last Question." I won't give it away, but it does suggest The Answer…. Charles Knight is the Principal of Charles Knight SEO The Top 100For an Excel spreadsheet of the entire Top 100 Alternative Search Engines, go to: http://charlesknightseo.com/list.aspx This list is in alphabetical order. Feel free to share this list, but please retain Charles' name and email. Update: Thanks Sanjeev Narang Update, 5 February 2007: Charles Knight has left a detailed comment (#94) in response to all the great feedback in the comments to this post. He also notes: "...while it looks like a very simple, almost crude list of 100 names, it has taken countless hours to try and do it properly and fairly. The list will be updated all year long, and the Top 100 can only get better and better until the Best of 2007 are announced on 12/31/07."
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