![]() |
|
|
|
Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
Posts: 32,246
|
Quote:
Like I said, I'm willing to wait and see if it pans out over time. Even Google kinda sucked in the beginning. (Remember WebBot, InfoSeek, and other now-obsolete search engines?) I've developed products at the direction of my business analysts. They were object-oriented bliss. Pure design euphoria. And they were rejected by end-users because they were to complicated to actually use (something I warned about). Good design and high technology does not necessarily make a good end product. The trick is always figuring out how to apply technology. If Wolfram doesn't do it, someone else will.
__________________
Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
||
![]() |
|
Navin Johnson
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Wantagh, NY
Posts: 8,801
|
I thought those old time search engines like Webcrawler, Infoseek, were bought up by the bigger players (Yahoo, maybe even Google) so they could use the good parts (algorithms)of the search engines..
__________________
Don't feed the trolls. Don't quote the trolls ![]() http://www.southshoreperformanceny.com '69 911 GT-5 '75 914 GT-3 and others |
||
![]() |
|
Custom User Title
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Miami
Posts: 4,294
|
The old search engines were annoying in that they had way too much content/advertising/links on them. They missed the point that google hit- you go to google, and it loads instantly, because it is immensely simple. There is a box- you type in what you are looking for, and it searches for it, and returns clean and fast results. The superior algorithms that it used probably didn't even matter to most users- they were just sick of opening infoseek and looking for the box to type in their seach after waiting for it to load (remember, a lot of people were on dial-up, so reduced content made a big impact on load times).
|
||
![]() |
|
Registered
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: London, ON, Canada
Posts: 1,737
|
I think a lot of people are missing the point of WolframAlpha... it's a COMPUTATIONAL engine, not a search engine.
There's a big difference. For instance, just type in "moon". It figured out where I was (within10 miles), and then calculated the lunar path for my physical location, as well as the celestial configuration for my sky. And Douglas Adams fans can be rest assured that yes, he's covered as well. ![]() |
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
I read on ArsTechnica that Wolfram relies on Wolfram employees to parse information sources and associate data with terms. If so, that seems like an unworkable system in the long run.
|
||
![]() |
|
Gon fix it with me hammer
|
i tried it, found the information provided inaccurate..
For instance inhabitants for Brussels They listed 1.09 million... which is wrong For Lille they had 200000 something... So they picked the number from Brussels region for Brussels city and for Lille, they picked the city number for the city. Either they take both for the city (140K and 200 K) or they take both from the region (1.09 million and 3 million respectively)
__________________
Stijn Vandamme EX911STARGA73EX92477EX94484EX944S8890MPHPINBALLMACHINEAKAEX987C2007 BIMDIESELBMW116D2019 |
||
![]() |
|
![]() |
Registered
|
Doesn't link to the source for information. So you can't conveniently check the answer or learn more about the subject.
|
||
![]() |
|
Registered
|
I think this is the Rainman of search engines.
|
||
![]() |
|