This link has been bookmarked by 37 people . It was first bookmarked on 25 Apr 2008, by Zhiming Wang.
-
15 May 09
-
14 May 09
-
03 Feb 09
-
04 Sep 08
-
31 Jul 08
-
16 Jul 08
-
12 Jun 08
Ryan CAs the Web swells with more and more data, the predominant way of sifting through all of that data—keyword search—will one day break ...
-
02 Jun 08
-
“Keyword search is okay,” he says, “but if the information explosion continues we need something better.
-
-
15 May 08
-
10 May 08
-
30 Apr 08
-
29 Apr 08
-
27 Apr 08
-
26 Apr 08
-
Spivack explains:
Keyword search engines return haystacks, but what we really are looking for are the needles . The problem with keyword search such as Google’s approach is that only highly cited pages make it into the top results. You get a huge pile of results, but the page you want—the “needle” you are looking for—may not be highly cited by other pages and so it does not appear on the first page. This is because keyword search engines don’t understand your question, they just find pages that match the words in your question.
-
So how do we get beyond keyword search and Google’s PageRank? There are many approaches being tried: social search, tagging, guided search, natural-language search, statistical methods, open search, semantic search, and (way out there) artificial intelligence.
- 1 more annotations...
-
-
They all have their problems. Tags are too messy and inconsistent. Natural-language requires too much computing power, is difficult to scale, and doesn’t deal with structured data well. Semantic search is perhaps the most promising, but it essentially requires every single Webpage to be re-written.
-
-
-
Alan McCluskeyAs the web becomes ever more complex, finding your way about and finding what you want requires different apoproaches.
-
Geoff EdwardsAs the Web swells with more and more data, the predominant way of sifting through all of that data—keyword search—will one day break down in its ability to deliver the exact information we want at our fingertips.
-
25 Apr 08
-
Alan LevineAs the Web swells with more and more data, the predominant way of sifting through all of that data—keyword search—will one day break down in its ability to deliver the exact information we want at our fingertips.
future google search semanticweb socialsoftware trends web2.0 hzmuseum08 hznmc hz08 hzau08
Would you like to comment?
Join Diigo for a free account, or sign in if you are already a member.