Search Waves: Are We Living through Periodicity?
March 26, 2008
I’m fascinated with cyclical phenomena. When working on my graduate degree, I accepted a grant from Duquesne University in 1967. Located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, this Jesuit university was little-c catholic. All faiths were acceptable. One of my professors and friends, Dr. Richard Oehling told me, “Where else could an orthodox Jew teach the Protestant reformation to a group of Jesuits?” Such was Duquesne.
In one course, I confronted phenomenological existentialism, then a hot concept in philosophy. Although I was busy indexing sermons in Latin using ancient mainframes, the fuzzy-wuzzy world of existential philosophy caught my attention. I had zero clue about epistemology, heuristics, and other concepts that whipped serious students of different beliefs and backgrounds into a frenzy. This philosophical banter was better at stirring up emotions than a break down on the Squirrel Hill bus.
So, what’s this got to do with search?
I’m not sure, but there’s a thesis-antithesis-synthesis dialectic rippling the fabric of acquisitions, start ups, and “old wine in new bottles” innovations I read about in news releases. Just this morning, my Google Alert service informed me of “A New Wave of Enterprise Search”. The essay appeared in the CMSwatch Trendwatch blog. The key sentence to me was, “There’s a growing movement afoot to de-throne the old guard; talk of replacing FAST and Autonomy seemed to be uttered by every vendor that wasn’t a household name.” Read more
Search: A Kitchen Sink and the Carcassonne Problem
March 25, 2008
As I worked on my keynote for the upcoming Buying and Selling eContent Conference in April 2008, I flipped through PowerPoint decks in search of examples. I came across a presentation I delivered in the summer of 2006. In that talk, I described behind-the-firewall search as following an interesting trajectory. Humans have a tendency to elaborate, embroider, and complicate.
Let me give you an example. My mother and father recently moved from their home to a condominium-style dwelling. The “space” was a blank canvas. After a year, I noticed that the white space was filled in. Some of the objects were family mementos like the hand-carved ebony elephant that has been in the Arnold family for a century. But other acquisitions were plaques identifying my mother as a “red hat lady”. My father had taped instructions for replacing the cartridge in his printer next to his flat panel monitor. In short, the white space was being filled in.
I noticed a similar “stuffing” when I was in Carcassonne, the walled city in Aude. Every square inch inside the city walls had been put to use. Read more
Vivisimo’s Founders Interview Reveals Enterprise Plans
March 24, 2008
An interview with Vivisimo’s founders, Raul Valdez-Peres and Jerome Pesenti is now available from ArnoldIT.com. You can access the full-text of the interview from ArnoldIT.com’s Search Engine Wizards speak page.
The origins of the technology and the company’s clustering technology provide new insights into the company’s success. With an infustion of $4.0 million from North Atlantic Capital in early March 2006, Messrs. Valdez-Peres and Pesenti reveal their plans to expand their presence in behind-the-firewall search.
Based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, this Carnegie-Mellon University spin out plans to challenge the likes of Autonomy, Endeca, Fast Search & Transfer (Microsoft) in the enterprise market.
The full list of ArnoldIT.com’s search wizard interviews is located at ArnoldIT.com. This unique series of interviews is designed to provide those interested in behind-the-firewall search to “hear first hand” how some of today’s most innovative systems entered the market.
Stephen Arnold, March 24, 2008
New Search System for “Beyond Search”
March 23, 2008
ArnoldIT.com shifted to the Blossom hosted search solution for the Web log “Beyond Search”. Blossom Software offers various packages of search services for Web sites and Web logs as well as the company’s behind-the-firewall search system. Stuart Schram, ArnoldIT’s chief technology officer, said, “Blossom’s Web log search is a quantum leap beyond the default WordPress search function.”
The Blossom Web log search, as implemented on Beyond Search, allows fast, intuitive searching. Users can enter words or phrases and see relevance-rank hits to postings matching the query.
More information about Blossom is available at the company’s Web site at www.blossom.com. If you want to see how Blossom handles your Web log, you can sign up for a demonstration at http://www1.blossom.com/search_signup.php.
Stephen Arnold, March 23, 2008
Search: Appearances Are Deceiving
March 22, 2008
In Toronto, Ontario, several years ago, I attended a lecture in which the speaker (whose name I have forgotten) asked the audience, “What do you see?” When I saw this illustration, I saved it. My source was the University of Toronto. What do you see?
My myopic eyes see wheels that rotate. When I focus my attention on a single “wheel”, nothing moves. When I shift my vision, some wheels turn.
Search and retrieval is to some people similar to this illusion. I wish I could assure you that “search” will settle down, allow us to examine it carefully, and remain fixed if we shift our attention to another problem. I can’t. Search is a blob of digital mercury, and we are — at least for the foreseeable future — going to find that it’s elusive. Perception of the viewer “defines” search.
Why is this important?
On March 21, 2008, I spoke to a journalist who asked me, “What’s the difference between Intranet search and a company’s Web site search system?” The distinction is important because information behind-the-firewall is usually viewed as “for employees only”. There are exceptions such as a consultant or attorney who needs to examine information residing on an organization’s servers. The idea is that a user name, password, and even other types of authentication may be required to tap into invoices, customer information, marketing and sales materials, and other organization information and data. Read more
Vivisimo’s Founders Interviewed: Raul Valdes-Perez and Jerome Pesenti
March 21, 2008
In mid-March, Vivisimo received an infusion of $4 million from North Atlantic Capital. Vivisimo has emerged as a full-scale “behind the firewall” search provider. The company landed the high-profile search-and-retrieval deal with the US Federal government for USA.gov, the public-facing portal for government information. Then, the company inked a deal with Interwoven, the content management company, to provide search and content processing system for the Interwoven CMS system.
Some pundits see Vivisimo as specialist vendor. That view of the company is incorrect. My sources tell me that Vivisimo is finding itself invited to bid on a range of commercial, government, and association projects. Executives at some well-known, high-profile search firms have asked me about Vivisimo. In my experience, this means Vivisimo is doing something right.
Google Wins FCC Auction: It Comes Away Empty-Handed
March 21, 2008
Left out in the cold with no licenses in the 700 MHz spectrum auction this week, Google promises to be the company that will eventually come in from the cold, using its open-source Android operating system to enter the mobile phone market in a big way.
That is, if Verizon Wireless, which won the lion’s share of the coveted C-Block spectrum in the FCC auction, doesn’t get in Google’s way.
Here is the back story: Months before the auction got underway, Google announced it wanted to insure the FCC would set aside some spectrum for open access whereby consumers would be able to use interchangeable devices and services on the spectrum. Verizon Wireless and AT&T initially opposed the idea, but then relented as FCC Chairman Kevin Martin went along with Google’s proposal.
So now with Verizon Wireless in the proverbial catbird’s seat, it is preparing to open up its wireless network, but under its own terms. Verizon Communications’ chairman and chief executive Ivan Seidenberg this week told a developers group that the company is drawing up certification measures so non-Verizon Wireless devices and services can operate on its network by the end of he year.
“The next wave of growth will come from a whole new generation of devices,” Seidenberg told the developers. “Our goal is to make our network the on-ramp for the next phase of wireless innovation.”
The big question for Google now is whether and how difficult it will be for its Android project to develop devices and services for Verizon Wireless networks.
Google initially hailed the results of the auction in spite of the fact that it had initially bid for the C-Block spectrum, but came away empty-handed. In their blog, Google’s top lawyers, Richard Whitt and Joseph Faber, said:
“Consumers whose devices use the C-Block of spectrum soon will be able to use any wireless device they wish, and download to their devices any applications and content they wish.”
The attorneys didn’t say so, but consumers will also be able to watch lots of Google-sponsored ads on their handsets, too, even if they don’t necessarily wish to.
Teragram: SAS’s Search Launchpad
March 20, 2008
This week SAS announced that it purchased Teragram, a content processing company with deep roots in, computer science, mathematics, and blue – chip clients. If you poke around Teragram’s Web site, you learn that the company supports double byte languages. If I read the Teragram information correctly, this little-known outfit not far from Harvard Yard has proprietary technology strongly suggestive of the super – sophisticated techniques in use at IBM, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo.
The Teragram system can match other systems advanced functions like advanced function — NLP (natural language processing)? Automatic summarization? No problem. Hosted services option? Check. Autonomy – Recommind type patten matching? Done. Attensity and Bitext style linguistic analysis? Covered. Teragram has a warehouse chock full of search and content processing goodies.
Now SAS owns this “search tech” tool box.
Teragram, founded in 1997, was a privately-held content processing company in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Two wizards — both from Luxembourg — have applied their computer science and mathematical expertise to unstructured information for more than a decade. That’s a long time in the fast-moving search and text processing sector.
I learned about Teragram when someone told me that the company was a technology provider to Fast Search & Transfer SA. Fast Search’s Dr. John Lervik is a canny technologist, and he has a good nose for solid technology.
Google Gets You To The Train On Time
March 20, 2008
Google has signed up New Jersey Transit’s public transportation system, which will use the Google Transit routing system to provide trip planning and coordination for commuters.
Google Maps is integrated with NJ TRANSIT’s website linking commuters with the transportation system’s 164 rail and 60 light rail stations; each station displays its own information page showing nearby retail locations like restaurants and dry cleaners.
“For visitors to the region or the occasional rider who is less familiar with New Jersey’s public transportation options it gives them a starting point for learning about NJ TRANSIT and is a key too for attracting new riders to our system,” said Kenneth Pringle, a board member of the transportation system, in a statement. NJ TRANSIT is the largest statewide public transportation system in the U.S.
Google has signed up more than 30 transportation systems to use its trip planning system.
EVVIE at the Boston Search Engine Meeting
March 20, 2008
Infonoritcs, Ltd. (Tetbury, Glou.) announced that the EVVIE award for the best paper will be awarded on Tuesday, April 29, 2008. Everett Brenner is generally regarded as one of the “fathers” of commercial online databases. He worked for the American Petroleum Institute and served as a mentor to many of the innovators who built commercial online.
The Boston Search Engine meeting attracts search professionals, search vendors, and experts interested in content processing, text analysis, and search and retrieval. Held each year in Boston, Ev, as he was known to his friends, demanded excellence in presentations about information processing.
Sponsored by Stephen E. Arnold (ArnoldIT.com), this award goes to the speaker who best exemplifies Ev’s standards of excellence. The selection committee consists of the program committee, assisted by Harry Collier (conference operator) and Stephen E. Arnold.
Mr. Arnold said, “I saw Ev shortly before he died. One of the things we talked about was selecting good speakers for the Infonortics conference. He asked me, “Is it possible to give special recognition to those who do outstanding work?’ I spoke with Ev’s wife and she agreed that an annual award was appropriate. Harry Collier made the EVVIE a part of the annual Search Engine Meeting. This award is one way for us to respect his contributions and support his life long commitment to excellence.”
The awardee receives a cash prize and an engraved plaque. Information about the conference is avaiable on the Infonortics, Ltd. Web site at www.infonortics.com and here. More information about the award is here.
Don Anderson, Intellas.com, March 20, 2008