Attivo Unveils Maturity Model

March 4, 2011

Our aggregators returned this interesting piece to us from PR Newswire: “Attivio Releases Maturity Model for Unified Information Access.” Attivo has released a series of whitepapers detailing the benefits of using unified information access (UIA). The purpose of UIA is to help businesses see how using information access technologies can increase revenue, cut costs, and increase customer satisfaction for long term strategic planning. Using the UIA model, businesses can learn new ways about data integration. Attivio said:

“The objective of the model is to help organizations establish, benchmark, and improve information access and management strategies. According to the report, the first step in developing a plan for implementing UIA is to conduct a self-assessment of current capabilities and needs, then determine the urgency and importance of solving each issue identified.  As an organization moves into the next stage, the incremental capabilities and benefits are measured across two vectors – business criticality and information management integration and process improvements.”

The UIA model can be used by any business to improve their information assets and overall practices.

Attivio is a technology firm that offers functions and systems that push beyond keyword search and retrieval.

Whitney Grace, March 4, 2011

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Another Explanation of Microsoft Fast

March 4, 2011

IceCream has posted “Microsoft FAST Search Server 2010 for Sharepointx64.” This write-up summarizes the product and its capabilities; for example:

“Customers have historically been forced to choose between powerful, high-end search platforms or more mainstream, out-of the-box infrastructure solutions. FAST Search Server 2010 for SharePoint Beta provides a new choice: powerful high-end search delivered through SharePoint.”

If you’re still in the dark about Microsoft FAST Search Server 2010, give this page a whirl. With so many explanations of Microsoft Fast available, there is an appetite for information. The duplication of the information, however, suggests that the basics are not getting through. More substantive information, in our opinion, remains difficult to locate.

Stephen E Arnold’s new book about flagship vendors for enterprise search includes an insightful discussion of Microsoft Fast Search Server. The new study will be available in mid 2011 from Pandia.com, publisher of the analysis of enterprise search vendors.

Cynthia Murrell, March 4, 2011

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Lucene Revolution Call for Papers

March 3, 2011

In “Lucid Imagination Searching for Lucene Revolution Presenters,” CMS WiRE announced the search for conference speakers:

“Lucid Imagination, the commercial provider of services and support for Solr/Lucene, has opened its search for presenters for the second Lucene Revolution conference, scheduled for May 25-26 in San Francisco. The annual Lucene Revolution, the largest U.S. conference focused on open source enterprise search, brings together developers and industry thought leaders to discuss the use of Solr/Lucene.”

See information about Lucid Imagination here.

Cynthia Murrell, March 3, 2011

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Protected: Fast University

March 3, 2011

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Protected: Google Search Appliance or MSFT Fast Search Server?

March 2, 2011

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Search and Virtualization

March 1, 2011

Quick. What enterprise search vendors’ systems permit virtualization? The answer is that the marketing professional from any search firm will say, “We do.” However, the technology professional who rarely speaks to customers will say, “Well, that is an interesting question.”

Virtualization is turning big honking servers into lots of individual machines or servers. Virtualization is easy to talk about as search vendors tout their systems’ capabilities as business intelligence services. But in our experience remains both science and art. Another way to describe virtualization and search is “research project.”

Our contributing writer Sarah Rogers reports:

The commercial climate for virtualization is changing.  Business intelligence (BI) represents just one force exerting its influence.  As the needs of numerous businesses reach levels where accessing, housing and reviewing information are yesterday’s problems, the new focus becomes how to maximize efficiency without renting secondary office space to handle the servers required.  Many are turning to virtualization.

But virtualization isn’t all perks, as examined in “Are SQL Server BI systems compatible with virtualization?”.  Systems operating under the BI umbrella will not always function at full capacity when connected to an incorporeal network.  Contemporary BI groups construct detail heavy examination patterns inside existing memory as you need it.  These analytical systems often are designed to retain vast amounts of data, which when operating through a virtualized platform can breed obstacles in the path to access. Another issue is what is described as over commitment, where hosts ration out available memory to all those connected.  A fine idea, though again analytical systems may overload the designated operating pattern and diminish results.

Though traditional databases are suited to disambiguate these compatibility issues, they seem to be struggling, awash in the flood of their in-memory counterparts. At least that is one opinion floating about.  It is clear that other variables exist that will spoil the math when looking to pass through to the other side.  So here is another opinion: the physical database does still have a viable roll.  Why not keep your options open?

Sarah Rogers, March 1, 2011

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Sophia Search Co-Founder Speaks

March 1, 2011

Sophia Search offers an alternative to key word retrieval. What’s the secret behind this new system? The Search Wizards Speak series provides some insight into Sophia Search with its most recent interview with Dr. David Patterson.

You can read an exclusive interview with the co-founder of the Belfast, Ireland-based enterprise search vendor Sophia Search on ArnoldIT.com. Dr. Patterson explains his search system’s use of semiotics to discern the meaning of textual information. The result is that a user finds the information required more quickly, thus reducing the need to run multiple queries or plow through a long, laundry list of query results.

In the interview, Dr. Patterson said:

I prefer to call Sophia a “contextual discovery engine.” Sophia can automatically disambiguate the different meanings of words based on their context within a document. In short, Sophia searches by the meaning of what the user is looking for as opposed to just the key words they use in their query. Sophia enables users to discover contextually relevant information they were previously unaware of, and it increases the users’ understanding of their content. One of the benefits of our technical approach is that Sophia operates without human guidance or training, and it does not require taxonomies, ontologies or thesauri.

He added:

Conventional search tools and systems don’t address the discovery component of search. How can the user query for information they don’t know exists? Finally, we were fascinated by solving what we call “the context problem”. Most systems simply do not understand the context of information. Therefore, most search and retrieval systems provide a lot of irrelevant hits to the user. Sophia is all about context and providing users with relevant information in the right context. It is about understanding the meaning of what the user is looking for, not simply returning lists of documents just because they contain the user’s query terms.

You can examine a screen shot of the Sophia Search output along with Dr. Patterson’s comments about the system and method used in this enterprise search system.

You can get the full text of the interview at this link.

Stephen E Arnold, March 1, 2011

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Arnold Columns for March 2011

March 1, 2011

The for-fee columns for March 2011 cover a range of topics. If you want to access the full text of these documents, please, contact the publishers who own the rights to the versions of the write ups I submitted this month.

ETM (published by IMI Publishing in London), “Choice: A Growing Problem in Enterprise Search.” Google seems to be trimming its product line but other vendors are expanding theirs.

Information Today (published by Information Today), “Autonomy’s Surprise Move into Health Care.” Who would have thought that Autonomy would dive into improving what a health care worker does for a patient and toss in access to third party journal papers?

Information World Review (published by Bizmedia in London), “Search 2011: Shape Shifting Accelerates.” This year promises to be one in which search is subjected to some potentially severe earthquakes or user pushbacks.

KMWorld (published by Information Today), Semantics is yesterday. Semiotics is the future at Sophia Search in this article “Sophia and Semiotics for Enterprise Search”. Don’t know what semiotics is? Read the KMWorld story when it comes out in a couple of months.

Online Magazine (published by Information Today), “Tracking Solr Activity” reviews some places to locate information about open source search and some of the cost factors to consider when deciding whether to go open source or proprietary search.

Smart Business Network, possibly available in online and in print. I am not really sure at this time. The article is “StumbleUpon: A Dark Horse in the Web Traffic Race”. The point is that one can advertise on StumbleUpon and use a free promotional service provided by the online service.

The quality of the research and writing in the ArnoldIT.com for-fee work is more detailed than the information that appears in the Beyond Search blog, on the ArnoldIT.com Web site, and in our data fusion blog IntelTrax. An explanation of the differences is at this link.

If you want content for your technical or business blog, write us at seaky20000 at yahoo dot com. Our team of writers is able to produce high quality writings at a competitive price.

We will be announcing two new Web logs in the next few weeks.

Stephen E Arnold, March 1, 2011

Freebie but the publishers listed in this story pay me to write articles for their readers. The total circulation of these publications is in the 100,000 readers per issue across all six publications.

Protected: SharePoint Excitement: The Content API Fizzles

March 1, 2011

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NLP Gets a Full Monty

February 28, 2011

Natural Language Processing (NLP) is experiencing huge growth.  From handwriting recognition to foreign language translation to predictive text on your handheld, NLP is used in many different ways to help our technology recognize what we mean when we simply speak or write English (or whatever language you happen to use in life).  Natural Language Processing with Python is a book available in pdf that gives a useful introduction to NLP based on the Python programming language with its shallow learning curve.

According to its own introduction:

“This book provides a highly accessible introduction to the field of NLP. It can be used for individual study or as the textbook for a course on natural language processing or computational linguistics, or as a supplement to courses in artificial intelligence, text mining, or corpus linguistics.”

The book is geared toward beginning and intermediate levels, so even if you are new, don’t be intimidated.  It is full of exercises, and the authors have used entertaining examples to lighten what might otherwise be a heavy subject.  The book is available for free download and the Natural Language Toolkit with open source Python modules is as well.  Whether your background is arts and humanities or science and engineering, this is a recommended read.

Alice Wasielewski, February 28, 2011

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