Posts Tagged ‘Suche’
YellowMap.de: Unterwegs ins Netz
Bei YellowMap.de kann man nun noch gezielter nach geeigneten WLAN-Hotspots suchen. Dazu kooperiert das Online-Verzeichnis mit Portel.de, einem B2B-Portal für Telekommunikation in Deutschland.
Mit dem verbesserten Dienst lassen sich ab sofort bundesweit rund 11.000 öffentlich zugängliche WLAN-Hotspots finden, erklärt die YellowMap AG in einer Pressemitteilung. Dabei erfahre man nicht nur, wo sich Funknetzwerke in der gewünschten Umgebung befinden, sondern erhalte auch aktuelle Informationen über Kosten, Konditionen und Zugangsdaten des jeweiligen Anbieters vor Ort. Ein fünfstufiges Bewertungssystem für die Hotspots komplettiere den Service.
Der Dienst ist über www.YellowMap.de oder www.Businesshotspot.de abrufbar, und mobil per Handy – etwa über www.YellowMap.mobi oder iphone.YellowMap.de.
More knowledge with Cuil?
The Gallic word “cuil,” pronounced as “cool” in English, means knowledge, and is the name of a new English-language search engine, which launched unexpectedly and without a Beta-phase, at the end of July 2008.
Launched in Menlo Park, CA, by former Google and IBM employees, Cuil has generated really high expectations. The operators themselves (in a recent press release) very consciously speak of its “innovative search offering”.
Cuil is intended to deliver better search results than its competitor, by concentrating on the content relevance, rather than their opposition’s analysis and level of awareness of their generated links. Additionally the results are to be displayed in detail, with images, sorted in groups and by category. Cuil’s makers promise the complete protection of the privacy of its users. Their theory is that the collection of user information is unnecessary for a search engine generating via content rather than popularity. With their 120 billion websites, Cuil has trawled three times more sites than its competitors and is therefore the largest search machine on the web. This is important to the Cuil folk, as (in their opinion) the other search providers are not able to keep up with the constant growth of the internet.
The above was the modus operandus with which Cuil debuted, which sounds convincing. However reality is something else– as yet the new search engine has not been able to fulfill these high expectations. On the contrary– already in the first days after launch, there was a media hailstorm of criticism, and not unfounded. Excluding that the layout of the results (in a choice two or three columns) was an acquired taste and that the search engine is English-based, but the generated results left much to be desired. And the successful recognition of content relevance is also not fully realized. Christian Stöcker of Spiegel Online points out that Cuil is also a ‘victim’ of the old “miserable failure” search… which like Google before it, links to the homepage of President George W. Bush as one of the first results, indicating that Cuil’s reliance on link frequency is indeed higher than envisaged. Further, parallel to the web search, no further functions are in evidence, such as specialized image results or local search results. The latter results are in today’s climate, of critical importance for a search engine, that wants to hold its own against the big players.
Can Cuil in reality present itself as a serious competitor to Google and Co?
SES in Hamburg: Interview with Isabell Wagner
The 2008 SES (Search Engine Strategies conference), an industry special event (see our report) for search engine marketing, has opened in Hamburg. We spoke to Isabelle Wagner, Managing Director of bigmouthmedia – one of the participant speakers.
What advantages do local search engines offer over standard web search engines?
One cannot compare these with each other, as local and global search engines follow two different approaches. In “the Business” the term Local Search is taken to mean the search function for a website. I assume that you mean the search engines which focus on specific regions. Advertising becomes interesting for local undertakings, especially when their target public is found in the same catchment area as the companies themselves are located. A web search engine combs through the Internet. As there Web consists of more than ten billion websites, companies can have an enormous reach. However, this also means that the competition with other providers is greater as well.
In what way does SEM (Search Engine Marketing) become rewarding for local small and medium-sized companies?
SEM is one of the most successful instruments in the online-marketing toolkit, achieving the higest ROI (return on investment) and presents the most limited risk. Through this, medium-sized concerns are able to wield marketing “weapons” on an equivalent basis compared to the big guns. Contrary to classic TV or print advertising, online advertisements are affordable for small and medium concerns and require no minimum turnover volume. Using the reporting functions of Google or Yahoo!, you can see at a glance how successful your campaigns are/were and how much they cost. The great advantage here is that in comparison to traditional methods, campaigns can be rapidly implemented . A further important aspect is that the advertisers can choose the regions where the ad-spots are to appear.
Web 2.0 continues to be an important trend, also in the local landscape. Are social-web local services and networks also of interest to small and medium business, as regards online marketing?
Advertising on social networks is a hot topic at the moment and relevant for undertakings of all sizes. Such communities consist of members sharing special interests, and thus are more receptive to the advertising message of the undertakings. Loss through spreading too thin is thus reduced there, as one can assume a certain predilection, and that the community will speak openly about their needs and interests.
Which trends do you anticipate that the coming year will bring to local search engine marketing, such as the mobile sector? What importance will online advertising gain over the next five years?
Mobile-search combined with localized search is one of the hot trends that will occupy the online marketing branch in the coming years. Local search per mobile phone will come to the forefront when the search requires quick results, such as “where am I and where is the nearest café?” For search results that need/allow more time and research, one expects rather the use of home PC or laptop. Geo-tagging is not yet far enough advanced for accurate and personalized target group implementation. Further development is required so as to limit the diffusion loss, and to specifically target the user. This will lead to the Internet becoming a direct marketing instrument. In the future, the user will only receive advertisements that fit their personal pereferences, search habits and actual geolocation. Thus “below the line marketing” will be able to use their trump card, over that of classic marketing.
suchen.de is now accessible via SMS
t-info, the proprietors of the local search engine suchen.de, has added to its locality-based SMS-Service.
This service, known as “SMS-Filialfinder” [en=SMS-BranchFinder], has been offered by t-info for several years– its selection opportunities were however not as rich as now on offer. The mobile-phone user is now able to access the entire local index of suchen.de, which hosts more than five million addresses. This was announced by the company in a press release. Additionally, one can use almost any imaginable search keyword, in using this function.
For those wishing to use this new feature, one sends a search word/string per SMS to the SMS-address 84636. Wherever one finds oneself at that moment, will according to t-info, be relayed via the mobile network to the server. For the first use of this service, the user needs to accept the Terms and Conditions, as to specifically whether t-info may determine the coordinates of the user’s actual location. Once agreed to by the user, the appropriate address(es) and telephone number(s) gathered as a result of the searched terms, will be sent to the user, specifically for their current location.
Especially practical for users without internet-ready cellphones, every received SMS costs €0,69. And the user receives for every search request a maximum of two addresses. If one then requires further search results, one then needs to reply to the first message with the letter ‘M’ (for ‘more’), and then will receive up to two further suggestions.
More information about this service can be accessed at http://sms.suchen.de







