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Posts Tagged ‘Suchmaschine’

New search engine wants to deliver concrete results

WeFind, a new Web2.0 search service, launched at the end of November 2008.

As delineated by its creators in a press release, the goal of WeFind is to deliver concrete answers and clean, structured information to searchers. To this end, WeFind automatically assigns the thematic area (e.g. “general” or “health”) of the search, and then sorts the resultant lists into special areas, such as “current news’, “pharmacies” or “cafés”.

To facilitate this new slant of search, specialized new search algorithms have been developed, for instance for the researching of news portals and blogs, as well as the products of cooperative partners. According to WeFind, the company is collaborating with national and international partners – users can find books and other products from Amazon, public notices from German official agencies, doctor/medical evaluations (delivered with DocInsider) or company information via Firmenwissen.de.

A local search option has also been introduced – if the user searches for “Naturheilverfahren in 10435″ [en=alternative medical in 10435], WeFind automatically finds relevant content, and will expand its range to person searches. Special here is that people discovered through the resultant search(es), would be able to be contacted directly via the WeFind community. “We can thus keep our fingers on the pulse and join up search and community: information can be searched for, WeFind delivers appropriate experts and provides the direct contact facility.  After a discussion with the experts, the searcher may also subsequently publish new discoveries on WeFind, and become an expert too”, said Helmut Hoffer von Ankershoffen, initiator and CEO of WeFind AG, in a press release.  This explains why WeFind sees itself as a Web2.0 initiative.

The new search service is run by WeFind AG, a daughter firm of neofonie Technologieentwicklung und Informationsmanagement GmbH.

Live Search Maps now with 360º views

The US-edition of Live Search Maps is now offering its users panorama and 3D-views, of cities, street views or buildings.

Microsoft has equipped its local search service with the Web2.0 photo tool Photosynth, with which users can assemble three-dimensional views using a collage of ‘normal’ photos. Whoever uploads photos with location-details, will facilitate these images being searchable through Live Search Maps.  This recent addition was announced by Microsoft employee Chris Pendleton in his blog.

Find thing the new feature is however like a needle in a haystack – it is found after a search, in the left hand menu, under ‘Explore Collections/Show/Photosynth (per link or icon). Once discovered, a list appears showing all available Photosynth images – the geo-locations of which are displayed on the map.  As these images are not embedded in Live Search Maps, users must have the Photosynth software installed on their computers. (Note, at the time of writing, the software was only available for the Windows platform).

Although this application is at present only accessible through the English-language edition of Live Search Maps, one is able to access various locations in other countries, including some in Germany, via this version of LSM.

So this is how a local search engine works

In an unconventional post, using a fun video, the team of local.ch explain the technologies used by the regional Swiss-based search engine. In this way, everyone should be able to understand the subject, including those with no idea about algorithms, syntax or semantics. And one doesn’t need to understand Swiss dialect! [Ed: this obviously is aimed at German speakers!]

The woman has barely started her search online, when an uproar breaks out in the search engine team: the entire team rummages through printed address lists, tearing out fitting extracts, and thrusting them into the hand of an office runner. He dashes with the scraps of paper to a fax machine and sends the data to a PC.

The above scene is a tiny sequence from the online video found in the blog of the local Swiss search engine local.ch. Using much humor and effort, the local.ch team somehow answers the question “how does a local search engine work?”

Lokalesucheblog.de asked local.ch how the fun idea for the project came about.  Martin Seiler, responsible for communication at local.ch, kindly fulfilled our curiosity.  The video actually began as an April Fool’s joke, with the team wanting to send itself up. Thus developed the storyboard and the characters as seen in the video. The text was penned by Seiler, who admitted that was also responsible for the direction.

Google Maps builds on the knowledge of its users

Google knows that Users know their own areas best of all.  The search engine giant is now allowing users of its German-language Maps site, to edit and append the search results.

The ability to rate entries has been available to registered Google-Account holders, as of June 2007.  Now users have the possibility to change these – such as when address details are incorrect or incomplete, or the markers are incorrectly positioned on the maps.  Indeed an out-of-date result can be completely deleted.  All these functions can be found in the respective Info-Window of each search result page, accessible through a click on the “Bearbeiten” [en=edit] link.  This however can only be done as long as the owner of the undertaking themselves have not ‘claimed’ control over the entry and have verified the information themselves.

If a location is missing, registered users can complete or add to the results. To access this, the user clicks on the link “Add Location to Map”.

These features have been available on other language editions (eg. the USA edition) of Google since March 2008 (see our post).

Sharper images for Google Maps

As of the start of September, our globe has been under a further scrutinous eye – that of the GeoEye-1 Satellite, an undertaking of the USA company GeoEyeGoogle in the future will be one of the customers using the current satellite images delivered by this company.

GeoEyeIn a press release, GeoEye explains how the new spacecraft, which orbits at 681km (XXX miles), is fitted with the highest resolution camera available in the non-governmental sphere. Black and white photos are delivered in a resolution of 0,41 meter, and color photos at 1,65 meter.  That means objects on the surface are recognizable at sizes from 41cm and 165cm respectively.

Google MapsAccording to A report on CNet details a contract between Google and GeoEye, giving the search engine giant the exclusive use of the images, in the sphere of online-map services. Google will use these for its online applications Google Maps and Google Earth.  However, Google will be unable to offer the best resolution images to its clients, as US regulations limit GeoEye to offer photos to the commercial sector with a resolution of 0,5m or worse.

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.

CuilLaunched 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.

Cuil 2The 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?

Tour-de-France-Route in Google Street View

The 95th Tour de France has been taking place from July 5 -27, 2008. For this great cycling event, Google has placed its first Street Views of France on-line.

Google Tour de FranceThe 360° Views are to be found in Google Maps, Google’s local search wing. By clicking on “Street View”, a virtual view of the entire race routing is to be found. What’s more, the view is presented from the rider’s perspective, as was reported by Google employee Daniel Ratner in the Google Lat Long Blog.  According to Ratner, the absolute latest features of Street View have been implemented for the 21-stage France tour, encompassing ‘Face Blurring’ and high image resolution (see our post).

Tour de France- Street ViewSo, for the first time users are able to access panorama views of Europe, via Google Maps.  Until this introduction, users were only able to view USA cities, national parks and recreational areas in Street View.  The Tour-de-France route is only the beginning ― Google has already announced that views of other European cities and areas will be forthcoming (see our report).  At the moment, German cities are being documented (as noted in the Google Watch Blog). Street-View cars have been already spied in Munich and Berlin– confirmed by a report in the Berlin Tagesspiegel, which also mentions that Google is also shooting in Frankfurt am Main.  When these Street Views will be posted on-line is any body’s guess.

Immowelt.de: Maps with local information from suchen.de

The choice of an apartment is not only dependant from its price or decoration – ist position and surroundings also play an important role. Using Immowelt.de one can gain a direct idea of the situations in the area under consideration.

Immowelt.deThe result of a cooperation between the Real Estate portal with the local search engine suchen.de, Immowelt.de announced the launch in a press release.

For many properties, it is possible to see their location on a map, and also their surroundings (by clicking on the “Umgebungsinfos” (en=Surroundings info), and discover where to find nearby bakeries, kindergartens, doctors or restaurants. In addition the searcher can select various categories (such as Health, Shopping, Training or Recreation) from a pop-up menu, or enter a special key word in the search field. The results of the research are generated a results list, and can also be viewed on a map in map-mode or aerial view. One can also sort the generated results by distance or relevance, a feature already enjoyed by suchen.de users.

SES in Hamburg: Interview with Isabell Wagner

SES HamburgThe 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.

Wikia Search – interactive search engine improved

The start of 2008 saw the Alpha-version start of the free search engine Wikia Search (see our report). Subsequently this service has been steadily developed, and as of the start of June 2008, it is substantially more user-friendly.

WikiSearchIn the launch version of the social search machine, users were able to rate the results, create mini-articles on the search results, or according to their technical abilities, even view the source code, and were free to help with its further development. User involvement was somewhat restrictive, leading to considerable criticism in the media, also as a result of limited search results.

The new Beta-version is now more inviting, especially for the purposes of development and expansion – users can, for example, add new links by mouse click, relevant to the search results, comment on these or edit their description and labeling. The discovered websites also are now able to be rated, thereby influencing their position in the search results.  To this purpose, not even a new registration is required – changes are immediately reflected.  In order to discourage abuse of the system, all recent changes and their authors are listed to the right of the results list, in a new area “Recent Changes”, and are thus subject to reediting or correction.  This underlines the Wikia-Search organization’s Wikia Inc., emphasis on the quality and reliability of the information submitted by users in this collaborative project.

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