New Search Engine http://www.cuil.com

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Rx Senior
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Dec 10, 2002
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Welcome to Cuil—the world’s biggest search engine. The Internet has grown. We think it’s time search did too.

The Internet has grown exponentially in the last fifteen years but search engines have not kept up—until now. Cuil searches more pages on the Web than anyone else—three times as many as Google and ten times as many as Microsoft.

Rather than rely on superficial popularity metrics, Cuil searches for and ranks pages based on their content and relevance. When we find a page with your keywords, we stay on that page and analyze the rest of its content, its concepts, their inter-relationships and the page’s coherency.
Then we offer you helpful choices and suggestions until you find the page you want and that you know is out there. We believe that analyzing the Web rather than our users is a more useful approach, so we don’t collect data about you and your habits, lest we are tempted to peek. With Cuil, your search history is always private.

Cuil is an old Irish word for knowledge. For knowledge, ask Cuil.

**********

I think this site was started and created by the core google search engine team who left to start there own company.
 

EL BANDITO
Joined
Apr 10, 2007
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Thank you Sir.. I already found a nice new variety of web sites that I never seen on google..Looks like we have some variance here.:103631605
 

Rx Senior
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http://money.cnn.com/2008/07/28/technology/cuil.ap/index.htm?cnn=yes


Ex-Googlers launch rival search engine

Developers of new engine say it offers a more comprehensive way to search the Internet.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Anna Patterson's last Internet search engine was so impressive that industry leader Google Inc. bought the technology in 2004 to upgrade its own system.

She believes her latest invention is even more valuable - only this time it's not for sale.

Patterson instead intends to upstage Google, which she quit in 2006 to develop a more comprehensive and efficient way to scour the Internet.

The end result is Cuil, pronounced "cool." Backed by $33 million in venture capital, the search engine plans to begin processing requests for the first time Monday.

Cuil had kept a low profile while Patterson, her husband, Tom Costello, and two other former Google engineers - Russell Power and Louis Monier - searched for better ways to search.

Now, it's boasting time.

Web index: For starters, Cuil's search index spans 120 billion Web pages.

Patterson believes that's at least three times the size of Google's index, although there is no way to know for certain. Google stopped publicly quantifying its index's breadth nearly three years ago when the catalog spanned 8.2 billion Web pages.

Ex-Googlers: Where are they now?
Cuil won't divulge the formula it has developed to cover a wider swath of the Web with far fewer computers than Google. And Google isn't ceding the point: Spokeswoman Katie Watson said her company still believes its index is the largest.

After getting inquiries about Cuil, Google asserted on its blog Friday that it regularly scans through 1 trillion unique Web links. But Google said it doesn't index them all because they either point to similar content or would diminish the quality of its search results in some other way. The posting didn't quantify the size of Google's index.

A search index's scope is important because information, pictures and content can't be found unless they're stored in a database. But Cuil believes it will outshine Google in several other ways, including its method for identifying and displaying pertinent results.

Content analysis: Rather than trying to mimic Google's method of ranking the quantity and quality of links to Web sites, Patterson says Cuil's technology drills into the actual content of a page. And Cuil's results will be presented in a more magazine-like format instead of just a vertical stack of Web links. Cuil's results are displayed with more photos spread horizontally across the page and include sidebars that can be clicked on to learn more about topics related to the original search request.

Finally, Cuil is hoping to attract traffic by promising not to retain information about its users' search histories or surfing patterns - something that Google does, much to the consternation of privacy watchdogs.

Cuil is just the latest in a long line of Google challengers.

Other contenders: The list includes swaggering startups like Teoma (whose technology became the backbone of Ask.com), Vivisimo, Snap, Mahalo and, most recently, Powerset, which was acquired by Microsoft Corp. (MSFT, Fortune 500) this month.

Even after investing hundreds of millions of dollars on search, both Microsoft and Yahoo Inc. (YHOO, Fortune 500) have been losing ground to Google (GOOG, Fortune 500). Through May, Google held a 62% share of the U.S. search market followed by Yahoo at 21% and Microsoft at 8.5%, according to comScore Inc.

Google has become so synonymous with Internet search that it may no longer matter how good Cuil or any other challenger is, said Gartner Inc. analyst Allen Weiner.

"Search has become as much about branding as anything else," Weiner said. "I doubt [Cuil] will be keeping anyone at Google awake at night."

Google welcomed Cuil to the fray with its usual mantra about its rivals. "Having great competitors is a huge benefit to us and everyone in the search space," Watson said. "It makes us all work harder, and at the end of the day our users benefit from that."

But this will be the first time that Google has battled a general-purpose search engine created by its own alumni. It probably won't be the last time, given that Google now has nearly 20,000 employees.

Patterson joined Google in 2004 after she built and sold Recall, a search index that probed old Web sites for the Internet Archive. She and Power worked on the same team at Google.

Although he also worked for Google for a short time, Monier is best known as the former chief technology officer of AltaVista, which was considered the best search engine before Google came along in 1998. Monier also helped build the search engine on eBay's (EBAY, Fortune 500) online auction site.

The trio of former Googlers are teaming up with Patterson's husband, Costello, who built a once-promising search engine called Xift in the late 1990s. He later joined IBM Corp. (IBM, Fortune 500), where he worked on an "analytic engine" called WebFountain.

Costello's Irish heritage inspired Cuil's odd name. It was derived from a character named Finn McCuill in Celtic folklore.

Patterson enjoyed her time at Google, but became disenchanted with the company's approach to search. "Google has looked pretty much the same for 10 years now," she said, "and I can guarantee it will look the same a year from now."
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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Google's (GOOG) New Rival, Cuil, Doesn't Work




By 24/7 Wall St.
Last update: 4:50 a.m. EDT July 28, 2008







Google (GOOG) has a new rival, Cuil. Out of the box, it seems hopelessly broken. The news search engine claims it covers three times as many web pages as Google.
Coverage of web pages is probably not the key to Google's success, though, by most measures it does a better job of this than Microsoft (MSFT) or Yahoo! (YHOO). Google's success in search so far is that it brings back results that most users find more relevant, or, to state it more simply, closer to what they were looking for.
Cuil has not cracked the "relevance code". A simple example is Motorola's (MOT) decision to break up its second largest business unit. "Motorola to break up unit" brings back a large number of relevant results from Google. Cuil does not find any results at all. The search "Batman tops box office again" brings back a number of good results from Google. Cuil's response to the same query is "we didn't find any results".
If Cuil cannot find the most basic information, especially on recent and important subjects, it does not matter how much of the web it searches.
Cuil is a failure and it has not been in the market a day.
Douglas A. McIntyre
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This blog is reprinted by permission from 24/7 Wall St, © 2007 24/7 Wall St., LLC All rights reserved.


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Show me a good loser, and I'll show you a loser
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Jun 22, 2005
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what a piece of shit. 2 minutes and still loading. Never again. Nice try googlers
 

New member
Joined
Sep 21, 2004
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Business Rule #1: Don't bring product to market before it is ready.

Might be a great product, but it obviously is not ready for prime time and you can never get a first impression back.

Yikes.
 

New member
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Jun 2, 2006
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D2bets summed it up nice.
Has the potential to ber a great site, I found page loads to be demonstrivly slower than Google.
Not ready for prime time sums it up.

Dsethi makes a good point about the images, I like that touch.
 

RX Senior
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Apr 20, 2002
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Business Rule #1: Don't bring product to market before it is ready.

Might be a great product, but it obviously is not ready for prime time and you can never get a first impression back.

Yikes.
Agree 100%. You have to come out with a bang. Can't put out something that even remotely resembles beta.

Unless it's a new concept altogether, which it isn't.
 

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