Search engines Accoona is a New Jersey based internet company. Their main product is a search engine that claims to use artificial intelligence to better understand searches. On June 23, 2005, in the ABC Times Square studios, the AI Accoona Toolbar, driven by a Fritz 9 prototype, drew against the 33rd World Chess Champion Rustam Kasimdzhanov. In addition to traditional searches, it allows business profile searches, and its signature "SuperTarget" feature. Their exclusive partnership with China Daily, a large Chinese internet portal, was seen as a highly strategic move. ...more on Wikipedia about "Accoona"
Grub is the name for a search engine acquired by LookSmart based on distributed computing. Users may download the grubclient software and let it run during computer idle time. The client indexes URLs and sends them back to the main grub server in a highly compressed form. The collective cache can then be searched on the Grub website. Grub is able to quickly build a large cache by asking thousands of clients to cache a small portion of the web each. ...more on Wikipedia about "Grub (search engine)"
A hybrid search engine (HSE) ** ** is a computer program designed to help one find and sort information stored on a network by using three or more seperate bodies of metadata in terms of an algorithimic process. The term, HSE, itself is still being defined, and some would argue that many of the leading search engines are technically HSEs due to the fact they include ranking algorithms based upon a combination of factors such as (1) hyperlink references to a given web page (i.e., how many other sites link to a page), (2) hyperlink execution history (i.e., how often people click to open a particular link), and (3) metadata derived from a web crawler (i.e, a complete index of all websites). ...more on Wikipedia about "Hybrid search engine"
Information Hyperlinked over Proteins (or iHOP) is an online service that provides this gene-guided network as a natural way of accessing millions of PubMed abstracts and brings all the advantages of the internet to scientific literature research. By using genes and proteins as hyperlinks between sentences and abstracts, the information in PubMed can be converted into one navigable resource. ...more on Wikipedia about "Information Hyperlinked over Proteins"
Kelforum is a search engine designed to test a new technology that creates real-time search engines for a very low cost. ...more on Wikipedia about "Kelforum"
Mamma.com, launched in 1996, was one of the web's first metasearch engines. With it's head office located in Montreal Canada, Mamma.com is a tier 2 search engine. On December 22, 2005 Mamma.com completed it's aquisition of Copernic. ...more on Wikipedia about "Mamma.com"
MEDLINE (MEDLINE, Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online) is a comprehensive literature database of life sciences and biomedical information. It covers the fields of medicine, nursing, dentistry, veterinary medicine, and the health care system. As perhaps a side effect of covering these fields, it also manages to cover nearly all of biology and biochemistry, even covering fields with no direct medical connection, such as molecular evolution. ...more on Wikipedia about "MEDLINE"
Oh No Robot is a webcomic search engine started by Ryan North and T Campbell. It works by having the authors or readers submit transcripts of each episode into the database creating an index of the comic based on the episode name, dialogue and characters in the particular episode. ...more on Wikipedia about "Oh No Robot"
Splunk is a search engine for application, server and network events. It is used to search large volumes of IT data to find obscure problems or to connect seemingly unrelated events on different servers. ...more on Wikipedia about "Splunk"
Tropes Zoom is a desktop search engine and semantic analysis software from Acetic/Semantic-Knowledge. ...more on Wikipedia about "Tropes Zoom"
Yandex ( ) is a Russian search engine and one of the biggest Russian Web portals. It has been online since 1997. Its name can be explained as "Yet Another iNDEXer" (yandex) or "Языковый (language) Index". Besides the Russian word "Я" is translated to the English pronoun "I", "Яndex" looks a little bit like translation. ...more on Wikipedia about "Yandex"
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