Today, Jimmy Wales, the famous founder of Wikipedia, has launched
its search project, Wikia Search. Announced last year in January and finance by
“angel investors”, Wikia Search (previously known also as Wikiasari), will
function on a concept similar to Wikipedia.
In fact, Wikia Search is combining the power of automated search
algorithms with ith the knowledge of human editors. The volunteer collaborators
will be able to suggest and rate the pages to be indexed.
Being released as an open-source platform, developers can
quickly and easily extend and add functionality to Wikia Search, improving the
quality and performance of the entire system
In the past, Wales
expressed his believe that an open search platform might better compared to the
proprietary technologies used today by all major search engines.
Wales
is confident that the human judgement is better than any computer search
algorithm. “Essentially, if you consider one of the basic tasks of a search
engine, it is to make a decision: ‘this page is good, this page sucks’,” Mr
Wales said in 2007 when the project was announced for the first time.
“Computers are notoriously bad at making such judgments, so algorithmic search
has to go about it in a roundabout way.
“But we have a really great method for doing that
ourselves,” he added. “We just look at the page. It usually only takes a second
to figure out if the page is good, so the key here is building a community of
trust that can do that.”
It remains to be seen if a community of human minds will
prove to be better than the complex alghoritms developed by the search-oriented
such as Google or Microsoft, but Jimmy Wales is confident that his project has
its chances.
In March last year Wales said that the Wikia Search plans
to capture as much as 5 percent of the search market and its collaborative
search technology could transform the Internet's power structure.
"Search is part of the fundamental infrastructure of
the Internet. And it is currently broken," Wales said on a wiki devoted to the
project. "It is broken for the same reason that proprietary software is
always broken: lack of freedom, lack of community, lack of accountability, lack
of transparency. Here, we will change all that," he said.
Though, as Wales
noted, Wikia Search is still in its alpha stage and it will take some time
before the quality of the classic search engines will be achieved.
"I don't know how long it will take to reach
industry-standard quality search results, but I'd say at least two years,"
Wales
explained.
Human-powered search engine has became a hot topic lately.
In May last year Jason Calacanis, the founder of Weblogs Inc, has started
Mahalo, a search engine project, where is the websites are rated by human
editors. The search engine results pages include beside text listings other
media, such as photos and video.
Improving the search methods is also a major goal for web
giants like Yahoo and Microsoft. Last year, Yahoo introduced Search Assist, a
technology which goes beyond basic search “suggestions” and gives consumers
real-time query suggestions as well as related topics and concepts.
Beside the Search Assistant, the web giant has introduced
also Yahoo Search Shortcuts, with the most useful information found on the Web
and contributed by other online users. The new shortcuts were designed to help
consumers save time when searching for popular categories such as events,
music, movies, travel, sports, health, shopping, businesses and restaurants.
Also in September last year Microsoft unveiled its first
major update of its Live Search engine. The company improved the relevance and
it has quadrupled the size of Live Search’s index.
Common “problems” for search engines like spelling errors,
stop words, punctuation and synonyms are now treated better with by Live
Search, thanks to the “substantial” improvements in understanding query intent.
So basically Live Search can “understand” what you wanted to search for,
despite the fact that your search query is not very clear.
So, with all these improvements in search, let’s see which
tools will prove to be better to help you with your searches!