Cloud Computing and IR

July 30, 2008

Here is a post on Search Engine Watch (SEW) today:

Cloud Computing Unites Yahoo, HP, Intel

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Yahoo, Intel and Hewlett Packard announced an alliance to advance “cloud computing,” backing a global trend that threatens Microsoft’s iron-fisted grip on packaged software installed on computers.

Earlier this year Google and IBM teamed up to advance research into providing SAAS (software as a service) on the Internet hosted by data centers.

Cloud computing isn’t as futuristic as it sounds. Web-based email (Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Hotmail) offered by Google, Yahoo, Microsoft is an example of cloud computing. Google has expanded its online software offerings to include word documents, spread sheets and more under the Google Docs brand.

The cloud computing initiative falls in line with Yahoo’s goal of open systems. Results of research done at the centers will be made public to make it easier for software developers to write applications for cloud computing.

“We believe this collaboration will do a great deal to take the research to the next level,” Yahoo Research chief Prabhakar Raghavan said during the conference call.

“We are really fueling the ecosystem here… Inevitably an application developer will build more readily for the cloud.”

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Guys, reserve your seats in the course on “Topics in Software Architecture” CS6600 this semester. The theme of this course changes every year and for this year it is “Cloud Computing”.

There will be guest lectures from Amazon, Microsoft, and Yahoo. BTW, There are only 20 seats available :)


Cuil Launches Biggest Search Engine on the Web

July 30, 2008

Cuil, a technology company pioneering a new approach to search, launches its innovative search offering, which combines the biggest Web index with content-based relevance methods, results organized by ideas, and complete user privacy.

Summary of Cuil’s features:

  • Biggest Internet search engine—Cuil has indexed 120 billion Web pages, 3x more than any other search engine
  • Organized results—Cuil’s magazine-style layout separates results by subject and allows further search by concept or category
  • Different results—Unlike other search engines, Cuil ranks results by the content on each page, not its popularity
  • Complete privacy protection—Cuil does not keep any personally identifiable information on users or their search histories

For more information, refer the following links.

http://www.cuil.com
http://searchengineland.com/080728-000100.php