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The Enterprise Approach to Search

A French search company believes the key to better Web-based search comes from the corporate world.

By Kate Greene

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

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Exalead, a Paris-based company, is experimenting with a new search model. It believes that by combining the approach of "enterprise" search and Google-like page-ranking search, individuals will be able to surf the ever-expanding Web more thoroughly and efficiently.

Enterprise search, which scours the intranets of institutions, has been the previous focus of Exalead's products. It differs from Google's page-ranking Web search approach: Google's tack is to give a higher rank to Web pages with more incoming links, explains Dan Gruhl, research staff member at IBM Almaden Research Center in San Jose, CA. This approach has created a "dark" Web, however, in which a large amount of data goes unread. Companies don't have the luxury of having all of their documents ranked, Gruhl says, and therefore page ranking algorithms "work pretty poorly" in the enterprise search environment.

In contrast, enterprise search software finds relevant items by processing an entire document or file "as a concept," Gruhl says. It's able to extract the meaning of a document, instead of just scanning it for key words. This allows the engine to search for terms in documents that weren't even entered by the user. For instance, if an employee at a pharmaceutical company searches for "aspirin," the search software would extend the search to "pain killers" and "COX inhibitors" as well.

This is the crux of Exalead's blending of a Web-based and an enterprise search approach, with the entire set of search features needed to find a specific file applied at the user-search level.

Using Exalead, an individual has a variety of options: searching by phonetic spelling, by six different languages, by specific document type (.pdf or .doc are two examples), and by date, continent, or country.

While many of these features are similar to Google's "Advanced Search option," Exalead also offers a "related terms section," in case the initial search terms don't bring up the intended results. This enables what François Bourdoncle, the company's CEO, calls "serendipitous search," in which a person can find something even when he or she doesn't ask the right question.

These related terms help distinguish Exalead from Google's advanced search, by allowing users to start at one search query and progressively narrow it down. For instance, a search on "greenhouse effect" could yield the related term "greenhouse gases." From there, a user can further narrow the search to geography, or types of document, for example. Then, one could return to the initial search and narrow down again, using a different related term.

Still, searching the Web effectively, even with this hybrid approach, is not technologically easy, Bourdoncle says, and it has taken his team of engineers -- many of whom came from Alta Vista, the Internet's first viable search engine -- about eight years to put in place.

Comments

  • voila!
    I hope they succeed! My web-surfing is torture for having to check so many sites that have only a word or two in common with my search. We need a Dewey-Decimal type of search system!
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (kitk)
    04/25/2006
    Posts:1
  • "the UI is always important..."
    my biggest gripe with current engines is that the results aren't sorted/grouped together.  Anyone remember that old Northern Lights engine?  It used to group results by catagory/topic, making it much easier to find and investigate what you were really looking for...
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (attain)
    04/26/2006
    Posts:1
    • Clustering search results
      Attain, if you want grouping of search results, have a look at the Clusty search engine. Other content-management companies such as Temis, Inxight, Autonomy also offer such clustering.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (Chichois)
      04/28/2006
      Posts:1
  • Free Energy
    A Flying Saucer gets free energy, just like Tesla got with his electric car.
    Read up by typing
    >One Terminal CapacitorJoseph Hiddink<  in your Search Slot
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (Joseph Hiddink)
    04/26/2006
    Posts:1

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