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/v3-uk/news/1974424/wolfram-alpha-promises-paradigm-web-search
09 Mar 2009, Phil Muncaster , V3
A new British-designed search engine set to launch in two months could take a major step forward in information access technologies by offering a new paradigm for using computers and the web.
Wolfram Alpha aims to trump current search technologies, which rely on returning documents that might contain the answers to users' questions, by understanding any question and computing the answer.
London-born scientist Stephen Wolfram, who designed the "computational knowledge engine", said that the search engine does this by utilising the firm's other technological inventions, Mathematica and NKS.
"With Mathematica, I had a symbolic language to represent anything, as well as the algorithmic power to do any kind of computation. And with NKS, I had a paradigm for understanding how all sorts of complexity could arise from simple rules," he wrote in a blog posting.
"Armed with Mathematica and NKS I realised there's another way: explicitly implement methods and models as algorithms, and explicitly curate all data so that it is immediately computable."
Wolfram explained that, with a mixture of Mathematica and NKS automation, and expert human help, he has been able to create a system that "knows a lot, and can figure a lot out".
He added that thanks to "algorithms and heuristics, lots of linguistic discovery and linguistic curation, and some serious theoretical breakthroughs", the system also understands natural human language when used to ask it questions.
Wolfram Alpha is due for launch in May, and will be a simple web site with a single input field.
Do you agree?
Duck Duck Go
Hey, also be sure to check out our new search engine, Duck Duck Go: http://www.duckduckgo.com/. We also have some semantic properties, e.g. ambigious keyword detection: http://www.duckduckgo.com/?q=apple.
Take care,
Gabriel Weinberg
Founder & CEO, Duck Duck Go
Posted by Gabriel Weinberg, 21 Mar 2009