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Home : Search Engine Industry : Page 12

 

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  Articles Sorted By Search Engine (3094)
Articles in this category are broken down by search engine. These articles primarily cover business oriented issues.

  Legal Issues (129)
From lawsuits, to dealing with governments, the articles in this category cover the domestic and international legal issues facing search engines.

  Related Forum Threads (3)



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  • Look Away, LookSmart
    Date: 2004-02-06  Source: Fool.com
    It's not easy being a laggard in a hot sector. Consider LookSmart, which has watched its rivals in online searches soar. The company barely broke even in its December quarter but things are about to get worse.
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  • IBM sets out to make sense of the Web
    Date: 2004-02-05  Source: News.com
    Enter IBM, which would like to see its WebFountain supercomputing project become the next big thing in Web search. Along with competitors such as ClearForest, Fast Search and Transfer, and Mindfabric, Big Blue hopes to foster demand for new data-mining services that ferret out meaning and context, not just lists of more-or-less relevant links.
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  • The Future of Search Engine Technology  pop
    Date: 2004-01-28  Source: Search Engine Guide
    Instead of looking at what will happen this year, perhaps we should look at what must happen in the search engine space if Google, Yahoo and MSN are truly able to revolutionize search and enhance the user experience.
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  • HighBeam Research: Going Beyond Googleing
    Date: 2004-01-27  Source: EcontentMag.com
    HighBeam seeks to to fill the gap between free search and costly professional research services and databases. HighBeam strives to pick up where Google leaves off—to help expand and refine the very definition of search.
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  • The Brains Behind B2B Paid Search
    Date: 2004-01-23  Source: eMarketer
    The now-dominant part of IndustryBrains' business is IB Industry Targets, where advertisers pick the specific sections of select sites where they want to appear (say, the Networking section of TechWeb and the Mac Hardware section of Macworld), and their contextual ads appear to visitors who head to those pages.
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  • Dueling Searchers in a Quest for Ads
    Date: 2004-01-22  Source: BizReport
    Internet search companies are gearing up to woo local advertisers because they know mom-and-pop shops generate tens of billions of dollars a year in revenue, money that currently goes to print Yellow Pages, newspapers, radio and TV stations.
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  • Eurekster, We Have Found It
    Date: 2004-01-21  Source: InternetNews.com
    Friendster meets Yahoo! in a newly launched search engine, Eurekster, which returns paid and non-paid search results ranked according to their popularity among networks of friends and associates.
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  • Dex Says What's Next: Searchable Display Ads
    Date: 2004-01-16  Source: MediaDailyNews
    Dex has converted all of its 240,000 yellow page display ads into searchable content. What this means, Dex President and Chief Executive Officer George Burnett claimed during a conference call, is that his company now offers the Web's most thorough search capabilities for local business information.
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  • Out-Googling Google
    Date: 2004-01-16  Source: PC Magazine
    Grokker 2.0 converts text lists of search results into a map of floating spheres and other graphical representations. You can drill down on each object individually, and each is labeled according to organizing principles, including date and context, so you get what amounts to a visual relational database that includes Web pages, documents, and pictures.
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  • Build Your Own Search Page with Speedi.us
    Date: 2004-01-15  Source: URLwire
    Speedi.us is a unique Web portal that allows the user to choose their search engines. With over 1000 general and specialty search engines to choose from, the site offers a personalized way to search.
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  • A Fountain of Knowledge
    Date: 2004-01-09  Source: ieee.org
    IBM's breakthrough is called WebFountain—half a football field's worth of rack-mounted processors, routers, and disk drives running a huge menagerie of programs. All this hardware and software is dedicated to one purpose: making sense of the churning ocean of information, opinion, and falsehood that roils the Internet every second of every day.
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  • Baidu Eyes Nasdaq IPO Queue
    Date: 2004-01-08  Source: BizReport
    A multi-millionaire at 36 and one-half of the brains behind the roaring success of China's self-styled Google, Robin Li now hopes his Web site will join a handful of Chinese dot-coms listed on the Nasdaq.
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  • Going Deeper than Google
    Date: 2003-12-17  Source: Fortune
    The new Grokker was released Monday by startup Groxis. It makes me wonder if Google really does have search as sewed up as we often assume. When you use Grokker you realize just how brain dead even the best search tools are today.
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  • How Search Engines Make Money
    Date: 2003-12-16  Source: SearchDay
    Too often, web entrepreneurs today think of search as a one-way business, focusing solely on how to make money off of the search engines without understanding how search engines also need to make money in order to survive and thrive.
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  • Results from WebAdvantage.net's "Business Users Search Engine Survey"
    Date: 2003-12-16  Source: Web Ad.vantage
    According to the survey, 85 percent of the respondents claim to click on sponsored links less than 40% of all searches, but nearly half of the audience (49 percent) does not seem to know the difference between paid and unpaid listings. Unlike the consumer audience which has been found to not drill down past the first page of search results, 92 percent of WebAdvantage.net survey respondents say they continue past the first pages of search results...
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  • aQuantive's Atlas DMT Announces Acquisition of GO TOAST
    Date: 2003-12-15  Source: GO TOAST
    Atlas DMT, an advertising technology provider and an operating unit of aQuantive, Inc., today announced the acquisition of GO TOAST, a leading global provider of paid search management and optimization tools. Denver-based GO TOAST will retain its brand identity and operate as part of Atlas DMT. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
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