A Search Engine For The Slower Net
Makarand writes "According to this BBC News
article researchers at MIT
are developing a search engine for people
using the web on slower net connections.
The software will e-mail queries to a central server and receive the most relevant
webpages from the search results by e-mail in a compressed form. Since the program is too big to download over a poor net connection
it will be mailed on CDs to libraries for people to borrow and install. They are also considering trying to persuade computer sellers
in developing countries to install the program on machines."
I mean really. I use dial up occasionally, and I can get my search results in 20 seconds instead of 2. What point does it serve emailing your search query off and waiting much longer for the results?
"Ask not for whom the bone bones. It bones for thee." --Bender
Could anyone else figure out why this requires a program on the user's end that is too large to be downloaded? Seems like all you need is an e-mail client, and instructions on how to format the information request.
This post is dedicated to all of those
Might be a nice way to preserve searches for later perusal. Unlike bookmarking, the returned search results are stored in an email.
This would be a good way to preserve stuff that may be the subject of removal due to court order, like xenu.net and other similar de-Googlings.
It's modded funny, but there is a good idea deep in there. I've basically been thinking about this idea for years. Not quite like a card catalog system as he described, but more like an ever changing directory. Of course it would require quite a bit of man hours to oranize/update/arrange, not to mention linking to the many many different categories and sections one page could belong to. Every day I run into something that I need to search for, but don't really know what exactlly to search for or where to go. I get lots of similar links but it usualy takes about an hour to narow them down to something usefull. I admit, this is part of the greatness of the internet, bucause quite often in this hour search I find valuable information that I need that I wasn't even looking for or stuble upon something that I didn't even know was out there. All of the sites that attempt to do this now are very limited and usually laid out quite poorly. It would be a massive project, but I think it would be quite usefull.
Teach someone to use the net and they won't bother you for weeks; show them Slashdot and you may never see them again.
I agree 100%, I just moved to a new place where I am forced to use dial-up because I am in an area that does not have access to DSL, cable, or anything else that is still decently priced... anyway when I run a search on google it takes at most 5 seconds to get the listing back of the results. If this program needs to send an email to the user letting them know the search results this will take at least 2 maybe 3 times longer (in the fastest instance) for the user to get the results. I think that MIT needs to re-think their ideas and come up with something more useful rather than coming up with something that will just cause more headaches to the users forced to use the slow connections like myself.
"The two most abundant elements in the universe are hydrogen and stupidity." -Harlan Ellison
for my cable Internet connection at home.
Yes, I am dead serious... Lets just say Charter's cable Internet in my area lately really stinks. I would almost rather be on a 14.4k modem - no joke. I am not the only user... I get lag spikes of over 3000ms when not doing anything, and almost dropped connections. Good thing DSL recently became available in my area =D. One less Charter Pipeline subscriber.
To try out this demo, please follow these simple steps:
1. Pick up the phone and call the automated voice search system at (650) 318-0165.
2. After the prompt Say your Search Keywords, say your query to the system.
3. Click this link and a new window will open with your voice search results.
4. Say another query, and the new window with the search results will be updated with the new results.
An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
It's a shame that with the way the net is going all they will get as search results will be flash heavy sites that take 20 minutes to download on broadband, let along dial up.
.tar.gz for download and offline reading.
Where did all the sites go that you could use wget -r to grab overnight? How about the odd few that used to offer a
Content over presentation is a concept that needs to be reintroduced to the net, preferably with a stick.
Beep beep.
As admirable as the idea behind this project is, I don't think it'll succeed. In a word: money. The programming and research aren't the problem -- someone's getting a thesis out of this, so MIT'll foot the bill. The problem comes with finding money for maintaining and improving the servers, handling abuse, support, etc.
It's a service that's only useful for poor third-world schools. Those organizations are probably running on a donated 486. They sure don't have money to pay, or even the money to pay to download ads. Charity-wise, "fund a search engine for poor third-worlders" is somewhat less compelling than "feed a starving child".
I see this idea living on research and enthusiasm for a year or two then dying a quiet, broke death.
Forward, retransmit, or republish anything I say here. Just don't misquote me.
Hi, I'm a Ph.D. student working on the TEK Project. TEK does send the content of pages, not just links (although it also allows you to retrieve individual links, if desired). This allows you to get information back in a single query. TEK stores all returned results in a local cache on the client machine, so that users can search through the pages and refer to them at a later date. The software provides a local search utility that allows you to peruse previous results with a standard web browser; you do not need to keep the emails that are returned from the TEK Server. We hope that this is useful not just for taking a snapshot of a given page, but also for averting future searches if some content has already been downloaded before. More details are available on the TEK website: http://tek.sourceforge.net/