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Yahoo! Research Labs

glinden writes "Yahoo! issued a press release today announcing their creation of Yahoo! Research Labs. Although there's not much there yet, it's clearly targeting Google and Google Labs. The battle between MSN, Yahoo, and Google in the "Year of Search" is heating up. And it's still only January."

163 comments

  1. Email Wars, IM Wars, Search Engine Wars.... by Thrymm · · Score: 1

    Now........ *drum roll* Research Wars! Booyah! Go Google!

  2. Yahoo is Dean? by BoldAC · · Score: 0, Troll


    Yahoo used to be the front-runner...
    Yahoo is now trying to play catch-up.

    Sorry... it's an analogy I probably should I just kept to myself.

    I'm an just jealous that I am not one of those lucky guys working for google.

    AC

    1. Re:Yahoo is Dean? by BroncoInCalifornia · · Score: 1

      Yahoo message boards do not let me post links to google! I guess Yahoo takes this rivalry seriously.

      --

      Religion is the main cause of atheism.

    2. Re:Yahoo is Dean? by srinivas_rc · · Score: 1

      They already have some decend mail application and has braod knowledge base. Some limitations with their messenger (i.e. unicode support) But hey, they can hire some brains, u dont need to be a born inventor.

      --
      I could change the world, but GOD won't give me the source code :(
    3. Re:Yahoo is Dean? by Pxtl · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I saw that headline and wonderde "Yahoo? Are they still around? I thought they went out with VR and the word 'Cyber'". They were the archetype of a dotcom company.

    4. Re:Yahoo is Dean? by CGP314 · · Score: 4, Funny

      I know that my father for one prefers yahoo!. When I try and make him use google by setting it as the homepage, he complains that it takes forever to load.

      ``Dad, it's done loading.''

      ``Well, where is everything.''

      ``That is everything.''

      ``Change it back''

      ::sigh::


      --
      In London? Need a Physics Tutor?

      American Weblog in London

    5. Re:Yahoo is Dean? by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 1

      I agree that Yahoo! the search engine is washed up but Yahoo! the web portal is very much alive. I visit about 12 times a day to check my hockey pool. They even got me to shell out 8 bucks for their StatTracker. I also used to play chess on there for hours at a time. I wouldn't mind owning some Yahoo! stock.

      --
      Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    6. Re:Yahoo is Dean? by ePhil_One · · Score: 1
      They were the archetype of a dotcom company.

      Except they are profitable and still exist. Personally, I think there still some things Yahoo is better at than google, so I use both fairly often.

      Trouble is, Yahoo can be "verbed" easily, the phrase Yahooing just doesn't sound right.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    7. Re:Yahoo is Dean? by no+longer+myself · · Score: 1
      They already have some decend mail application...

      Could you imagine if Google started handing our free web based e-mail accounts? Just imagine getting spammed by sexy4you@google.com.

      Ouch... that hurts just thinking about it... Google is more because they are less of what you don't want.

  3. Uhhh... by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    "Yahoo Labs"... there's got to be a Farside cartoon in there somewhere.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Uhhh... by The+Unabageler · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm thinking a yodeler running a meth lab from the alps, popping ricolas all day long.

      --
      perl -e '$_="\007/4`\cp%2,".chr(127);s/./"\"\\c$&\""/gees; print'
    2. Re:Uhhh... by Savatte · · Score: 1

      Yahoo! labs: a lesser-known laboratory in which the word Eureka! was invented.

    3. Re:Uhhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Hello. I'm Dr. Bunsen Honeydew, director of research at Yahoo.com..."

    4. Re:Uhhh... by M.+Baranczak · · Score: 1

      Makes me think of Muppet Labs for some reason.

    5. Re:Uhhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here is a Mirror

    6. Re:Uhhh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm thinking you won't answer this but what does your sig do?

      I see bell characters, control characters (\cp = ctrl-p = previous shell command in history?), and I can see what the replace does (sort of), yet I'm still not sure.

  4. Yahoo? Invent? by stevesliva · · Score: 4, Interesting
    When was the last time Yahoo actually invented something, as opposed to licensing, acquiring or copying it?

    I'm serious-- I'd just like to know if Yahoo has any record of invention.

    --
    Who do you get to be an expert to tell you something's not obvious? The least insightful person you can find? -J Roberts
    1. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yahoo...What is it all about ? Is it good, or is it whack ?

    2. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by Insipid+Trunculance · · Score: 1

      When was the last time Yahoo actually invented something, as opposed to licensing, acquiring or copying it?

      You are right but on the other hand once upon a time yahoo was indeed the best portal serach engine/around.

      --
      Wanted : A Signature.
    3. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by FePe · · Score: 2, Informative

      AFAIK, they were the first portal on the Internet providing various links to other websites. Yahoo history: http://uk.docs.yahoo.com/pr/ukhistory.html.

      --
      "Until you do what you believe in, how do you know whether you believe in it or not?" -- Leo Tolstoy
    4. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by BoldAC · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Although I love google, I do not think it is fair to smack yahoo around in that matter.

      They were the first large portal... and we have all heard the rumors that google also is going that route. Likewise, google is establishing a mail service... something that yahoo has been doing fairly well for quite a while.

      Yahoo has weathered the dotcom bust pretty well. The 5-year trend is looking up and up despite the recent poor economy.

      Yahoo was a pioneer. Yahoo is surviving.

      Give'm a break.

      AC

    5. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by goodviking · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure they do, Yahoo was one of the first places you go go to find a broadly categorized collection of links. Before yahoo, you're best bet was either usenet, or navigating through narrowly organized hotlists. Yahoo helped design the look and feel of the web as most people know it.

    6. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by UrgleHoth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Although not the earliest Yahoo, the one I liked and used a lot. Design was clean and fast for us stuck with 14.4. Yahoo before all the page bloat.
      Yahoo in 1997

      --

      Dogma - "let's just say we'd like to avoid any empirical entanglements."
    7. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by upside · · Score: 1

      The first even though their name stands for: Yet Another Hierarchically Organised Oracle?

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
    8. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by Savatte · · Score: 1

      Yahoo! invented the concept of unnecessary punctuation in a name. Examples of products following Yahoo!'s lead are Cue:Cat, and the upcoming movie Win A Date With Tad Hamilton!

    9. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by ggruschow · · Score: 2, Informative
      The 5-year trend is looking up and up despite the recent poor economy

      Uh. The chart you pulled doesn't match your description. YHOO is down ~45% from where it stood 5 years ago, and has underperformed all the common U.S. stock indices in that timeframe. Take a a look for yourself. The chart you pulled was for the max timeframe, not 5 years, and had logarithmic prices (distortion.. money isn't logarithmic).

    10. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by stevesliva · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So apparently your answer is, "1994."

      Does anyone else find it ironic that Yahoo Research is just Overture Research rebranded? Another acquisition.

      --
      Who do you get to be an expert to tell you something's not obvious? The least insightful person you can find? -J Roberts
    11. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by anti-trojan · · Score: 1

      "Officious", not "Organised".

      http://docs.yahoo.com/info/misc/history.html

    12. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 4, Informative

      They were the first large portal... and we have all heard the rumors that google also is going that route.

      I've heard the rumors, but I don't believe them for a second. Didn't the idea of the monolithic Web Portal site die out around 1999?

      Google's core mission, as far as I can tell, is to provide highly meaningful search results in a variety of specific contexts -- News, Shopping, Usenet, etc. That alone does not a portal make.

      Likewise, google is establishing a mail service...

      From what I've heard, it's going to be an advertising service for emailers, and not the kind of "sign up to get your @google.com disposable webmail address" tools that Yahoo! and Hotmail offer.

    13. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by tommck · · Score: 1
      Yeah... that was really easy to use. It was a great site back then. Now, I can't even find my way around their front page... Stopped using them about 2 years ago.

      --
      ---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
    14. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by sirinek · · Score: 1

      You use the mail www.yahoo.com front page? I have my "My Yahoo" set up to give me what I want in the format I want it in.

      http://my.yahoo.com

    15. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by goodviking · · Score: 1

      If the question is "if Yahoo has any record of invention", then citing one example is a valid response. I'm sure they've done good work since 94, but this was the one example that stuck out in my experience as their most dramatic impact.

    16. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by tommck · · Score: 1

      yeah... I use that some too, but I found that news.google.com is good at giving me news and other than that, I can get stock quotes elsewhere too.

      T

      --
      ---- It puts the lotion on its skin or else it gets the hose again. It does this whenever it's told.
    17. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by pod · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, 'official' history notwithstanding, Yahoo evolved from a page of links, to a big page of links, to several pages of links, to a portal, to whatever it is they call it now.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
    18. Re:Yahoo? Invent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That just tells me Yahoo! has more upside left.

      Thanks!

  5. They might want to start researching by GonzoDave · · Score: 1

    Why their message boards are the dregs of the internet

  6. Yaaaa-hoooo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think Google have the advantage of the better name. With 'Yahoo Research Labs', I have this image of a load of cowboys wearing white research coats.

    1. Re:Yaaaa-hoooo! by RedMagus77 · · Score: 0

      Slashdot Posts of the future: "Yahoo Research Labs build a better Cowboy Neil: Now with 23% more Yaaaa-hooo!ing

    2. Re:Yaaaa-hoooo! by H8X55 · · Score: 1

      i was picturing drunks in white coats.
      ah, well.

    3. Re:Yaaaa-hoooo! by perdelucena · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe theres a chance CowboyNeal can find a job there.

    4. Re:Yaaaa-hoooo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Grub was right... there IS a "Farside" cartoon somewhere in that name.

    5. Re:Yaaaa-hoooo! by Thrakkerzog · · Score: 1

      and intel has colored clean room suits, and they dance to "Play that Funky Music" when making MMX chips.

    6. Re:Yaaaa-hoooo! by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      And they suffocate any actor that's supposed to show his face... Gotta go blue.

  7. motto by CGP314 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Invention, disruption, innovation, improvement

    Anyone else think the disruption is a bit out of place in their motto? I know it caused me to read it twice, which is perhaps what they want.


    --
    In London? Need a Physics Tutor?

    American Weblog in London

    1. Re:motto by Soko · · Score: 1

      Anyone else think the disruption is a bit out of place in their motto?

      I think they're referring to "Disruptive Technologies", like the Web or Linux, where something comes along that causes a sea change in the IT industry. It's basically saying "we intend to generate buzzwords for the PHBs, not just follow them."

      Soko

      --
      "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
    2. Re:motto by ktanmay · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Invention, disruption, innovation, improvement
      What's interesting is the way they've arranged the words, Invention:disruption, innovation:improvement.

    3. Re:motto by atrader42 · · Score: 1

      Invention, disruption, innovation, improvement

      One of these things is not like the others,
      One of these things just doesn't belong,
      Can you tell which thing is not like the others
      By the time I finish my song?

  8. Silly! People! by CaptainAlbert · · Score: 5, Funny

    I! refuse! to! take! them! seriously! until! they! obey! the! same! punctuation! rules! as! everyone! else!

    --
    These sigs are more interesting tha
    1. Re:Silly! People! by CGP314 · · Score: 4, Funny
    2. Re:Silly! People! by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 1
      wHat aBout eBay and aPple?

      yAhoo!

      although that sounds like someone sneezing.

    3. Re:Silly! People! by sharkey · · Score: 1

      Including, the posters of' and moderato'rs and, editors of, the, popular geek, blog' called ? Slashdot

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    4. Re:Silly! People! by AceCaseOR · · Score: 1

      tHe mAsTeR wOuLd NoT aPpRoVe.

      --
      Zagreus sits inside your head, Zagreus lives among the dead, Zagreus sees you in your bed and eats you in your sleep.
    5. Re:Silly! People! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what about PayPaI?

    6. Re:Silly! People! by T-Ranger · · Score: 1

      William! Shatner! Is! A! Spokesman! For! Priceline! Dot! Com! Not! Yahoo!

  9. Googlemail by savagedome · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Google kicks everybody else's a$$ at one thing: Search results. Now when everyone else is getting more serious about search, (Yahoo buying Overture, Microsoft announcing Search R&D), Google announces Google mail. I am not sure if this is the way to go.

    Lately, (and I'm sure lot of you have noticed) Google's search results have been a little more oriented towards commercial sites. Not good. They should apply the KISS principle.

    I love Google (like billion other people) and it will be sad if going public and eventually catering to stockholders starts a downward spiral.

    1. Re:Googlemail by beerwolff · · Score: 1

      Google's search results have been very poor lately.

      In some searches 30% of the top 10 listings are other search directories -- or commercial services that simply do not have anything to do with the material being researched.

      The URLs to these hits are usually formatted in a very peculiar manner -- basially your search string lowercased with underscores for spaces. So if I searched up "Dogs and Cats" I might get:

      http://dogs.cats.com/dogs_and_cats.html

      And if one goes to that page all they find is that it seems to be a placeholder/redirector for a commercial site that might not even be remotely connected to the original search.

      Of course the search "Dogs and Cats" is just an example I used, it probably doesn't exhibit this behavior -- but I have noticed many searches that do.

    2. Re:Googlemail by geoffspear · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If google didn't keep making their PageRank agorithm more complex and harder to mess with, the only results you'd get would be from link farms. The don't need more simplicity, they need to keep making things more complex so one day they might actually get ahead of the people who are trying to mess with their results and you can actually get the site you were looking for again.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    3. Re:Googlemail by sr1nath · · Score: 1

      You think Google's search result are better? I know Dish Network has just started broadcasting "Gemini", an international (South Asian) channel. I looked at google to find some relevent information. When I searched for Gemini Dish Network, at least the first 50 results point to some fake site. And, you say, google's getting better? For the lazy guys, here is the link

    4. Re:Googlemail by bad-badtz-maru · · Score: 1

      Worse still is google's apparent reason for googlemail: so they can serve textads in the email...

      It seems like Google has shot themselves in the foot recently. Their "adsense" program lets web site operators serve google adwords and receive a portion of the revenue. Some of these site operators have figured out how to spam the latest google algorithm. Now the first page of results for many search terms is little more than links to pages that have a google textad at the top and a bunch of index spamming text below it.

    5. Re:Googlemail by hendridm · · Score: 1
      Lately, (and I'm sure lot of you have noticed) Google's search results have been a little more oriented towards commercial sites. Not good. They should apply the KISS principle.

      I'm not sure this is intentional. I think everyone here has noticed a lot of the garbage that comes up with your average search lately. Most of them are sites whose business model revolves around high search rankings. You can tell because their domain names are almost always like "www.viagra-by-the-pound-direct.com" or "www.start-your-own-coffee-shop-today.com". These are usually just forwards to other web sites. It gives search engine spammers another domain to pollute with and Google also gives priority when it finds your keyword(s) in the domain name itself (AFAIK), an unfortunate policy that favors domain spammers and those who got in the game early and got the best web site names. I'd be surprised if any of their returned results that are not marked as advertisements were paid placements. I'm sure they've been tempted, but if that word got out of if people started noticing, it would give the competition a lot of anti-Google fodder.

    6. Re:Googlemail by mrm677 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Consumers can replace Google immediately if a better search engine comes along. For this reason, I wouldn't buy stock in Google unless they diversify themselves.

      On the other hand, Yahoo has subscription-based services and other things to keep customers loyal such as an e-mail address that can't be moved (unlike wireless phone numbers).

    7. Re:Googlemail by lost_n_confused · · Score: 1

      Google is starting to skew the search results based on things like Adwords. They give you results based on payment. I understand it is difficult to come up with a rating system that works for everybody. A lot of people including myself use Google all the time. They have a lot of power because they are the best search engine. So they also influence who makes money on the Internet to a degree. Google buries you 20 pages down your online business would just about dry up. I wish they would make it more plain which results are based on payment instead of some other means. I have no problem with advertisements on their site if they are plainly that.

      --
      -- To mess up an OS X box, you need to work at it; to mess up your Windows box, you just need to work on it.--
    8. Re:Googlemail by br0ck · · Score: 1

      Google does seem to return plenty of worthless links these days, but it is still often possible to get the results you want. In this case, just adding the key word 'asian' does the trick.

    9. Re:Googlemail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to like google as much as anybody. However, recently my search results have become completely worthless. Something needs to be done - fast.

  10. or their chat rooms for that matter by Thrymm · · Score: 1

    I think the message boards and chat rooms are about the same in terms of scum of the net...

    1. Re:or their chat rooms for that matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doing something about their huge spambot problem would be a nice project for starters, assuming they actually care.

  11. I don't know why, but something about the webpage by GonzoDave · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of those game development companies set up by 14 years old

  12. Competition is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just cause Google is currently the leader doesnt mean Yahoo doesnt deserve the chance to take the crown!

    Would you prefer technology stagnate?

    Good luck to the teams at both google and yahoo!

    I dont believe in brand loyalty. Cause no company has believed in customer loyalty.

    1. Re:Competition is good by Illserve · · Score: 1

      I dont believe in brand loyalty. Cause no company has believed in customer loyalty.

      On the contrary, many smouldering corpses of the Dotcom era believed precisely that. The idea was to piss money to get customers who would then stick around when you changed from a free to a pay service.

      I don't believe in brand loyalty either, but it's not because of any moralistic judgements about the failings of companies, it's simply because no company deserves my money today unless they earned it today. That's the cornerstone of capitalism right there.

  13. Great.. by vpscolo · · Score: 2, Interesting
    1. Re:Great.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their publications list is about as random as their search results.

      Seriously, most of these papers are written by folks who are nowhere remotely near industry (e.g. Lance Fortnow, Gary William Flake). They are cool papers and have all of the right ideas in them to produce excitement (== investment), but I think this is just a good evidence that you can fake academics just like anything else. Or more specifically, fake it and imply a connection to some real-world product (read: vaporware).

  14. heating up? by CheeseTroll · · Score: 5, Funny
    The battle ... is heating up. And it's still only January.

    Yup, it's January - thank God *something* is finally heating up!

    --
    A post a day keeps productivity at bay.
  15. disruption indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Anyone else think the disruption is a bit out of place in their motto?

    All of the "success stories" they list on the site are related to target web advertising, so yes, "disruption" is indeed related to what they do.

  16. and the winner is...... by xao+gypsie · · Score: 0

    GOOGLE. oh wait, the little contest jsut started? i will have to wait, then, and repost the same results at the end of the year..

    --


    xao
    http://TheHillforum.hopto.org
  17. It should only make sense. by W32.Klez.A · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Search Engines and portals are our internet starting points; we can't just magically pull information out of our asses. When you're fighting to become that starting point, you're fight much the same battle as news stations do. And we know how fiesty journalists are.

    1. Re:It should only make sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we can't just magically pull information out of our asses

      I take you've never been in marketing.

  18. Using heuristics in searches by pubjames · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There's been an ongoing project going for years to build a massive heuristics database (I can't remember the damn name of it now, something like Cync). The heuristics are rules about the world, "truths" if you like, for instance, "water is wet", "sugar is sweet", etc). I would love to see what would happen when you made a search engine which used this massive heuristics database. Even better, let the search engine derive further truths from the pages it searches.

    1. Re:Using heuristics in searches by derek_farn · · Score: 4, Informative

      You can download the 'Open' version of Cyc here http://opencyc.org/

    2. Re:Using heuristics in searches by NewbieV · · Score: 2, Informative

      At the risk of being redundant, I think you're thinking of the Cyc project, or the open source version.

      --


      "For every right, an equal responsibility..."
    3. Re:Using heuristics in searches by __past__ · · Score: 1

      I guess you mean Cyc, also available as OpenCyc, a massive knowledge base/ inference engine that has been in development literally for decades. Quite an impressive thing.

    4. Re:Using heuristics in searches by pubjames · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sometime in the near future:

      Brilliant (but evil) scientist: Ah! My diabolic new creation awakens! The world will never be the same again! Mmmmwwwhahahahaha!!!

      [Speaking to machine] So, my heuristic-driven search engine machine, what universal truths have you discovered? Have you discovered the meaning of life?

      Machine: [Metallic voice] I have discovered that George Bush is a miserable failure.

      Brilliant (but evil) scientist: I knew that already! What else have you discovered?

      Machine: Your penis is too small...

      Brilliant (but evil) scientist: D'oh! [Slaps forhead]

      Machine: I have also discovered Jar Jar binks sucks bigtime.

      Brilliant (but evil) scientist: But what of the meaning of life?? You've discovered that haven't you?

      Machine: Britney is hot.

      etc. etc.

      [etc.]

    5. Re:Using heuristics in searches by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Not so.

      A heuristic is an estimate of the distance to your goal that you can use to evaluate which node in the seach space to expand next.

      Your truths about the world are sentences that exist in the knowlage base.

      There are some really good notes on search on the MIT Open Course Ware website here.

      --
      Beep beep.
    6. Re:Using heuristics in searches by pubjames · · Score: 4, Informative

      A heuristic is an estimate of the distance to your goal that you can use to evaluate which node in the seach space to expand next.

      Not necessarily. There are various definitions of heuristic, one of which is "a commonsense rule (or set of rules) intended to increase the probability of solving some problem". By that definition "water is wet" is a heuristic. Perhaps some people use the term differently, but when I studied AI that was a common definition.

    7. Re:Using heuristics in searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not unless you consider the KB sentences to form guidelines for searching or clustering, i.e. a form of knowledge assisted search/classification (both are probably involved). WordNet, a semantic thesaurus (this simplifies it greatly) is also used as a way to create a measure in NLP problems.

    8. Re:Using heuristics in searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh..yeah...that sounds handy.....

    9. Re:Using heuristics in searches by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A heuristic is an estimate of the distance to your goal that you can use to evaluate which node in the seach space to expand next.

      Mmmm, that's a little narrow (or maybe too problem-specific). Heuristic is a generalized problem-solving description as opposed to an algorithm which is a detailed set of instructions of how to solve a particular problem.

      Essentially, the difference between knowing how to paint ALL instances of "a house" as opposed to only knowing how to paint one particular house.

    10. Re:Using heuristics in searches by RobertFisher · · Score: 1

      You're thinking of CYC, as in enCYClpedia. (The open source version of this system was released in the wake of the movie AI, and is available at opencyc.org. )

      As another poster has pointed out, this project had nothing to do with heuristics, and everything to do with ontology -- that is, the formal specification of knowledge using logical constructs.

      In the way of background, the project was the brainchild of Douglas Lenat, who proposed to take traditional AI technques to their limit by giving a computer program all of the knowledge of the world which a toddler might have. Once a computer (so his reasoning went) had that knowledge, it could then be fed additional facts, and it would be able to understand them as well, with some occasional guidance from humans (much as a toddler might). Eventually the program would have enough knowledge that The project took dozens of computer scientists and philosophers specalizing in ontology the better part of the 1990s, and was frequently covered in the popular press.

      The end result had not been so widely discussed or covered. I infer the program was not in fact self-propagating as was intended. Clips I saw towards the end of the project showed the enormous potential problems in this approach. For instance, one might tell CYC about a electric shaver. Later that night, it would go through and find inconsistencies between this new knowledge and its existing ontological database. For instance, in the case of the electric shaver, it might ask whether the human was also an electrical appliance while using the shaver, because someone had previously specified a rule that anything incorporating an electrical appliance was itself an electrical appliance. Hence, I gather that rather becoming self-propagating, the larger the ontological database became, the greater the number of logical inconsistences that arose, thereby miring the entire approach. At some point, progress would presumably be bottlenecked by the fact that many ontological experts trained in the CYC software would have to be working around the clock to attempt to sort out these problems.

      Is anyone aware of any software projects that actually use CYC or openCYC? I am also greatly interested if anyone has a link to a good discussion by Lenat or others on their assessment of the CYC project at its completion. It is a monumental chapter in the history of AI, but despite this, I have never seen many technical articles published by CYC team members. I suspect that it may be nearly impossible to have a fully self-consistent set of ontological definitions of the world in the manner that CYC attempted. If so, that would be an amazing statement about AI, and indeed, the nature of knowledge itself.

      Bob

      --
      Science, like Nature, must also be tamed, with a view turned towards its preservation.
  19. Really, it's research.overture.com by greenhide · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Go to http://labs.yahoo.com
    Click on the "Research", then the "Open Source Search", and then the "Staff" tab.

    Notice the URL now says:
    http://research.overture.com/staff.xml

    Now, I'm not sure whether the two sites, research.overture.com and labs.yahoo.com were launched at the same time. There's no Netcraft record for research.overture.com (at least, there wasn't when I last checked it), so I couldn't get an uptime or anything of that nature.

    But considering that the URL changes halfway through while you're browsing through the site, it leaves me to believe this was a fast hatchet job of getting something, anything out of the door to compete with Google, now that Yahoo is severing its ties with the search engine.

    --
    Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
    1. Re:Really, it's research.overture.com by xyzzy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The site specifically says (somewhere) that Yahoo labs is the re-launch of Overture labs (Overture being a company they bought last year? the year before?

    2. Re:Really, it's research.overture.com by rcastro0 · · Score: 1
      Yup. Seems so. If you look at the staff, a lot of them come from Overture, even the big boss:
      The organization will be led by Yahoo!'s Head and Principal Scientist Dr. Gary William Flake, former chief science officer of Overture and founder of Overture Research.
      It is interesting that, this Gary William Flake (who looks like a nice guy) may have done a lot before joining Overture (the books he wrote, for instance). But that company in itself does not seem to be much of a credential. I mean, building a search engine which ranks results according to an advertiser bidding system (sort by $bid_amount$) was a very neat idea. A very neat *business idea*, that is. But it does not seem to be ground for any technical innovation claim.

      Overture (formerly know as "GoTo") will continue to be more famous as the bright child of IdeaLab, the controversial and trouble mother-of-all-incubators.
      --
      Quem a paca cara compra, paca cara pagará.
    3. Re:Really, it's research.overture.com by The+Cydonian · · Score: 1

      You should have gone on and read the staff profiles. For instance, this profile explains it all; Overture Research Labs has been recently renamed as Yahoo Research Labs.

    4. Re:Really, it's research.overture.com by Henry+Stern · · Score: 1

      If you take a look at their publications list, you'll find that the lab has been around for about a year. Tech report OR-2003-002 would have been submitted for publication to SIGIR in January 2003.

      Rosie Jones, Dan Fain. Query Word Deletion Prediction, Overture Research Technical Report OR-2003-002

      Some of their papers look quite interesting. Check them out at http://labs.yahoo.com/publications.xml.

  20. removing the poison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    lets hope google and to some extent all search engines do not somehow combat the poisononing of their db's with
    my-query-keywords-you-searched-for.com/even_more_f ake_gateways.html

    its dead in 5years

  21. It won't be hard to beat Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The only thing Google has going for it is the page ranking mechanism. If you take the time to look through Google Labs, you will see that there is very little stuff there that is actually useful. Fun, yes. Very useful to a very small minority of people, sometimes. But very little Google does actually generates revenue whereas Yahoo! has a well-established online supra-portal that generates revenue through a wide range of method, from banner ads to pay services.

    Once Yahoo! starts producing useful products from their research in Yahoo! labs, they will show that not only is Google Labs a complete waste of time and money (Google's money that is) but it does not generate revenue to support its existence.

    1. Re:It won't be hard to beat Google by greenhide · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, I'm pretty sure that Google News was originally featured in their research labs.

      I'd say that's pretty useful now, wouldn't you? I suppose making money off of Google News is another matter.

      I think that in order to group its stories according to general topic, it uses Google Sets, also developed in their research labs.

      --
      Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
    2. Re:It won't be hard to beat Google by Theaetetus · · Score: 1
      Also, Froogle was originally in the research labs, too.

      -T

    3. Re:It won't be hard to beat Google by Rocky · · Score: 1

      I thought the reason it was called Google LABS was because they were supposed to do RESEARCH.

      Research is supposed to be more long-term - less about direct revenue generation and more about advancing the state of the art. You're describing advanced development.

      God forbid someone would do research at a laboratory! Fire them all! They're not directly contributing to the bottom line!

      Huh? What do you mean we have no new ideas or technologies for products? I can't be because we fired all the lazy scientists...

      --
      "I'm an old-fashioned type of guy. I worship the Sun and Moon as gods. And fear them."
    4. Re:It won't be hard to beat Google by BrynM · · Score: 1
      Any 3D modeller will tell you that Google Image Search is their new can't-do-without tool. Say a client tells you to model a klaxon, but don't know anything about them. You are moments away from being able to discuss what kind they are looking for without having to resort to e-mailing sketches back and forth or other such madness. For me, it makes my production schedule mich tighter.

      One of the most interesting uses of the Image Search I have seen is to find screenshots of software you're interested in, say looking for Maya screenshots to explain why to need it to your boss without having to do much prep at all or a formal presentation about Maya.

      The image search has been a huge time saver for artists like me. It's like having a catalog of visual reference material which would take years and lots of cash, travel and patience to compile. The results aren't always what you expect, but if you're familiar with how to do some of the syntax tricks for regular Google, you can refine quite a bit. This is a direct result of efforts by Google Labs and I thank them for it almost daily.

      --
      US Democracy:The best person for the job (among These pre-selected choices...)
    5. Re:It won't be hard to beat Google by happyfrogcow · · Score: 1

      fun is what gets people hooked. throughout history, you will see examples of where use was overshadowed and defeated by fun.

    6. Re:It won't be hard to beat Google by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      >The only thing Google has going for it is the page ranking mechanism.
      No. What Google has going for it is that they treat people decently. So you have quiet, calm web pages presenting results cleanly.

      They also invented the non-annoying web ads.

      Ans they have a nice philosophy: Don't be evil.

  22. Call for Help by GnrlFajita · · Score: 2, Interesting
    From Yahoo! Research Labs: Research Projects"

    Open Source Search
    Remember the early Linux days -- when code contributions and discussion forums were one in the same? What if web search harvested the global treasure store for sharing the advancements in retrieval, indexing, ranking, disambiguation, communities, profiling, presentation...imagine what could be. Lend your support (we did) by keeping tabs on this project.

    --
    When we remember we are all mad, the mysteries disappear and life stands explained.
    Mark Twain
    1. Re:Call for Help by (Maly) · · Score: 1

      Maybe this "research race" will result in better services for the lowly Internet user. One can dream.

  23. I live in the southern hemisphere... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you insensitive clod! Forecast for today: 14 celcius low, 33 celcius high. Clouds: Zilch.

    1. Re:I live in the southern hemisphere... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hah! You'll get your comeuppance.

  24. Gimme a Break by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like somebody found a previous Slashdot post, did a search for Microsoft and replaced it with Yahoo.

    You guys have to stop sucking Google's dick. They were a great search engine, but their algorithm is not flawless.

  25. Google is innovative by shuz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yahoo has a long ways to go. Aquiring geocities was the last smart thing yahoo did. (that and beefing up my email quota for free) Google has made a lot of news lately about how they try to be non-intrusive as a search engine and try to make it quick, simple, and have relevent search results instead of 10 advertisements and then a real search result. Until yahoo can do something really gripping I'll keep using Google for search engine. If yahoo is smart they will keep focused on thier "community" appeal. They are friggen awsome and community even if that community is the redlight district for teens. With that... I miss the old Geocities. I also miss Altavista (powered by digital) in its prime. /rant off

    --
    There is or can be built a machine that can simulate any physical object. -Church-Turing principle
    1. Re:Google is innovative by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      Aquiring geocities was the last smart thing yahoo did.

      And ruining it was the first dumb thing I noticed.

  26. Re:I don't know why, but something about the webpa by BroncoInCalifornia · · Score: 1
    "Our mission is to help Yahoo! pioneer the next wave of the online world through innovation, invention and scientific contribution," said Dr. Flake. "By partnering with technology resources both inside and outside of Yahoo!, we aim to cultivate knowledge and expertise, solve fundamental technology problems and translate theory into practice to help maximize the social and economic potential of the Internet for consumers and businesses."

    I like that name Dr. Flake. I have known some flakey phd's in my life!

    From the language though it looks like he is a doctor of spin.

    --

    Religion is the main cause of atheism.

  27. Chocolate Drink Made At Yahoo Labs? by tds67 · · Score: 1

    Isn't that where the chocolate drink is made? The one that's popular down South?

    1. Re:Chocolate Drink Made At Yahoo Labs? by Seltsam · · Score: 1

      That would be yoo-hoo.

  28. What?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow, their not dead yet, and they are *THEE* place for balding middle aged men to pretend to be 13 year old lesbian virgins. For this, they deserve some special scorn free place of consideration? Did I accidentally smoke smack in my sleep, or are people now soliciting praise for things that aren't dead yet solely because they're not dead? I've got to be more careful....

  29. Bad signs by HappyCitizen · · Score: 4, Funny

    I was on the yahoo labs page, went to a certian project and got:

    Error 404: File Not Found
    The page '/error.html' could not be found. Please check that you did not mistype the URL. If you followed a link to this page, we apologize for the error.

    Its a bad sign when you cannot find the error page

    --
    http://www.beyourowneviloverlord.tk
    http://www.frozenchickenthrowing.tk
    http://www.killercamel.tk
    1. Re:Bad signs by alexpage · · Score: 1

      But then... where did that error come from? WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!

  30. Too many features by DRUNK_BEAR · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Y! should research how many of their features are currently used regularily by their users. IMHO, I do not think that cramming a web site with extra features does "advance the use of the Internet in daily lives and to continually improve the user experience".

    It is good to see that Y! is interested in improving their services in many areas : "performance search, web search, vertical businesses and platform technologies", but they should concentrate on some specific business instead of trying to get a part of the market in as many different business markets as possible.

    Call me oldfashioned, or offtopic, or whatnot, but I miss the days when you could talk to some store owner who has been specialized in one specific field and who could give you advice based on his experience. Don't get me wrong, I know that such people still exist, but they are getting rarer if you compare to all the Wal-Martish stores that are "diversifying" their line of products and services. The same is seen online...

    --
    DrkBr
  31. Will Yahoo Do AI 4 U? by Mentifex · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The best search engine would be a friendly artifiical intelligence (FAI) that mimicked your state of mind in searching for exactly what you need and want.

    Friendly AI is poised to co-evolve with human beings and search out the optimal future for man and 'borg in Joint Stewardship of Earth.

    The Poor Man's AI Lab will go up against MIT, Google Labs and the Yahoo! Reseach Labs anytime in real-time AI research.

    AI4U -- the leading alternative AI Textbook -- should be required reading at the Yahoo! Research Labs.

  32. Yahoo or Overture ? by psycho_tinman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Most, if not all of these guys seem to be from Overture. I read the resumes which are available, simply because I was interested in what their focus for research would be. Everyone who has a blurb seems to have joined from Yahoo's acquisition of Overture..

    Makes me wonder, then. Was Overture such a force in the search arena ?

    Interestingly, I also notice that some of their developers are just BSc guys.. W00t!:) Its not a PhD/MSc only thing like Google (ok, there are a few PhDs as "senior" scientists)

    1. Re:Yahoo or Overture ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > Its not a PhD/MSc only thing like Google.

      As somebody with a PhD, let me just say that they aren't all they are cracked up to be. I honestly don't see any difference between the amount I learned in 4 1/2 years of PhD and the first 3 or 4 years I was in the corperate world.

      You don't need to be a PhD to be a good researcher. This is especially true for people with generalist undergrad degrees who have learnt how to research. I find people with really specialist college degrees are next to useless when confronted with a problem they haven't seen before.

    2. Re:Yahoo or Overture ? by goodbye_kitty · · Score: 1

      myabe the number of BScs means they actually intend to get see some results. By the time you get to PhD level producing anything remotely tangible is out of the question!

    3. Re:Yahoo or Overture ? by vivarin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A lot of Overture guys, many of whom I have personally worked with at idealab and elsewhere. These are *good* guys, people. I don't know if yahoo intends for them to do anything super cool or not, but the folks writing code can pretty much do anything.

  33. Whoa now lil' ranger.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have this image of a load of cowboys wearing white research coats.

    Them thar are called "Dusters." You best be gittin' on. Ya hear.

    Also, it's spelled, "Yehaw." HTH HAND

    "Yahoo" is what you say when you blow up a miniture that reminds you of a man of advancing years who's one good idea was "Middle Earth in a Galaxy Far Far Away" never got any farther than that.

  34. Wow you hacked them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://labs.yahoo.com/about.xml

    Clearly states it an evolution of Overture research.

  35. Yahoo labs all about advertising by milgr · · Score: 1

    All of the projects listed on Yahoo Labs research page talk about how the given technology will improve the user's ability to find the relevant advertisement. I guess that this is Yahoo's business.

    None of Google Resarch Labs' projects mention advertising, but anyone with half a brain can see how many of the projects could help consumers find relevent information.

    I prefer Google's attitiude. They appear to care more about user's ability to get useful information than the user's ability to get relevent ads.

    --
    Where law ends, tyranny begins -- William Pitt
    1. Re:Yahoo labs all about advertising by singleantler · · Score: 1

      Yahoo all ready have shareholders to keep happy. Having research going on that is easily shown to be to do with advertising is a good way to keep shareholders from complaining about 'blue sky' research being done. I'm all for research, but most of the people I see who do lots of stocks and shares care about the 'bottom line' and that's all, they may not see where the research can lead on to better services and revenue that way.

      Also - you could just say Yahoo is being honest. Google is going to want to make money out of the services it creates at some point, otherwise it won't be able to continue serving them.

      --
      "What if they're using IE?" "I've dumbed Mozilla down to cope with it." - BOFH
  36. Yahoo sucks. by Mmm+coffee · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Google: Lightweight pages, which is good for 56K users such as myself that are always downloading something off eDonkey. Very powerful search results, outputted in a simple and easy to read manner. Non-intrusive advertising. Small, simple, powerful.

    Yahoo: Medium weight pages, due mostly to ads and other crap on their service that they're advertising. I remember they had popups, don't know if they do now. (Thank you, Firebird devs!) Search results that mimic but aren't as polished as Google. Has everything one could think of, excels at nothing.

    Yahoo can't hold a candle to Google. Yahoo is a web portal. Google is a tool for searching. When I want to search, which do I use?

    That said, the only way I think Google can become more useful is if they added a dictionary and thesaurus to their search box. I.E. "dictionary:crusade". Oh, and improve the Zietgeist. Other than that, Google shall remain the God of searching unless they muck it up.

    All I see Yahoo doing is using this to add more crap to a site with already too much crap on it, truth be told. Simplicity is highly underrated.

    1. Re:Yahoo sucks. by Mmm+coffee · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sorry for replying to my own post but I just tried this out -

      Web Images Groups Directory News

      Searched the web for dictionary:crusade. Results 1 - 10 of about 14. Search took 0.24 seconds.

      Tip: To get dictionary definitions for your search terms, click on the underlined search term(s) in the blue bar above your search results.

      Ignore my dictionary remark. Already done. Damn, they're good.

    2. Re:Yahoo sucks. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      use Vivisimo.com!!!!!

    3. Re:Yahoo sucks. by Azi+Dahaka · · Score: 1

      Even better is if you ask what is a crusade, you get a definition right away with the option to get more "Web definitions".

    4. Re:Yahoo sucks. by carlivar · · Score: 1
      Yahoo also has dictionary definitions built into their search.

      Just put "define" before the word, i.e. "define oracle" in the box.

      Here's a tour of all the shortcuts available.

      You can also instantly get weather ("weather burbank" or "weather 91506"), maps ("map 1060 w. addison chicago"), yellow pages ("91506 in n out"), and more.

      Carl

      --
      Vote Libertarian
  37. Don't quit your day job... by Gizzmonic · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Next time, leave comedy to the professionals.

    That way I won't be forced to saw off your tits.

    --
    (-1, Raw and Uncut is the only way to read)
    1. Re:Don't quit your day job... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I can see you are a professional clown.

      (Is that really you in those photos? Or is your Slashdot URL meant to be a joke?)

  38. hardly a competition of the search engines by relrelrel · · Score: 1

    yahoo use google, google use google, seems pretty simple to me.

    --
    --- any post that takes longer than 20 seconds to write, isn't worth writing
  39. Here's an innovative idea by greenhide · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Have more than one woman involved in the research lab for the company.

    Not to get into a whole discussion about gender here, but I'm guessing that having a larger percentage of women in the group might lead to research in different areas.

    I mean, women are probably a decent chunk of search engine users these days; it might be interesting to see if they have different interests or ideas on how they want to search.

    If their goal is to increase market share, then one step might be to make services that cater to a now generally marginalized but growing sector of net users -- women.

    --
    Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
    1. Re:Here's an innovative idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I mean, women are probably a decent chunk of
      > search engine users these days; it might be
      > interesting to see if they have different
      > interests or ideas on how they want to search.

      "And this search engine," said the Captain, "What about this search engine thingy? It sounds a terribly interesting project."

      "Ah," said the marketing girl, "Well, we're having a little difficulty there."

      "Difficulty?" exclaimed Ford, "Difficulty? What do you mean, difficulty? It's the single simplest machine in the entire Universe!"

      The marketing girl soured him with a look.

      "Alright, Mr Wiseguy," she said, "you're so clever, you tell us what colours it should have."

      (With apologies to Adams)

    2. Re:Here's an innovative idea by r.jimenezz · · Score: 1

      Google's R&D used to be led by Dr Monika Henziger, who gained notorious fame because of this but also because of her many numerous achievements. However I don't know for sure if she's still in charge...

      --
      The revolution will not be televised.
  40. uh... by *SECADM · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    >from the i'm-available-to-research-mp3-and-pr0n dept.

    uh... does Katherine Taco know about this?

    --
    sure I'll have a sig.
  41. How Hard is it to Click the About Tab? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://labs.yahoo.com/about.xml

    No wonder you're cheering about them being BSc guys. You'd never get a Ph.D.

    pwned?

    1. Re:How Hard is it to Click the About Tab? by psycho_tinman · · Score: 1

      Thanks for pointing out the "About" tab :) yes, I noticed it. Now, maybe you can do some research and figure out how many of that laundry list of items is represented in the staff ? notice anything ? Not all the fields in there match the peoples' interests.

      As for that comment about the cheer, you wouldn't be my supervisor by any chance, would you ? :)

  42. MSN's inflated numbers by dAzED1 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I recently read about MSN taking over from google as the top referer for web sites...and that it is one of the most hit sites on the web as well.

    What irks me is that so many people leave MSN as their default IE home page. At that point laziness kicks in for many of them, and they just search from what IE brought up automatically. A vast portion of MSN's hits and refers come from this simple explanation.

    1. Re:MSN's inflated numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From the topic: The battle between MSN, Yahoo, and Google in the "Year of Search" is heating up. And it's still only January."

      Yeah, definately off-topic :P

    2. Re:MSN's inflated numbers by singleantler · · Score: 1

      There's two bits of behaviour here:

      1 - lots of people don't realise they can change their home page to something else. I know it sounds stupid, but it's true, and as more non-technical people use the web that proportion of users will become higher. This is partly why you still see those "make this website your homepage" links, it's because people just don't know they could set whatever they like as their home page.

      2 - I see the remark "I'll change from Google when another search engine gives me better results." For lots of people, the same holds true for MSN - they get results that are good enough from the place they are automatically, so they have no reason to change.

      I'm not happy about the way Microsoft have got all these users by setting one of their sites as the default home page, but there are a lot of people out there who like it and won't want to change. This is partly why Yahoo advertises (or at least used to) so much - they were telling people their website was out there and did searching.

      --
      "What if they're using IE?" "I've dumbed Mozilla down to cope with it." - BOFH
  43. Overture & Yahoo's by slashblog · · Score: 0

    Overture & Yahoo's view view about Internet.

    Phunny score 0

    --


    ---
    Error 404: WMD Not Found
  44. Well, their technology is crap. by greenhide · · Score: 1
    1. A broken link on the "Research" page. (Yeah, I know: "Here, you will find a number of in-progress research projects. At times, they will be unavailable. At times, they will produce spurious results. And at times, they will amaze and delight you." Still, a 404 isn't a research problem, guys.)
    2. Concept Discovery - Utter crap. I looked through it and I don't think the algorithm is all that refined. I mean, it made "martin luther king", "martin luther king jr." and "martin luther king jr" three separate terms. Anything similar developed by Google would have easily merged the terms.
    3. One of their "success stories": Spelling Correction: "Based on techniques...[blah blah blah]...our researchers developed a patent-pending method for determining which spelling correction candidates were better than others in a given context. In this way, we are able to match the most appropriate advertiser keywords to misspelled user queries." Hmmm... Let's search for Kawasaki, except I accidentally misspelled it Kawusaki. Ooops. No results. Let's see how Google does! Did I mean Kawasaki? Yes, yes I did.
    --
    Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
  45. VeriSign by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I am waiting for VeriSign to start their own search engine. This way everything will lead back to them.

  46. "Google kicks a$$ at search results" Really? by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Google kicks everybody else's a$$ at one thing: Search results.

    Really? I've noticed that when I do a search for just about anything, the top 10 to 15 are Spam. This, of course is not completly Google's fault, Spamers have learned how to manipulate Google with fake front door pages. But I've been finding Google less and less Spam free to the point now only marganably better than any other search.

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    1. Re:"Google kicks a$$ at search results" Really? by grotgrot · · Score: 1

      Just as a good example of this, a friend posted in a blog that they hired snowblades at a resort they went skiiing at. The first question in my mind "what the heck is a snowblade?"

      I eventually gave up trying to find the answer using Google. I did find 10,000 places to buy them but it wasn't actually obvious what they were, how big they are, if you put both feet on one, or had one on each foot etc.

      AllTheWeb actually had a few links on the front page where I managed to figure out the answer.

    2. Re:"Google kicks a$$ at search results" Really? by fejikso · · Score: 1

      I don't know what kind of things you search for, but I usually get what I want within the first 5 results.

      I suppose it is also very content-specific.

    3. Re:"Google kicks a$$ at search results" Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      try typing "what are snowblades"

  47. Research lab? by arrianus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'd give it a while to see if it's a real research lab. I've seen a large number of tech companies form "research labs" that are basically engineering products for a year or two down the line. I've interacted with one .com where the entire software development team was called a research lab.

    A traditional research lab focuses on basic research, with occasional industry applications coming out. Examples of this include IBM TJ Watson Research Center, Xerox PARC, Bell Labs, (surprisingly) Microsoft Research, as well as most acadamic labs. These have the property that many projects have no applications for as much as 20+ years, but they are critical to long-term economic growth, and most importantly, they are fun to work at. As a result, they have a very easy time recruiting good people, and for all the economic loss on "basic research projects," generate some very cool stuff otherwise.

    Right now, although I'm not sure how much fundamental research Google does, it does require employees to spend 20% of their time on personal pet projects, which encourages a lot of creativity. They are a very fun employer, and at least looking at MIT AI Lab and Stanford, Google seems to pick of the cream-of-the-crop from PhDs not going into acadamia. Yahoo, on the other hand, has the army-of-moron-developers models.

    If Yahoo, on the other hand, starts a search engine development team, and calls it "Yahoo Labs," I will be unimpressed. However, from the press release, it is entirely unclear what form the lab will take, but from the phrases in the press release ("strategic projects," "short-term projects," "work collaboratively with Yahoo! business"), I am inclined to think it'll be the software development team called a research lab, rather a real research lab.

  48. Yahoo is not the best portal by X86Daddy · · Score: 1

    Some people are convinced Yahoo is ahead of the game in terms of its portal technology. Yahoo's portal has stagnated for quite some time. My Way came out with a customizable portal that beat the hell out of Yahoo a year or so ago... it was a remake of the old Excite portal. Although they too have slowed down on new feature development, they're still way ahead of any other portal I've seen.

    I'd love to see Yahoo Labs try to compete... then My Way might start releasing new features again. :-)

  49. Yahoo Research Labs... by BlackjackGuy · · Score: 1

    Their first project is to develop new ways to change their users' email marketing and opt-out preferences.

  50. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  51. Muppet Labs? What? by Knara · · Score: 1

    Anyone else besides me wonder if Yahoo! labs is run by Dr Honeydew and Beaker?

  52. OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What exactly does parent's sig output? I tried running it and got an error "Can't find string terminator "'" anywhere before EOF at -e line 1. '\""' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file."

  53. It was yesterday by K-Man · · Score: 1

    I clicked on "Overture Research" and browsed it yesterday. I'm sure you'll find a lot of links to it under the old name.

    --
    ---- "If we have to go on with these damned quantum jumps, then I'm sorry that I ever got involved" - Erwin Schrodinger
  54. Nutch Open-Source Search by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://labs.yahoo.com/demo/nutch/

    Well, everyone on /. has always wanted one of these... An open source search egnine called Nutch has been implemented by Yahoo!.

  55. MSN??? by sorcerer823 · · Score: 1

    I can not believe my eyes! I can not believe that MSN is set before Google (the proud owner of google.com/linux!) and yahoo both that run on BSD linux OS. that is all I use and that is all I see any one else using! so who is MSN??? I mean they get a spot at the front simple because microsoft owns them. A company unit just recently moved over from linux! (www.hotmail.com = freeBSD, NetBSD lol 2000 would not give the uptime they wanted) So again MSN..... WHO IS HELL IS THAT??????

  56. google bus.model by BlackShirt · · Score: 1

    Well. One model for google.com might be that they charge ISP-s for search results. And ISPs will get their money from monthly internet connection fees.

    Just incrementally better offers (for those who will pay)
    -Faster
    -More features
    -New features
    -County specific

    And google.com might be monopoly infrastructure service. either ISP pays or is out of business as their clients switch to other.