Posted by randfish
I ran into a kindred spirit at the SES conference
in San Jose this summer - John Anderson. Smart incredibly likable
motivated and passionate about making the web a better place I felt
like I had known John for years after spending 10 minutes with him
outside a session (this is one of my favorite parts of going to
conferences). Over the past few months John and a talented team of
friends have been working on a meta-search engine with the
impossibly cool address - URL.com. Let me walk you through
it:
URL's home page has a search box but it also
shows off members who've contributed to the results and the latest
input. The idea here is to let users contribute comments and
ratings to search results - something that engines have tried in
the past (Google does this privately with their search quality
review team) but URL is pretty slick.
I run a search for
geoengineering - a topic I read about in Rolling Stone on my
flight down to San Jose:
URL uses a standard metasearch system for ranking
results; note that the first result is #7 at Google #1 at Yahoo!
and #6 at MSN.
This is the first result I got - pretty
disappointing. But note how I can leave a comment in the frame bar
at the top and give a thumbs up or thumbs down. I give this a
well-deserved thumbs down and return to the results to click on
#2:
This second result is far more valuable - an
in-depth article on the subject with some interesting examples. I'm
giving it a thumbs up and some positive comments.
Now when someone runs a search at URL.com they
get new rankings ordered by the comments and criticism I've given
out for the results.
Is this in danger of being spammed? Yep... If it
gets popular I guarantee high levels of spam. But I have to say
that as a concept it's terrific and the implementation is pretty
intuitive. Assuming the spam and manipulation could be controlled I
can imagine myself really liking this type of search engine - it's
almost a mix between StumbleUpon Del.icio.us and Google.
Kudos to John and his team - this is no easy road
to travel but they're innovating executing and experimenting and
the search industry could use more of that.
View Comments