New content discovery tools
Spezify provides a bird's-eye view of the search results

This edition of Netspeak discusses the ongoing changes in the information 
dissemination/retrieval front and explores some of the new content discovery 
tools available on the Net.
Like the ever-expanding Universe, we have an ever-growing space of online 
content. To tame this information overload and help one find the information 
with ease, several search services exist and new ones continue to emerge 
regularly. Spezify (http://www.spezify.com/), a search service that presents 
search results in a visual form, is yet another instance of this trend.
The advantage of spezify is that through its visual output, the service 
provides a bird's-eye view of the search results from a single web page 
interface. Like other Net related phenomena, content discovery tool mix is also 
in a constant flux. In the past, for this author, search engines were the main 
content discovery tool. Then online technology discussion sites (like 
Slashdot.org) occupied the centre stage of information discovery. Later, it got 
shifted to blogs, news aggregation sites (like Techmeme), Web feeds and the 
like.
Though all these sources still serve in comprehending/researching content, they 
are no longer the dominant source for tracking the latest information. Of late, 
real-time content generators like Twitter, Facebook and other social media 
outlets have become the major source for finding/distributing content. The 
availability of desktop based real-time content monitoring tools (like 
Tweetdeck and TweetGlide) makes this process further easy.
The ongoing Twitter (http://twitter.com/jmurali) user-base explosion has 
resulted in an uninterrupted information flow from the length and breadth of 
cyberspace. As mentioned in an earlier column, the availability of this 
overwhelming flow of information has tempted several tech entrepreneurs to 
develop information processing services that slice and dice this huge database 
in multiple ways.
Instead of just displaying the tweets and other social media content as it 
happens, new search services analyse the content from them and present it under 
different categories (based on the topic being discussed). The online tweet 
aggregator, Tweetmeme (http://tweetmeme.com/), is an apt example of a product 
in this genre. The service aggregates Twitter messages and keep them in 
categories such as entertainment, science, technology and business. So, if you 
wish to track only tweets pertaining to, say, science, just access the category 
'Science' or subscribe to the corresponding web feed with your newsreader.
If you are a job seeker, you may find special Twitter based services like 
Twitjobsearch (http://www.twitjobsearch.com/) quite rewarding. JobDeck 
(http://www.tweetdeck.com/jobdeck/), the desktop software (created by Tweetdeck 
and Twitjobsearch) that displays job tweets as it happens, is another valuable 
tool worth a mention in this regard. Besides tracking the latest job openings 
and tweets from job search experts, Jobdeck serves to keep up with your 
favourite topics as well.
Generally, real-time search services list out relatively recent tweets only. 
Now, along with new tweets, if you would like to obtain historical tweets (that 
is, twitter messages delivered months ago) as well, check out the search 
service Searchtastic (http://www.searchtastic.com/). An advantage of this 
service is the facility to export the search output as an Excel worksheet.
Real-time content
Real-time content means the content that hits the subscriber as soon as it gets 
published. Content from blogs, discussion boards and other similar sources are 
not considered real-time as it takes some time to appear on your newsreader. 
This means, if by some means we can push the blog updates to its subscribers' 
newsreaders promptly, we can bring blogs and other similar sources also into 
the purview of real-time content.
It seems PubSubHubbub (http://code.google.com/p/pubsubhubbub/), the recently 
invented technology serves this purpose. If your blogging platform supports 
PubSubHubbub, your newsfeed subscribers may receive the blog updates almost 
instantaneously (provided they read it via PubSubHubbub enabled newsreaders 
like 'Google Reader'). Blogging systems like Wordpress 
(http://en.blog.wordpress.com/2010/03/03/rub-a-dub-dub-in-the-pubsubhubbub/) 
and Blogspot (http://buzz.blogger.com /2009/08/blogger-joins-hubbub.html) 
support the PubSubHubbub technology. It seems more exciting days are ahead for 
those who use the Net as an information publishing/consuming medium.
Information retrieval is not limited to discovering text, image or video 
content alone. A wide variety of data stored on different databases are 
available on the Net. Discovering the hidden meaning/facts/information stored 
on such data is also an equally important information-mining task. Towards this 
end, certain Google features meant for mining public data (data published by 
the World Bank and other public data sources) assume significance. These search 
features help us fire queries for extracting information from such data 
sources. For instance, if you type the search query, 'gdp of india', Google 
will immediately provide you the GDP with a time-series graph.
If you wish to compare the GDP with that of other countries, just click on this 
graph. Yet another development related to data analysis is the recent launch of 
the data visualisation tool 'Public data explorer' 
(http://www.google.com/publicdata/home) by Google Labs. This tool generates 
different types of graphs (line, bar and bubble) that animate over time. It can 
be used to compare the performance of economies across the globe over time on a 
variety of development indicators. Data from providers such as the OECD, the 
World Bank, Eurostat and so on are used for this purpose 
(http://googleblog.blogspot.com /2010/03/statistics-for-changing-world-google. 
html).
J. MURALI
He can be contacted at: jmur...@gmail.com


Regards

"Perhaps our role on this planet is not to worship God-- but to create Him."

                                        --Arthur C. Clarke

(Rajesh Asudani)

Assistant General Manager,
Reserve Bank of India
Nagpur
09420397185
O: 0712 2806676
Res: 0712 2591349




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