>From The Times
May 18, 2009
Google challenged by new rival with all the answers - WolframAlpha
Mike Harvey, Technology Correspondent
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A revolutionary new search engine that computes answers rather than pointing to
websites will be launched officially today amid heated talk that it could
challenge the might of Google.
WolframAlpha, named after Stephen Wolfram, the British-born computer scientist
and inventor behind the project, takes a query and uses computational power to
crunch through huge databases.
The service can compute the distance between two cities, the population of a
country at a specific date and the position of the Space Shuttle at a given
moment. The user does not have to search through links provided by the engine;
the answer comes immediately and, if appropriate, is accompanied by charts or
graphs. What it does that Google, at the moment, cannot do is provide answers
to questions that have not been answered already.
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The new service, available at wolframalpha.com, was previewed several months
ago amid industry speculation that it could be a “Google killer”. Dr Wolfram,
however, is at pains to point out that his brainchild is a “computational
knowledge engine”, not a traditional search engine.
A physics prodigy who earned a PhD aged 20, Dr Wolfram, 49, founded Wolfram
Research, in Illinois, which develops advanced software called Mathematica,
used mainly by scientists. Mathematica has built up a number of databases and
Wolfram Alpha is an attempt to bring them to a wider audience.
The service is free but the company plans to include advertising eventually and
to offer paid versions with extra features. Dr Wolfram said that WolframAlpha
was a “long-term project” and he hoped to broaden the databases that it uses.
Danny Sullivan, editor-in-chief of Search Engine Land, the website, said:
“They're saying they're not trying to wipe out Google, but they feel they do
the kinds of searches that Google doesn't handle. If you're trying to get
facts, this might be a handy kind of encyclopedia for you.”
Last week Google previewed a new experimental service called Google Squared,
which will automatically produce spreadsheets of information from search terms.
Mike Harvey's blog: WolframAlpha - should Google be quaking in its boots?