Posts filed under 'Search'
Cuil – Foiled by Strawberries, Muffin Test.
Q: Where do I go to find out everything I always feared about Cuil or Haktia and have it come true?
Back to Strawberries, Muffins
“If they have no bread, then let them eat cake!” _ Marie Antoinette
Ok – so Cuil seems to have hit another low point for overfed and “who the hell knows/cares” Board and founders – and not just for returning random porn even when safe search is on (… don’t believe it? click here if ur over 18).
It is to do with the still recoverable, mindless, dot-com largesse of the senior team.
Sarah Carey (not related to the random un-porn Google returned image above) – the whistle blowing, “Strategist to the CEO” has now told us all. Read it all here in Cade Metz’s riveting expose’ – Quantum Porn Engine foiled by Strawberries and Muffins http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/07/31/inside_cuil/).
But that isn’t all. Given the continued fuss about search startups, perhaps it a sign of the markets readiness to have Google’s rule challenged – even if it means a few extra strawberries, muffins or cake.
- DS
Add comment July 31, 2008
The results of our neural heuristic supercaliflagilstic keyword bake-off between Hakia, Google and Cuil!
The idea behind the neural heuristic supercaliflagilistic test is simple. We figure out how each of the search engine’s treat the other’s brand as a keyword. So when I did plug in the keyword “Hakia” in Cuil – it faithfully brought up Hakia’s site as the first result. Something to be said for context and relevance.
Enter “cuil” on Hakia’s semantic search engine and the first return from a PC magazine article says “not the catchiest name ever, but neither was Google, before it became a household name…”! Cuil’s site was, mercifully, the second result on the page.
Something to be said about semantics!
And while both Hakia and Cuil returned Google’s site with the keyword Google that wasn’t all.
Something to be said for age ranking.
Google itself was kinder to Hakia – returning Hakia.com but less kind to Cuil where the first result featured an article titled……Cuil Needs To Fix Its Technology Before It Can Get Hot!
A lot to be said for page ranking!
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AND WE ARE NOT DONE YET!! EXTRAAA SPECIAL BONUS! THE IMAGE CHALLENGE!
The image challenge – plug each search engine name in Google’s image search and list the first images returned!!
Hakia wins for creativity, excitement and irrelevance. Cuil wins for a mobile readable 3 column layout. And Google wins hands down for read the writing on the wall.
- DS
1 comment July 31, 2008
Google Logo in Hindi….back by popular demand…
Ok – listen up everybody. I get im’ed by two of you asking me for a how to on
the Google logo in Hindi.
I used the Hindi keyboard on www.gate2home.com. Then cut and paste that on a desktop tool (u guessed it – powerpoint) that showed up ok in the Mangala font. After some pretty nifty shading, saving as a gif – the rest as they say was not history. pretty mundane stuff really.
And dont forget the music – it helped. Leadbelly singing the Midnight Special, accompanied by the Golden Gate Quartet. With that you now have my secret recipe…
Add comment July 29, 2008
Danny Does (in) Cuil – Politely. Me – less so.
Cuil Launches — Can This Search Start-Up Really Best Google?
Danny Sullivan’s excellent deconstruction of Cuil’s debut (launch would be generous) is instructive in as much for what its says about Danny Sullivan, as gentleman, as much as it does about Cuil, a Google for some of us.
Cuil does not seem to have just lost the second ‘l’ in the gaelic word for wisdom (Cuill). They seemed to have lost some wisdom. Bloated claims on indexed page size and relevancy, new age page ranking algorithms. three column displays to confuse us all, privacy protections, a minimalist infrastructure and truncated brand are still not strong enough arguments to unseat Google. And Danny is right about all of that. And he does his make his case politely, almost like a seasoned trial lawyer.
But I think he did miss the one big ‘Gorilla in the room’, ‘naked emperor’ issue. And that is Search is no longer a business model unto itself. The world has moved on and consumers have voted with their clicks.
With its pedigreed exec team and millions in backing, Cuil would serve itself well by looking for a better brand name. Having settled on a better one, i would recommend they stop making clones and start studying the human experience that search is a part of. Somewhere in there, staring us all in the face, is the secret to what lies beyond search.
Any takers?
Add comment July 28, 2008
Murabba, Roshan Seth and the art of Google Search in Hindi…
History: Roshan Seth and Murabba
It was years ago perhaps – 1983 or 84 when I went with the IITK contingent to the Lady Shri Ram festival in Delhi. Roshan Seth was the guest of honor/keynote speaker. The actor had by then acquired some notoriety after his role as Nehru in the movie Gandhi by Attenborough.
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Roshan Seth – Nehru 2.0 |
In any case, true to Nehru’s uppity image, he played the snooty ‘convent educated’ anglophile by giving a perfectly accented speech. He then proceeded to go down the agenda and said something to the effect… “I know what English JAM* is but what is Hindi JAM?”.
*JAM as we all know stands for Jest-A-Minute, and Mr. Seth’s question seemed not so much about getting an answer as much as making a statement. There was a long awkward silence in the auditorium when all the ‘cats’ (as the city boys were undeservedly known as) and the ‘bihari’s (as the country boys were undeservedly known as) squirmed uncomfortably.
And then right next to me was Vach (for Vachaspati) who shot his hand in the air and yelled out “Murabba! Hindi JAM is known as Murabba!”. The whole auditorium burst into laughter and a sheepish Sheth slunk off the stage.
That brings me to what this post was really meant to be about – which was searching for Jam and Murabba in Google’s Hind Search. Read on.
Google ki khoj mein (or is it Google ki godh mein?):
Note: This is my unofficial rendering of the Google logo in Hindi. To know how I did it, mail me. Was pretty cool. Also notice the small superscript which is the phonetic equivalent for T and M for trademark.
Anyway I did get a chance to give Google’s Hindi language search engine a test drive today. It was pretty awesome. Very well put together, fast, anticipatory and the results were very comprehensive.
The first two words I typed in English were jam and murabba! Worked great except they had not integrated their awesome translation tools into this.
It accepted inputs in Hindi and in English. When the search keywords were obviously English it offered no prompts.
When I tried inputting anything in English that phonetically sounded Hinglish or when the names were obviously Indian it prompted me with a variety of choices in Devanagari drop down. I typed in the word Shah and it offered शऱुख खान (Shah Rukh Khan as an option).
Nice job so far. But areas they could improve upon (if u know guys in Google India – do pass this on).
| no. | feedback |
| 1 | If the search keywords are typed in English and are clearly English words – then offer closest Hindi translations with their English meaning. |
| 2 | Make all links on top left bi-lingual (for example do the hinglish on Gmail). |
| 3 | Get an on-screen drop down keyboard for someone to type in words in Devanagari. Or better yet acquire http://www.gate2home.com. Nice app fully integrated with a tie into Google Search. |
| 4 | U have no ads on even the best of keywords. Looks pretty bare. At least stick some public service ads on family planning and Aids awareness. |
| 5 | Give your India Ad sales team a k**k in the pants and ask them to think out of box in how to get the market bootstrapped. Awareness, marketing and man-in-loop solutions can all help jump start the Hindi Long Tail. |
| 6 | Consider a Hindi Logo… |
Guruji did a better job in having an on-screen Hindi keyboard. But getting to know they had local language search itself was hard – its hidden away on the top right like a guilty secret. They had pretty good prompting of phonetically similar words in Hindi – so assisting someone who knew hinglish but still did not integrate a translator prompting word meaningful word choices. Shah Rukh Khan ended up being spelt wrong in Hindi. And just like Google – they had no ads and their logo remained firmly rooted in English.
And of course I could never end up spelling Murabba properly on the keyboard! See, there seemed to be no easy way to type the half ‘b’ sound in Hindi, using their on screen keyboard.
Seems like after all these years we still have bridged the gap between English Jam, Hindi Jam and Murabba. Any takers?
Add comment July 28, 2008









