30 Jul 2008

Irishman launches Cuil but will it scare Google?

Cuil (previously known as Cuill) has launched its brand new search engine today after receiving €25m in funding back in April.

The California-based start-up is led by Irishman, Tom Costello, a computing graduate of Trinity College Dublin and his wife Anna Patterson, the president of Cuil and former Google employee.

Cuil’s new search engine is the first product to be seriously touted as representing plausible competition to Google.

Both Ask.com and Windows Live search received significant makeovers in the recent past in terms of both the look and the search technology behind the scenes but there has been no notable new rivals to the established reigning king of search, Google.

While the Jimmy Wales-backed Wikia Search was launched earlier this year, even the Wikipedia co-founder admitted it was in no way, shape or form a threat to Google.

Cuil sets itself apart from the traditional search engine by not just searching for keywords on a page it is about to index – it also scans the rest of the page’s text for more context and relevance. The example the company gave on the official site is the word ‘jaguar’ – it said Cuil will return more relevant results for the user based on determining from the main text whether the jaguar in question is the cat, car or operating system.

“The web continues to grow at a fantastic rate and other search engines are unable to keep up with it,” said Tom Costello, CEO and co-founder of Cuil.

“Our significant breakthroughs in search technology have enabled us to index much more of the internet, placing nearly the entire web at the fingertips of every user.

In addition, Cuil presents searchers with content-based results, not just popular ones, providing different and more insightful answers that illustrate the vastness and the variety of the web.”

Cuil displays its search results with an accompanying picture that it chooses as relevant to the page based on an algorithmic process. However, when searching for siliconrepublic.com, some of the results showed pictures bearing no relevance.

While Cuil says it is the world’s biggest search engine, only time will tell if it can compete with Google – a difficult task considering those playing second fiddle to Google –Yahoo! and Microsoft – come far, far behind in terms of second and third most popular.

Cuil, the company said, is the old Irish word for ‘knowledge’. It is also the modern Irish word for ‘corner’, so here’s hoping Cuil can carve out its own successful niche or corner of the web.

Thanks to SiliconRepublic :)

23 Jul 2008

MCITP here I come!

This morning I sat 70-624 (Deploying and Maintaining Windows Vista Client and 2007 Microsoft Office System Desktops) Vista exam, and passed with 100%. The associated MCTS is Business Desktop Deployment. Yippee :)


Here is a scan of the result sheet...

70-620 is booked for next week - watch this space!

2 Jul 2008

Mozilla set a Guinness World Record

Well done to Mozilla for making their latest version of Firefox (3.0) a record breaker. The Guinness World Record was for the largest number (8,002,530) of software downloads in 24 hours!

Firefox 3

Here's the press release:

Mozilla Sets New Guinness World Record with Firefox 3 Downloads

Massive grassroots community effort behind world record for most software downloads in 24 hours

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. – July 2, 2008 – Mozilla today announced it set a new Guinness World Record for the largest number of software downloads in 24 hours. The record-setting 8,002,530 downloads coincided with the launch of Firefox® 3, Mozilla’s major update to its popular and acclaimed free, open source Web browser.

Mozilla enthusiasts worldwide drove more than 1.7 million pledges to download Firefox 3 on Download Day, hosted regional download “fests,” and added Download Day buttons to their sites, resulting in more than 40 million impressions. The global Mozilla community has been celebrating the historic goal of establishing a Guinness World Record with parties in more than 25 countries, including a 24-hour long download fest celebration called Camp Firefox at Mozilla’s Mountain View headquarters.

“The enthusiasm and creativity of Firefox fans was instrumental in achieving this record,” said Paul Kim, VP of Marketing at Mozilla. “Our community members came together and not only spread the word, but also took the initiative to help mobilize millions of people to demonstrate their belief that Firefox gives people the best possible online experience.”

“As the arbiter and recorder of the world’s amazing facts, Guinness World Records is pleased to add Mozilla’s achievement to our archives,” said Gareth Deaves, Records Manager for Guinness World Records. “Mobilizing over 8 million internet users within 24 hours is an extremely impressive accomplishment and we would like to congratulate the Mozilla community for their hard work and dedication.”

How to stop Windows XP time from drifting out of sync!

The computer clock will gradually get out of line with reality since it's not a very accurate beast. Some software can check the time with an outside source on the network or Internet and regularly adjust your computer by a few seconds so it never drifts so far off that you would notice.

If your computer is a part of a domain (not possible in Home Edition) you do not need to do anything. The computer will automatically update it's time by querying the PDC Emulator (usually the first DC n the domain).

If you still want to adjust your clock (you shouldn't because it might have adverse effects on some of your network connections and management tools) you can run the following command:

(%logonserver% can be used as a variable, but you can specify a DC name if you want).

If you're not a part of a domain and still want to update your clock automatically, you can right click the clock found on the tray area on the lower right of your screen and choose "adjust time/date".

Click on the Internet Time tab, then select the "Automatically synchronize with an Internet time server" checkbox.

1 Jul 2008

Powerset natural-language search

Microsoft have just acquired Powerset, a natural-language search startup from San Francisco. If you're a fan of Wikipedia (which I am), then I suggest you give Powerset a try!



Powerset’s goal is to change the way people interact with technology by enabling computers to understand our language. While this is a difficult challenge, we believe that now is the right time to begin the journey. Powerset is first applying its natural language processing to search, aiming to improve the way we find information by unlocking the meaning encoded in ordinary human language
...more here

I recommend watching the embedded video to see how good this really is.


Powerset Demo Video from officialpowerset on Vimeo.

Microsoft Midori - the post Windows OS?

There are whispers out there of a new OS in deveopments which could potentially replace the all concurring Windows. I find the thought of this very-very exciting. Shelving Windows in favor of a more Cloud-friendly OS could be just what Microsoft needs to combat the rise of Google. With release a potential 5 or 6 years away, I still see Microsoft loosing significant ground in the home computing market - big business will be very different. There is still time!



Although highly insignificant - Midori is the name of a light-weight, cross-platform Web browser written in C with GTK+ and uses the WebKit rendering engine, much like Safari from Apple. It is currently in very early development.

Thanks Gizmodo