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Powerset wants to change the
meaning of Web search…literally! The company unveiled on Monday the public availability
of its latest beta product, a search engine that delivers query results based
on meaning, rather than words, delivering valid answers and improving the search
experience, the company unveiled on Monday.
Following multiple reports that
several buyers are interested in the acquisition of Powerset, including
Microsoft, the company doesn’t want to sit and wait for that to happen. Instead,
they chose to launch a new search engine to revolutionize users’ search
experience. The question is: will they go as far as Google?
That is not something we’ll see
anytime soon, but things look promising. Powerset is taking just one little
step into the search “jungle” for now, delivering only results from Wikipedia
and Freebase, with the help of its natural language technology, based on
patents licensed from PARC.
“We have focused on making
Powerset able to read and understand documents on the web as part of a broader
vision to change the way people interact with technology, Scott Prevost,
general manager and director of product, said in a statement. “This first
product will make people’s search experiences on Wikipedia and Freebase easier,
more natural and more relevant.”
It’s a promising start for
the new Powerset Wikipedia search engine, a tool that offers a semantic search into
articles, providing a faster, more relevant way of searching and navigating the
Web, and most importantly, delivering more accurate search results.
“Our first product has only
touched the surface of what our technology will allow,” Lorenzo Thione,
co-founder and product architect, said in a statement. “Our team of
computational linguists, computer scientists and engineers, together with the
PARC technology we licensed, has allowed us to develop a solid platform to
begin to change the way people consume content.”
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