May 17, 2009 Sunday
Updated

May 17, 2009
New Web tool starts test run

WASHINGTON - GOOGLE rules the roost when it comes to Internet search and has easily brushed aside efforts by Yahoo!, Microsoft and others to knock it off its perch.

While not a traditional Web search engine, a challenger to Google emerged on Friday - WolframAlpha, named after the man behind the venture, British-born computer scientist and inventor Stephen Wolfram.

Mr Wolfram, who earned a PhD in theoretical physics from Caltech at the age of 20, is careful not to call his latest invention a search engine, describing it instead as a 'computational knowledge engine.'

Unlike Google, which takes a query and uses algorithms to scour the Web and return a series of links to relevant websites, WolframAlpha.com takes a query and crunches through its databases to return answers.

'The basic idea of WolframAlpha is very simple,' the 49-year-old Wolfram said in an online presentation of his venture, which went live for a test run on Friday.

'You type your input, your question and WolframAlpha produces a result.'

WolframAlpha had been scheduled to kick off at 8.00pm on Friday (0000 GMT Saturday, 8am Singapore time) but was late out of the gate because of what was described on the company blog as 'some kinks.' 'We got off to a late start, but so far, so good,' it said.

Danny Sullivan, editor-in-chief of SearchEngineLand.com, said in a telephone interview with AFP that WolframAlpha is a 'really interesting tool.'

'I try to describe it as a 'fact search engine' to help people understand the degree that it's different from Google,' he said. 'Google tends to point to stuff while (WolframAlpha) actually have some answers.' -- AFP

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