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Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Calacanis' Project X Revealed: Mahalo, a Human Search Engine

I'm a big believer in the notion that computers can't yet do everything that humans can. No matter how comprehensive a job that a programmer does, nobody has yet replicated all of the judgment of people -- for better or worse.  As good as Google is, there are still results that don't make sense.  (For a time, one of my blog posts was the #1 result for "teacher tenure" for instance, which I'm fairly certain is not what someone was looking for.)

So the concept behind Jason Calacanis' much talked about "Project X" is promising:

Mahalo is the world's first human-powered search engine powered by an enthusiastic and energetic group of Guides. Our Guides spend their days searching, filtering out spam, and hand-crafting the best search results possible. If they haven't yet built a search result, you can request that search result. You can also suggest links for any of our search results.

It feels sort of like Google meets Wikipedia

It could prove to be a valuable resource.  Right now, however, just hours after it was unveiled, it feels thin to me.  I'm not talking about the number of searches that have been customized -- I expect that it will take time to get that to a broad level.

I guess what I mean by "thin" is that the results pages don't feel especially robust.  They do a decent job of providing the obvious links, but I'd love to see the results page act more as a portal for more information -- perhaps a "dashboard" of information for the search term.

I should also note that this is likely to work best when you are searching for a concrete topic, company, product, person, etc.  For instance, there is a "Star Wars" page but if you type in "Star Wars AND Lucas" you get zilch from Mahalo.

If it doesn't evolve significantly from its present form, though, I'm not certain that Wikipedia isn't actually more helpful since it provides the nuts and bolts on one page, whereas Mahalo just provides links to the real info.  Google and the other generic search engines are all pretty good at the basics.  They tend to start having difficulty with more complex searches.  And that's where I'd love to see Mahalo or some similar engine come through with tailored results.

Nevertheless, glad to see this project has come to life, and I'll be watching to see how it evolves.

Read more about Mahalo: TechCrunchWSJ, Danny Sullivan and Mashable.

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Topix.net Rebrands & Turns to Human Editors

Topix: Local News for the WorldPaidContent's Rafat Ali has the scoop on the future of Topix, the local news aggregator and search site owned by several competing newspaper companies.  Apparently, as they rebrand from Topix.net to Topix.com, they will also be changing the focus of their site from software-selected content to human editors and citizen journalism.

The homepage will become a hub of citizen-generated news (more Netscape.com-like in implementation than Digg), with easy-to-use tools for users to blog/vote stories onto the main and section pages.

Much like before, the site’s focus is on zip-cod based local news. Anyone can now submit local news for any U.S. zip code through the site or through mobiles. Participants can also become editors of the local pages.

I find the new focus fascinating because I have believed for some time that as good as computers are, they can't replace editorial judgment entirely.  Moreover, I believe that human review can remove some of the antiseptic feel of completely computer generated sites.

It will be interesting to see the results of the change, though I do wonder about whether the fact that they are making two major changes simultaneously will make it harder to determine the success of either.  Rick Skentra is one of the smarter thinkers in the information aggregation space, though, so I wouldn't bet against their ability to pull this one off.

UPDATE: Rick has now posted a detailed explanation.  Worth a read.

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What Is Pardon the Disruption?

  • As founder & CEO of CustomScoop, I have a special interest in the intersection of technology and PR/marketing. In addition, as a serial entrepreneur and angel investor, I cover those topics, as well as an occasional post on the gadgets I love.