Yebol Founder Discusses the Future of Search

San Jose, CA–Yebol is a general “decision” search engine that has developed a semantic search platform. Yebol’s artificial/human-infused intelligence algorithms automatically cluster and categorize search results, web sites, pages and contents that it then presents in a visually indexed format that is designed to be more alligned with initial human intent. Yebol applies association, ranking and clustering algorithms to analyze related keywords, categories and web pages. Yebol presents as one of its goals the creation of a unique “homepage look” for every possible search term.

Yebol says it aims for absolute relevance and eliminating the need for refined, secondary, or advanced search steps, as currently required by Google, Yahoo! and others. Yebol sees the Future of Search as being very different than today’s current Pay-Per-Click dominated model. Its public beta version launched July 27, 2009, at which time Yebol announced that it covered in excess of 10 million search terms with its current knowledge-based search/organized results format. In fact, Yebol says its main distinction is its verticality (versus the horizontal nature of today’s major indexing search engines). Like all engines, Yebol uses “a recursive procedure in which an automatic problem solver seeks a solution by iteratively exploring sequences of possible alternatives.”

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Search Engine Optimization And LSI: The Truth

Many people are confused by search engine optimization and LSI. What is LSI and what has it to do with SEO? In fact nothing. That’s right – nothing. Zilch. Absolutely nothing whatsoever. So why all the fuss? Through ignorance and possible subterfuge.

LSI stands for Latent Semantic Indexing, a term that has no meaning whatsoever. There is a term called ‘latent semantic analysis’ that is the analysis of the hidden meaning of text and its explanation by means of an analysis of the way that other words in the passage are used. The code for each letter in a word is analyzed, and the word thereby identified. There are certain known juxtapositions of certain words that provide a meaning to these words, although all may not be what it seems.

For example, is I ‘bought an apple’, did I buy a computer or a piece of fruit? That only becomes apparent when the rest of the semantics of the passage is analyzed. The word semantics means the meaning of words in the way that they are used. For example: “I bought a dog lead for my German shepherd” indicates that the German shepherd is a dog, and not a Teutonic gentleman looking after sheep. It is the rest of the semantics in the text that makes it clear what the term means.

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The New Release Of Semaphore Improves “self-Service” By Delivering Semantic Search Across Organisations’ Internal And External Informat

Smartlogic have announced the release of Semaphore 3.1, the latest release of the semantic platform. The new version with its revolutionary information classification capabilities increases the ability of diverse audiences to quickly find information, promoting “self service” and cutting costs.

Smartlogic’s CEO, Jeremy Bentley, explains the concept of “self service” as provided by semantic search:

“Self service involves the 3 A’s – audience, author, and algorithm. Say the author is a world-class vet, working for the Department of Agriculture, who has written a research paper on BSE. She writes the document in ‘vet speak’ and uses the terminology she’s used to. The audience in this case is a farmer, who’s worried about mad cow disease. But when he types “mad cow” into the Department of Agriculture’s website, the research paper doesn’t show up. That’s because the website’s search algorithm is too simple and has no understanding of meaning, and looks only for the words “mad” and “cow” in the documents on its system.

We could take this a step further, by assuming the farmer then phones up the Department to ask for advice about mad cow disease. The telephone operator has a third vocabulary, and she might search for ‘MCD’ on the Department’s intranet, again, turning up nothing about ‘mad cow disease’ or ‘BSE’. She’s trained to try to help the farmer answer his query, so she puts him through to the – very expensive – vet.

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