Cuil: The Latest, Baddest AntiGoogle Looks Like A Magazine

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MICHAEL LIEDTKE | July 28, 2008 06:45 PM EST | AP

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SAN FRANCISCO — Anna Patterson's last Internet search engine was so impressive that industry leader Google Inc. bought the technology in 2004 to upgrade its own system.

She believes her latest invention is even more valuable _ only this time it's not for sale.

Patterson instead intends to upstage Google, which she quit in 2006 to develop a more comprehensive and efficient way to scour the Internet.

The end result is Cuil, pronounced "cool." Backed by $33 million in venture capital, the search engine plans to begin processing requests for the first time Monday.

Cuil had kept a low profile while Patterson, her husband, Tom Costello, and two other former Google engineers _ Russell Power and Louis Monier _ searched for better ways to search.

Now, it's boasting time.

For starters, Cuil's search index spans 120 billion Web pages.

Patterson believes that's at least three times the size of Google's index, although there is no way to know for certain. Google stopped publicly quantifying its index's breadth nearly three years ago when the catalog spanned 8.2 billion Web pages.

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Cuil won't divulge the formula it has developed to cover a wider swath of the Web with far fewer computers than Google. And Google isn't ceding the point: Spokeswoman Katie Watson said her company still believes its index is the largest.

After getting inquiries about Cuil, Google asserted on its blog Friday that it regularly scans through 1 trillion unique Web links. But Google said it doesn't index them all because they either point to similar content or would diminish the quality of its search results in some other way. The posting didn't quantify the size of Google's index.

A search index's scope is important because information, pictures and content can't be found unless they're stored in a database. But Cuil believes it will outshine Google in several other ways, including its method for identifying and displaying pertinent results.

Rather than trying to mimic Google's method of ranking the quantity and quality of links to Web sites, Patterson says Cuil's technology drills into the actual content of a page. And Cuil's results will be presented in a more magazine-like format instead of just a vertical stack of Web links. Cuil's results are displayed with more photos spread horizontally across the page and include sidebars that can be clicked on to learn more about topics related to the original search request.

Finally, Cuil is hoping to attract traffic by promising not to retain information about its users' search histories or surfing patterns _ something that Google does, much to the consternation of privacy watchdogs.

After making so many bold promises, Cuil got off to a rocky start Monday as its computers were overwhelmed by curious Web surfers. As of late Monday afternoon, even simple search requests were still being greeted with this message: "No results because of high load."

Cuil is just the latest in a long line of Google challengers.

The list includes swaggering startups like Teoma (whose technology became the backbone of Ask.com), Vivisimo, Snap, Mahalo and, most recently, Powerset, which was acquired by Microsoft Corp. this month.

Even after investing hundreds of millions of dollars on search, both Microsoft and Yahoo Inc. have been losing ground to Google. Through May, Google held a 62 percent share of the U.S. search market followed by Yahoo at 21 percent and Microsoft at 8.5 percent, according to comScore Inc.

Google has become so synonymous with Internet search that it may no longer matter how good Cuil or any other challenger is, said Gartner Inc. analyst Allen Weiner.

"Search has become as much about branding as anything else," Weiner said. "I doubt (Cuil) will be keeping anyone at Google awake at night."

Google welcomed Cuil to the fray with its usual mantra about its rivals. "Having great competitors is a huge benefit to us and everyone in the search space," Watson said. "It makes us all work harder, and at the end of the day our users benefit from that."

But this will be the first time that Google has battled a general-purpose search engine created by its own alumni. It probably won't be the last time, given that Google now has nearly 20,000 employees.

Patterson joined Google in 2004 after she built and sold Recall, a search index that probed old Web sites for the Internet Archive. She and Power worked on the same team at Google.

Although he also worked for Google for a short time, Monier is best known as the former chief technology officer of AltaVista, which was considered the best search engine before Google came along in 1998. Monier also helped build the search engine on eBay's online auction site.

The trio of former Googlers are teaming up with Patterson's husband, Costello, who built a once-promising search engine called Xift in the late 1990s. He later joined IBM Corp., where he worked on an "analytic engine" called WebFountain.

Costello's Irish heritage inspired Cuil's odd name. It was derived from a character named Finn McCuill in Celtic folklore.

Patterson enjoyed her time at Google, but became disenchanted with the company's approach to search. "Google has looked pretty much the same for 10 years now," she said, "and I can guarantee it will look the same a year from now."

SAN FRANCISCO — Anna Patterson's last Internet search engine was so impressive that industry leader Google Inc. bought the technology in 2004 to upgrade its own system. She believes her latest ...
SAN FRANCISCO — Anna Patterson's last Internet search engine was so impressive that industry leader Google Inc. bought the technology in 2004 to upgrade its own system. She believes her latest ...
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- jasjohn128 I'm a Fan of jasjohn128 26 fans permalink
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Cuil's fine. I've been using it off and on throughout the day and don't have any complaints. It looks good, it's pretty fast, has returned some surprisingly good results on obscure tech & academic topics, and frankly I don't think the owners and developers are gonna run home and cry tonight because it hasn't, in a day, met the expectations of ... who, really?

I suppose some of you whiners will call tomorrow and ask for your money back, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 PM on 07/29/2008
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The developers and backers ought to be very worried. I googled 'cuil' . The results are uniformly negative. Not a great way to start.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 07/29/2008

Crashed and burned so many times on it's first day..not cuil,
Disjointed search results......not cuil
Who the hell is that photo next to my web page listing, cuz it ain't me....not cuil

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:01 PM on 07/29/2008

I feel sorry for those bums who invested 33 million. Ouch. You know, I'd probably throw in a grand or two and hope that ten years from cuil and google were the top dogs and could make a few hundred grand on my investment. But that's it. $33 million, maybe it will catch on....I just don't think they have a catchy enough name......so you tell someone "go to "cool" dot com. Well, when they go to "cool" dot com they won't end up there. Losers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 07/29/2008
- tjntn I'm a Fan of tjntn 5 fans permalink
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Tried it yesterday and got the "load" error message. Tried it today and got it to work - sort of. I tried a news item - "unitarian church shooter knoxville" - no hits. Google gives about 46,500. Ok so maybe its just poor at news. I tried "Frazier Seattle Niles" (hey, I liked that show). I got a lot of hits (over 73,000) but two of the six hits on the first page had absolutely nothing to do with the TV program (or any one thing that was related to all three keywords). All 10 hits on Google's first page were about the TV show or the actors in it.

CUIL isn't going to fly without major improvements. I'll stick with Google.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:08 PM on 07/29/2008

Well, one simple test -- could it deal with a mispelling (two letters reversed)? It could not.

Back to Google. And frankly, I don't care that it looks the same as it did ten years ago. It's a clean, fast-loading, efficient, easy to read page, and that's all I want.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 PM on 07/29/2008
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I wish we could get Google quality without the censorship.

(What, you didn't know that Google censors content in the US? Perhaps not in the legal sense, but they do write their algorhithms so that specific sites - often sites exposing US/Israeli government wrongdoing - will not show up in their search results.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 AM on 07/29/2008
- cBc I'm a Fan of cBc permalink

I dig the look of it, but not the results. Many repeats of same listing , many useless ones (to me) from other countries, and no real preferences to allow filtering. Not Ready For Prime Time by a long shot

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 AM on 07/29/2008

Be careful. I wasn't on there five minutes and Avast stopped a trojan. I'm not going back.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 AM on 07/29/2008
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Cuil has a rather bizarre look to it. Very slick and mystifying. I was not impressed and I'm an elderly computer nerd.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 AM on 07/29/2008
- RickO I'm a Fan of RickO 63 fans permalink
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Black Background - trying to look dark and hip but not a good background color unless you're a metal band. C-

Weird name - not weird like Google or Yahoo, but weird like you have to explain how to pronounce it. F

Trying to displace Google - but with none of the other features that make google useful (gmail. google apps, google earth, google maps, iGoogle, the little guitar chord speller gadget. Another search engine. Big deal. D

Getting a story on HuffPost. - Okay, A. But it has a shelf life measure in minutes.

Good luck with all that and enjoy the VC while you have it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:37 AM on 07/29/2008
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Interesting format but I could find no way to limit or refine results. A search of one daughter's name who is a scientist and athlete brings up her references (some with extraneous photos that don't relate) But it also brings up other people with the same last name including an "actress" with some exotic poses.

Not ready for prime time in my view.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:43 AM on 07/29/2008
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This is a 33 million DOA abortion. Reminds me of the startup my daughter worked on.

Introduced too early... pathetic preferences, advanced search where?, crummy format... exactly why would I ever come back and visit again to see the improvements? More specifically why didn't cuil launch the improved website to begin with?

And, what's with cuil? Incredibly out of touch. How about something like findit.comm'. Jeezuz. This site is so cool it is already in the morgue deep freeze.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:27 AM on 07/29/2008
- LeBelAge I'm a Fan of LeBelAge 13 fans permalink

A 33 million DOA abortion? WTF? Is that some sort of weird new conservative slang term?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:25 AM on 07/29/2008
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No, it means that after spending 33 million dollars (as indicated in the article) they've got nothing to show except a dead on arrival product, aborted before it has any chance to make a splash... all because they delivered the product prematurely. Are you making the connection now?

Cheers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:47 AM on 07/29/2008
- nellie I'm a Fan of nellie 502 fans permalink
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I tried two searches I often do with Google: native California plants and the lyrics to a Brazilian popular song (this time "Eu vim da Bahia"). All I can say is Cuil has a lot of work to do.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 AM on 07/29/2008
- Kevbo68 I'm a Fan of Kevbo68 11 fans permalink
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Cuilbating.

Nah. Just doesn't have the same ring to it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 AM on 07/29/2008

I tried Cuil and it sucks. In Google. my website, which is the largest on its subject on the internet and which is completely ad free, comes up fourth on and fifth on the first page under different search terms. With Cuil, a bunch of spam sites show up in the results and my site isn't to be found at all under one of the two common search terms for it. Plus it is criminally slow.

The other thing is that with all the graphics it shows in the results, Cuil is going to clog up computers with more temporary files as opposed to the spartan look of Google. I also wonder if it is usable in Firefox, though I also use a widget that blocks web page scripts (including adware such as Doubleclick, which is all over HuffPo) so that I can choose which ones get through. So Cuil could also be adware's best friend. And that ain't good froma sexurity standpoint. It seems to me that it is gong to be easy to place malware on Cuil users' computers.

Therefore, Cuil is no threat to Google right now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 AM on 07/29/2008
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