Updated 6 January 2007
There has been extensive coverage of Wikia Inc.'s project to develop a "new kind of search engine, which relies on human intelligence to do what algorithms cannot". (Wikia Inc. is a for-profit company co-founded by Jimmy Wales, that lives alongside, but is discrete from, Wikipedia.) This updatable list of links to some of the stories, annotated by Wikia Inc., provides the flavour, and this 23 December 2006 statement by Jimmy Wales summarise the Search Wikia vision. You can also join a mailing list (busy, with plenty of high level contributions, but there is a digest option) about the project, from where you can find, for example, this more detailed and sceptical assessment of the prospects for the project, by Danny Sullivan, or this lucid 3 January 2007 piece by Jimmy Wales summarising his views on how the project might take shape. Currently (6/1/2007) there is interest in an Open Source "distributed peer-to-peer web-indexing application" called Yacy. If I were Google, Yahoo, or Microsoft, would I be worried? Not yet. But I think people who use search for primarily narrow intellectual pursuits rather than in areas where there is a lot of active commerce, are maybe unaware of the extent to which spam and porn on the web damage the value of conventionally obtained search results. Search Wikia would, amongst other things, aim to solve this problem.
See also this 1 February 2007 link to, and extract from a New Scientist interview with Jimmy Wales.
Learning Light, Sheffield - Jane Hart and Vaughan Waller move on
Vaughan Waller and Jane Hart
I've reported occasionally about Learning Light, a publicly funded not-for-profit company in Sheffield that describes itself as "a centre of excellence in the use of learning technologies (e-Learning) in the workplace and organisational learning best practice"*. Last year, Learning Light recruited Jane Hart (previously Jane Knight) as its Head of Research Services, and acquired Jane's e-learning centre web site. Later in the year, Vaughan Waller joined Learning Light as Head of Membership Services. Until recently, Vaughan was Chair of the UK e-learning network, where Fortnightly Mailing is syndicated. Jane and Vaughan have now left Learning Light and set up a consultancy called WallerHart - Learning Architects.
* Disclosure. PA Consulting had the contract for getting Learning Light established, procuring a web site for it, and commissioning some research reports for Learning Light to subsequently provide to users of its services. I wrote two of these with David Jennings and David Kay, Camilla Umar, and Liz Wallis of Sero Ltd.
Posted on 08/01/2007 in News and comment | Permalink | Comments (0)
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