I want to share this post I first wrote for the Darwin Awareness Engine blog last week to see what you think and what questions you might have. Google has been the dominant
web search engine for years now for good reason. It is the default opening
screen on my laptop and I use it multiple times every day. It brought the
innovative concept of Page Rank to gauge popularity and provide us with useful,
quality content. The Darwin
Awareness Engine™ brings a different approach through its use of Chaos
Theory and the concept of correlated content. I am certainly not attempting to
equate these innovations but I want to attempt to better explain what the
Darwin Awareness Engine does by comparing it to the well-known Google Web
Search. First, let’s review what Google does.
You put a search term or
phrase into Google. It brings back a list order by its algorithm based on
reputation (link popularity), relevance (based on content), and currency. Google decides what is important for
you to see. Lately Google has started to try to better understand what you do
to bring more focused and personalized results. However, they are still the
“decider” and the list is one dimensional with the recent addition of some
social media sidebars.
This works very well but it
can be subject to spammers who attempt to manipulate the dimensions of
reputation and relevance through nefarious means. There has been some concern of the impact on legit content
(see ReadWriteWeb on Content Farms: Why Media, Blogs & Google Should Be Worried and Tech
Crunch on The End Of Hand
Crafted Content). There are also the
more honest search engine optimization people (SEO) who are simply trying to
get the best returns for their honest content. For example, I help companies with their blogs and one of
the services I offer is SEO for legit content.
Applying SEO to Google can
lead to some interesting results. A Google search on - beach bars Sardinia –
finds a blog post on beach bars in Sardinia I did based on a vacation trip as number one out of over 250k
results. As far as I know it has held that position for the past four years.
Now granted I did original field research with a friend and it is part of a
series, Rating the Beaches of Italy, which also remains
number one in Google (out of 800k) for that term. While my content is legit, I
have to admit that I am far from the best expert on Italian beaches and their
bars. The listing on Google is
more the result of using good SEO to get there and the fact that it is a niche
topic.
Google is trying to determine the proper order of
the universe of content. It does a great job but it is up against an impossible
task according to Chaos Theory. It will not achieve perfection and it will have
to try to stay ahead of spammers and coexist with legit SEO along the way.
Darwin’s Awareness Engine does not attempt this task. It accepts there is no
order in the universe of content and let’s you be the decider. It just tries to
expose you to the different dimensions and themes in your topics of interest.
It tries to make you aware of what is going on so you see trends and find
things you were not aware of.
The Darwin Awareness Engine uses the concept of
attractors (based on Edward Lornez’s attractor concept – see math model in illustration w via Wikipedai)
to let the content order itself through correlations of related themes that
emerge. Instead of a list ordered by Google you get a Scan Cloud™ that displays the content
related to your chosen topic that is organized by the themes that have emerged
that correlate with your content.
Under each theme is a set of related content and you can drill down to
this content. You can decide which themes to explore. You can also decide
whether you want to see the results form informal (blogs, etc.) or formal
content sources (mainstream news sites, etc.).
If you are interested in climate change you see
content organized under such themes as - threats - or - hoax - depending on
your view and, of course, see what the other side is saying. You can also see
what the English speaking press is saying about the Copenhagen conference or
what the French speaking press is sawing by looking under the English or French
spelling of the term Copenhagen.
You can see content emerging in real time that is
not order by popularity links and does not have to wait for the links to be
created for it to emerge in search results. This allows for unanticipated results that might be buried
in the back pages of a Google search for days, if not forever. For example,
when looking at content related to the prime minister of Quebec we found
coverage of the current initiatives in electrical service to the Canadian Maritime
provinces. This was expected. We also found some unexpected emerging concern by
the oil companies over this move as the theme – oil – appeared in the Scan
Cloud. This was not expected.
The Darwin Awareness Engine is not designed to
replace Google or other search engines. These tools are largely designed to
help you find what you know you are looking for. With many search engines you
can narrow this focus with filters but these are filters that you select. In
contrast, the Darwin Awareness Engine is designed to provide an alternative way
of letting you discoverer what is happening in your areas of interested, even
the unexpected. Here is more.
This information is very relevant to my study right now. Thanks a lot
Posted by: jake | January 22, 2010 at 11:08 AM