Accoona – Real Potential or Hype?
NYTimes.com has a good story about Accoona.com, a new search engine that could have real potential. [NYTimes.com Article link: Searching the World, From Jersey City]
Sometimes I wonder why someone would start a search engine now, with the industry being utterly dominated by the big three – Google, Yahoo and MSN. Unless, of course, a new engine has a novel twist.
Accoona has this novel twist. They claim to have a form of artificial intelligence powering the engine -- that’s marketing speak for “lateral matching.” This means it can provide search results that do not necessarily contain the actual keyword in the query.
As an example, if you search for “Lord of the Rings” it might also provide you results on Orlando Bloom, even if the words “Lord of the Rings” do not appear on that page.
This is a very intriguing feature for a search engine. Accoona is trying to delve into user intent, or trying to determine the true meaning behind what the searcher is looking for.
While this lateral searching ability can be handy, Accoona is missing other features that have come to be considered standard to many search engines, such as image search. Currently Accoona only offers three types of searches – web, news, and business.
All the press given to Accoona in the past week reminds me of the press Teoma received when it was first launched. I even recall one headline ambitiously referring to Teoma as the “Google killer.”
But, ultimately, Teoma failed to live up to the lofty expectations. Even after being purchased by Ask, Teoma failed to garner any type of market share or general interest it had at launch. Teoma, and its technology, has now been completely absorbed by Ask.
Is Accoona a rising star or another engine getting hyped more than it should? Search engine companies are now expected to deliver on so much more than just search. They are expected to deliver news, email, instant messaging and a host of other features. Given the break-neck pace of the search industry, I can’t imagine how Acconna could catch up.
The lateral search function, or in their terms, artificial intelligence, is quite nice. Added to their Chinese roots (think: emerging markets), I expect Accoona will be purchased by one of the other, bigger, players.
