Braj Mohan Chaturvedi

Total Business Management

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  • This Blog is dedicated to all the Management Professionals who want to challenge the set pattern, who are practical in their approach and dont think in thin air; who believe that strategy is all about making things simple; who strongly advocate the “Rule of Simple” and who believe that impossible is nothing. - Just like Katyayana. Katyayana was a disciple of Gautama Buddha. He is also known as Kaccana or Kaccayana, Mahakatyayana, Mahakaccana and in Japanese as Kasennen. Katyayana is one of the “Ten Disciples of the Buddha”. Mahakashyapa, Ananda, Shariputra, Subhuti, Purna, Mahamaudgalyayana, Katyayana, Aniruddha, Upali and Rahula. He was foremost in explaining Dharma. He was born in a brahmin family at Ujjayini (Ujjain) and received a classical Brahminical education studying the Vedas. Katyayana was a Sanskrit grammarian, mathematician and Vedic priest who lived in ancient India, around the time of the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom. He is known for two works:- The Varttika, an elaboration on Panini’s grammar. Along with the Maha-bhasya of Patanjali, this text became a core part of the vyakarana (grammar) canon. This was one of the six Vedangas, and constituted compulsory education for Brahman students in the following twelve centuries.- He also composed one of the later Sulba Sutras, a series of nine texts on the geometry of altar constructions, dealing with rectangles, right-sided triangles, rhombuses, etc. Katyayana certainly have been a man of very considerable learning but probably not interested in mathematics for its own sake, merely interested in using it for religious purposes.He wrote the Sulbasutra to provide rules for religious rites and to improve and expand on the rules which had been given by his predecessors. Katyayana would have been a priest instructing the people in the ways of conducting the religious rites he describes. Authorship: Nettipakarana, a work of grammar, and Petakopadesa, a treatise on exegetical methodology, sulvasutras dealt with geometry.

Archive for August 3rd, 2008

Factiva – search engine

Posted by Braj Chaturvedi on August 3, 2008

Factiva, a Dow Jones and Reuters company provided global content, including newswires from Dow Jones & Reuters and The Wall Street Journal. Factiva has unrivaled collection of more than 14,000 authoritative sources includes the exclusive combination of The Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times™, Dow Jones and Reuters newswires and the Associated Press, as well as Reuters Fundamentals, and D&B company profiles. It offered a personalized single content solution with multiple language interfaces from archives of 9000 news sources. Thus, an engineering team got highly technical results while a marketing outfit got consumer friendly documents.

Factiva boosts of an innovative, XML-based and Web services-enabled technology platform provides access to this rich content collection via role-specific products or through customized enterprise, group or personal solutions

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

Eurekster – search engine

Posted by Braj Chaturvedi on August 3, 2008

Eurekster is a company based in Christchurch, New Zealand, with an office located in San Francisco, California, that builds social search engines for use on websites, the search engines are called swickis.

The co-founder and chief scientist of Eurkester is Dr Grant Ryan, who is also the co-founder and chairman of Christchurch-based company, SLI Systems, who specialize in search engines that learns from the users.

Eurekster a startup launched in January 2004, specialized in providing highly personalized search results to users through its proprietary SearchParty technology. Its search engine was capable of analyzing the search behavior of its users and supplied results based on their preferences and interests.

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Vivisimo – search engine

Posted by Braj Chaturvedi on August 3, 2008

Vivísimo was founded in 2000 by a trio of computer science researchers at Carnegie Mellon University. The name was taken from the Latin root viva for “life,” with the Romance suffix – issimo indicating a superlative.

Vivísimo is a privately held enterprise search software company in Pittsburgh that develops and sells software products to improve search on the web and in enterprises. The technology that Vivísimo uses could classify search results based on clustering and metasearch technology. The company made active use of business intelligence and data mining techniques to explore its database and to bring out the veiled and hidden relationships therein.

Vivísimo technology is available to enterprise in the form of a cohesive search suite, Vivísimo Velocity, which includes the Velocity Search Engine, Velocity Clustering Engine and Velocity Content Integrator. The technology is also freely available to the public in the form of Clusty. Vivisimo , despite a negligible share in the search engine market, was able to achieve high quality results on any type of textual content with little or no customization.

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Ask Jeeves – search engine

Posted by Braj Chaturvedi on August 3, 2008

Ask.com formerly known as Ask Jeeves is a search engine was founded in 1996 by Garrett Gruener and David Warthen in Berkeley, California. Three venture capital firms, Highland Capital, Institutional Venture Partners, and The RODA Group were early investors.

The original Ask Jeeves software was implemented by Gary Chevsky from his own design. The technology provided smart search features that lent access to weather forecasts, stock quotes, news headlines, etc. The search site offered various specialized search options apart from effective categorization facilities. It also offered the options to edit, to categorize and to annotate both saved searches and search history.

Ask Jeeves had its own search engine Teoma, which is now defunct. Ask Jeeves again on February 27, 2006 disassociated the character Jeeves and renamed the firm Ask.com and later in 2007 Ask.

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Cuil – search engine

Posted by Braj Chaturvedi on August 3, 2008

Cuil is a brand new search engine created by former Google and IBM veterans. Cuil, an old Irish word for knowledge, was co-founded by Tom Costello, CEO; his wife, Anna Patterson, president and Russell Power, vice president of engineering.

Cuil may succeed where others have failed and give powerhouse Google a run for its money. Cuil has developed new architecture and algorithms and that its search engine has indexed 120 billion Web pages. Cuil’s robot Web crawler, Twicler, supports the robots.txt Crawl-delay directive robots.txt to help small sites that are bandwidth-limited. Moreover, unlike other search engines Cuil’s privacy policy states that it does not store records of users’ search activity or IP addresses.

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Yahoo– search engine

Posted by Braj Chaturvedi on August 3, 2008

Yahoo pioneered the online commercial directory concept when it first launched the service in 1994 but did not pay much attention to search services during its initial days, preferring to source it from other parties like Open Text, Alta Vista, Inktomi and eventually, Google. Yahoo realized the importance of search engines in the late 90s when they
gained prominence and started affecting e-commerce to a level that almost a third of online ad revenues were generated through them.

Yahoo started focusing on search engine business starting October 2002, by outsourcing the service to Google. The purchase of Inktomi for $235 million in late 2002 and subsequently Overture in October 2003 (for $ 1.6 billion) made Yahoo the owner of two of the largest and the oldest of the commercial paid search services. This also gave Yahoo 100 billion new users and the capability to promote its own internal search engine through innovative advertising solutions that competed with Google’s AdWords and AdSense programs.

In February 2004, Yahoo scrapped its relations with Google and began using its own search engine instead. The Cable News Network (CNN), the leading media giant, replaced Google for Yahoo in May 2004 to provide algorithmic and paid results to its users.

Posted in Internet | Leave a Comment »

Google – search engine

Posted by Braj Chaturvedi on August 3, 2008

Google was the largest and the most versatile search engine on the Internet. The search engine had a robust workload and query-processing abilities. Realizing the importance of a fast, scalable search engine, Google employed linked PCs to quickly find the results of a query. This resulted in faster response times, greater scalability and lower costs. Google used PageRank10 and Hypertext-Matching Analysis11 technologies to provide fast and accurate results. Besides, it employed special software robots called Spiders that built a list of important key words found in the millions of websites on the Internet. This process of automated listing was called web crawling.

About 95% of Google’s revenue came from advertisements, primarily through its two popular offerings, AdWord and AdSense.

Posted in Internet | Leave a Comment »

Google – search engine

Posted by mybighr on August 3, 2008

Google was the largest and the most versatile search engine on the Internet. The search engine had a robust workload and query-processing abilities. Realizing the importance of a fast, scalable search engine, Google employed linked PCs to quickly find the results of a query. This resulted in faster response times, greater scalability and lower costs. Google used PageRank10 and Hypertext-Matching Analysis11 technologies to provide fast and accurate results. Besides, it employed special software robots called Spiders that built a list of important key words found in the millions of websites on the Internet. This process of automated listing was called web crawling.

About 95% of Google’s revenue came from advertisements, primarily through its two popular offerings, AdWord and AdSense.

Posted in Brand, Internet | Leave a Comment »

Yahoo– search engine

Posted by mybighr on August 3, 2008

Yahoo pioneered the online commercial directory concept when it first launched the service in 1994 but did not pay much attention to search services during its initial days, preferring to source it from other parties like Open Text, Alta Vista, Inktomi and eventually, Google. Yahoo realized the importance of search engines in the late 90s when they
gained prominence and started affecting e-commerce to a level that almost a third of online ad revenues were generated through them.

Yahoo started focusing on search engine business starting October 2002, by outsourcing the service to Google. The purchase of Inktomi for $235 million in late 2002 and subsequently Overture in October 2003 (for $ 1.6 billion) made Yahoo the owner of two of the largest and the oldest of the commercial paid search services. This also gave Yahoo 100 billion new users and the capability to promote its own internal search engine through innovative advertising solutions that competed with Google’s AdWords and AdSense programs.

In February 2004, Yahoo scrapped its relations with Google and began using its own search engine instead. The Cable News Network (CNN), the leading media giant, replaced Google for Yahoo in May 2004 to provide algorithmic and paid results to its users.

Posted in Brand, Internet | Leave a Comment »

Cuil – search engine

Posted by mybighr on August 3, 2008

Cuil is a brand new search engine created by former Google and IBM veterans. Cuil, an old Irish word for knowledge, was co-founded by Tom Costello, CEO; his wife, Anna Patterson, president and Russell Power, vice president of engineering.

Cuil may succeed where others have failed and give powerhouse Google a run for its money. Cuil has developed new architecture and algorithms and that its search engine has indexed 120 billion Web pages. Cuil’s robot Web crawler, Twicler, supports the robots.txt Crawl-delay directive robots.txt to help small sites that are bandwidth-limited. Moreover, unlike other search engines Cuil’s privacy policy states that it does not store records of users’ search activity or IP addresses.

Posted in Brand, Internet | Leave a Comment »