HotBot Searches for a Direct Hit.
Published:
26 February 1999 y., Friday
HotBot users should find that search results as of Monday are more accurate, thanks to technology from startup Direct Hit Technologies. Called the Direct Hit Popularity Engine, the technology tracks keyword searches and analyzes which Internet sites are most visited by users and how long surfers stay at those sites. Subsequent searches by users will then automatically list the top 10 most-frequented sites checked out by others looking for the same keyword. The tracking and analysis are anonymous so that users_ identities are not known. Hundreds of HotBot users sent e-mail praising the new search approach and those letters prompted the portal, which is run by Wired Digital, to fully incorporate the technology into the site. The deal between HotBot and Direct Hit is not exclusive and officials from both companies declined to provide financial terms. HotBot has some 5.6 million users per month and those who bother to scan to the bottom of the search list will find a notice that the technology they have just used to track down information is powered by Direct Hit. Users who decide that they want to see more than the top 10 search results will find a link taking them to the next set of 10 sites. Technology enabling that additional step will come from Inktomi, with which HotBot also has a deal. HotBot hasn_t taken the approach of other portal search sites that build their own technology, choosing instead to sign licensing agreement with other companies.
Šaltinis:
IDG News Service
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
A growing number of online companies are ambushing competitors through software that puts ads where marketers want them most--in front of customers visiting rival Web sites.
more »
Internet Explorer 6 is due to go gold next week and will be released on August 15 as a standalone program, according to software development sites.
more »
Another .NET enabled product has left the stables at Redmond.
more »
The worm has kept Josef Chamberlin busy at the keyboard, operating on only snippets of sleep, many recent days and nights.
more »
If you need to reach someone at his or her office, the phone--we now know--is not the best way to do it. E-mail is easier and more popular, as evidenced by the deluge of messages with which cube dwellers are greeted each morning as they log onto their com
more »
Over a third of European Internet users are ready to buy a car on the Internet, according to a new study.
more »
Sweden must maintain the pace of its UMTS network rollout
more »
While the Federal Bureau of Investigation and network security advocates are busy mobilizing IT managers around the country for the upcoming outbreak of the Code Red Worm, one resourceful Web site operator from the Utrecht in the Netherlands stands to mak
more »
The fast-spreading ``Code Red'' Internet worm, which disrupted U.S. government Web sites last week, is likely to start multiplying again on Tuesday and could slow down the Internet, officials said on Monday.
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »