- 01 Apr 2008, 03:29
#1083518
Dakle, Google je uspeo da razvije sistem za pretragu sutrašnjeg sadržaja Interneta, koristeći njihove (očigledno) svemoguće algoritme...
Zaboravite na gospođu (ex-vidovitu) Zorku... tu je gDay™ - pretraga Interneta sutrašnjice.
Vaši utisci
?
Press release:
Looking ahead: Google announces technology that searches tomorrow's web, today
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1 April 2008 - Google Australia today announced the launch of gDay™, a new beta search technology that will search web pages 24 hours before they are created.
View the gDay™ page for more information, user testimonials and Q+A.
gDay was developed in Google's Sydney engineering centre and can accurately predict future events and internet content. It does this by using machine learning and artificial intelligence techniques from a system called MATE™ (Machine Automated Temporal Extrapolation).
Using Google's index of historic, cached web content and a mashup of numerous factors including recurrence plots and fuzzy measure analysis, gDay creates a sophisticated model of what the internet will look like 24 hours from now - including share price movements, sports results and news events. Plus, using language regression analysis, Google can even predict the actual wording of tomorrow's blogs and newspaper columns.
Then, to rank these future webpages in order of relevance, gDay uses a statistical extrapolation of a page's PageRank, called SageRank.
Only Australian websites are included in the beta.
“Google's Australian engineers have a history of major technological innovations, from Google Maps™ to Mapplets™ to Traffic for Google Maps. Giving humankind the ability to see 24 hours into the future is just a natural progression – of sorts,” said Alan Noble, Head of Engineering for Google Australia & New Zealand.
“Users – particularly those who like a casual flutter – will really benefit from this feature. Maybe you want to see tomorrow's rugby scores. Maybe you want to see tomorrow's lotto numbers. Maybe this is the greatest product since sliced bread."
See today's post on the Google Australia blog
gDay, MATE, SageRank, PageRank, Google Maps and Google Mapplets are trademarks of Google Inc.
Zaboravite na gospođu (ex-vidovitu) Zorku... tu je gDay™ - pretraga Interneta sutrašnjice.
Vaši utisci

Press release:
Looking ahead: Google announces technology that searches tomorrow's web, today
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA, 1 April 2008 - Google Australia today announced the launch of gDay™, a new beta search technology that will search web pages 24 hours before they are created.
View the gDay™ page for more information, user testimonials and Q+A.
gDay was developed in Google's Sydney engineering centre and can accurately predict future events and internet content. It does this by using machine learning and artificial intelligence techniques from a system called MATE™ (Machine Automated Temporal Extrapolation).
Using Google's index of historic, cached web content and a mashup of numerous factors including recurrence plots and fuzzy measure analysis, gDay creates a sophisticated model of what the internet will look like 24 hours from now - including share price movements, sports results and news events. Plus, using language regression analysis, Google can even predict the actual wording of tomorrow's blogs and newspaper columns.
Then, to rank these future webpages in order of relevance, gDay uses a statistical extrapolation of a page's PageRank, called SageRank.
Only Australian websites are included in the beta.
“Google's Australian engineers have a history of major technological innovations, from Google Maps™ to Mapplets™ to Traffic for Google Maps. Giving humankind the ability to see 24 hours into the future is just a natural progression – of sorts,” said Alan Noble, Head of Engineering for Google Australia & New Zealand.
“Users – particularly those who like a casual flutter – will really benefit from this feature. Maybe you want to see tomorrow's rugby scores. Maybe you want to see tomorrow's lotto numbers. Maybe this is the greatest product since sliced bread."
See today's post on the Google Australia blog
gDay, MATE, SageRank, PageRank, Google Maps and Google Mapplets are trademarks of Google Inc.