An alpha version of
Mahalo,
which is Hawaiian for 'thank you', was launched with the internet's 4,000 most
popular search terms completed.
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The Santa Monica-based company hopes to reach 10,000 search terms by the end
of the year, at which point it will enter beta and launch shortly afterwards.
"We are in month five of a five-year project, but we wanted to get some
real-world feedback so we are launching it early here at D Conference," said
Jason McCabe Calacanis, co-founder of Weblogs Inc.
The site is focused on the top English-language search terms in verticals
such as travel, products, news, entertainment, sports, food and health.
"Google's mission is to index the world's information; our mission is to
curate that wonderful index," explained Calacanis.
"It is my belief that humans can play a significant role in the development
of search results, and we are going to figure out exactly what that role is over
the next couple of years. I am looking forward to hearing what people think of
the alpha."
However, some commentators are sceptical about the potential accuracy of the
hand-crafted results.
Dominic Trigg, vice president at
InfoSpace
Europe, said: "Calacanis has the right idea in handing control of search
back to the people and not in the hands of huge conglomerates.
"But his method will allow the same inaccuracies that Wiki sites have allowed
to creep in. The only way to effectively remove subjectivity and manipulation is
to verify information and sources.
"Very few people have the time, or the inclination, to conduct the same
search across multiple search engines, which is why we are seeing the rise of
meta-search engines."
If Mahalo does not yet have a result created for a search term, it offers
results from Google, as well as the ability to receive an alert when Mahalo has
completed the result.
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