The site looks interesting from the introduction. Wolfram Alpha is an upcoming search engine developed by Stephen Wolfram that answers factual questions that you plug into it. http://www.wolframalpha.com/screencast/introducingwolframalpha.htmlhttp://www.wolframalpha.com/index.html
5/14/2009 1:33:45 AM
we'll see. this has been buzzing for the last couple weeks. remember how much hype cuil got?
5/14/2009 9:03:17 AM
Maybe it will revolutionize search like Wolfram has already revolutionized science, with his masterpiece A New Kind of Science---I'm watching the screencast, and the results look very, very cool. However, it sounds like all the data is coming from an internal Wolfram database, and the results are tailored for specific types of data (dates, weather, chemistry). I think it's been shown in the past that manually created and maintained databases are not really sustainable (early Yahoo) or expandable to be useful in real world examples [Edited on May 14, 2009 at 9:16 AM. Reason : .]
5/14/2009 9:05:04 AM
Based on the screencast it does not really seem like a replacement for Google, or even really a 'search engine' per se - their description as a knowledge engine seems apt.I don't really expect it to handle popular culture, or many of the other things a search engine is typically used for.
5/14/2009 10:23:38 AM
5/15/2009 6:51:41 AM
w/r/t A New Kind of Science.....Let's just say that after being hyped almost as much, A New Kind of Science has had about as much impact on science as the Segway has had on transportation. I don't mean to be giving Wolfram a bum rap here. All accounts point to him being a top-echelon genius, and I have never heard an ill word about Mathematica, although I've never used it myself. But my first experience with Wolfram was all the build-up to ANKoS, and I even pre-ordered it and still have a nice glossy hardback sitting on my bookshelf. However, after reading the first couple chapters, in my own simpleton little mind, my conclusion was "this is ridiculous...." And not that I didn't understand it - I "got it" pretty well, but I thought it was bullshit. He took some interesting observations, but then extrapolated them into a huge worldview and tried to reinvent hundreds of years of scientific observation with a couple digital algorithms. After the official reviews came out, I think my personal viewpoint was justified. So, I look at Wolfram Alpha with a jaded eye, one that sees Wolfram and Co. as brilliant thinkers, but maybe who's own self importance gets in the way of making practical observations and products. That being said, if WA delivers on what the screencast demonstrates, and if they weren't severely cherry-picking what kind of data and searches to show, then it does look incredible. That's assuming it's really as flexible as they claim, that the database of information is as vast as it would need to be to be useful on a daily basis, and tat the data is kept up to date, which may be the hardest part of all. Ars has a pretty good first analysishttp://arstechnica.com/web/news/2009/05/wolfram-alpha-set-for-launch-first-look-unveiled.ars
5/15/2009 12:29:47 PM
I'll wait for the Beta.
5/15/2009 5:13:26 PM
going live in 15 minutes?
5/15/2009 8:47:03 PM
Does this mean I can use it to answer all the math problems I have no clue how to do anymore?
5/15/2009 8:50:05 PM
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?works now. but the results aren't horribly impressive. it hasn't known what to do with most of my queries.
5/15/2009 9:56:00 PM
damn this thing is WebAssign's worst nightmare
5/15/2009 11:43:13 PM
i asked it 'what time is it' and it crashed my browser
5/15/2009 11:45:23 PM
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=what+is+the+airspeed+velocity+of+an+unladen+swallow
5/15/2009 11:59:51 PM
Down. The 'sorry dave, I'm afraid I can't do that' part amused me slightly.[Edited on May 16, 2009 at 6:36 AM. Reason : .]
5/16/2009 6:35:40 AM
here's an early review. He mentions some highlights, but it's mostly negativehttp://arstechnica.com/science/news/2009/05/wolframs-black-box-a-biologists-take-on-wolframalpha.ars
5/18/2009 11:59:51 PM
^thanks for the link, this was my initial impression too (thought it looks like it's even more limited than we all thought )
5/19/2009 4:17:09 AM
search "how much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?"
5/19/2009 9:08:33 AM
Its a great and convenient boolean minimizer. I know that you guys have no interest in something like that though.
5/19/2009 1:29:57 PM
5/19/2009 1:41:58 PM
Well it knows how old it is, so thats a start.
5/19/2009 2:08:21 PM
5/19/2009 2:24:55 PM
Its nice to know that you still excel at repetition
5/19/2009 2:30:55 PM
It's nice to know you still contribute nothing to discussions.
5/19/2009 2:41:44 PM
It doesn't know what to do with the majority of my search strings.
5/19/2009 3:30:59 PM
same
5/19/2009 3:37:56 PM
ha, i just used it to solve a simple Coloumb's Law problem from my hw. but.. what did it really do? I guess it finds an equations and symbolizes it so you can assign values to teh variables.. then solves it.I guess thats cool.. it makes an online calculator out of any equation.
5/19/2009 3:42:18 PM
http://www50.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=AAGCTAGCTAGCThats pretty impressive if its searching the human genome in real time. i dont really know what the significance is though. i'll have to ask the gf who's into that.[Edited on May 19, 2009 at 3:48 PM. Reason : dfff]
5/19/2009 3:48:35 PM
If anything it's great for stat data:http://www50.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=nc+state+university
5/19/2009 5:09:18 PM
5/22/2009 8:43:11 AM
^There's a joke there somewhere ...
5/22/2009 6:09:42 PM
this column puts its finger exactly on some problems in WA that will frustrate 95% of users, but who won't/don't/can't take the extra step to realize what an easy fix the problem could be. http://unqualified-reservations.blogspot.com/2009/07/wolfram-alpha-and-hubristic-user.htmlWA, taking its hints from Google (like everyone does now), implemented a natural language search engine. In Google, this works well, because Google does full-text searches of billions of webpages, which themselves use natural language. WA, however, is just a bunch of huge, specially-built databases that require specific syntax to search, but they tried to put a natural language front-end on it and the program tries to translate your search into the database query language. When this works, it works well and the results can be stunning. But when your query fails, all you get back is a stupid error message and no clues at all about what you're supposed to do about it. The article proposes that, at the least, the simple act of presenting the types of data that can be searched to the user to select from on a failed query could resolve most queries. It's because you're sitting there, looking at the WA interface, and you know it has the data you want, but you can't figure out how to extract that particular data, and WA doesn't give you any fucking clues at all
7/14/2009 11:30:53 PM
Damn this would have been useful going through some EE classes
7/15/2009 12:10:07 AM