Cuil, the new search engine created by a team that included a couple of former Google execs, launched this week. However, just a few hours after it went live, it seemed as though Cuil’s dive into the search engine pool was more like a belly flop, judging by a sizable number of reports and reviews.
Cuil says it’s capable of providing more relevant results due to technology that examines the contents of a Web page rather than its popularity, and it boasted a page index of 120 billion.
Perhaps, then, expectations ran a little too high. Early reviews took jabs at the search engine, decrying ticks like odd query results and an apparent inability to recognize punctuation marks like periods in search terms (though that particular shortcoming appears to have been corrected).
Melting Under the Limelight
For better or for worse, the glut of publicity the search engine received Monday brought people to the site in droves, according to Vince Sollitto, vice president of communications at Cuil.
“[The coverage] generated a great amount of interest, for which we were initially grateful. But it was overwhelming,” Sollitto told TechNewsWorld.
The search engine handled more than 50 million queries on Monday. That’s more than Microsoft gets in a day and almost as many as Yahoo, Sollitto explained, citing Comstat statistics.
“You can imagine that those established search engines have more infrastructure than our little startup. And quite frankly we got all that traffic, and that brought machines down and redundancies were not so redundant after all,” he said.
The volume of queries put a huge strain on Cuil’s system, and as a result, machines started to go down.
“When a machine goes down, and that machine has the results you were looking for because of our specialized architecture, you might have gotten no results. We were completely under water,” Sollitto said.
Now that it’s been a few days, said Sollitto, things have cooled down, and the company is attempting to solve its remaining problems.
How Cool is Cuil?
So, how does Cuil stack up against Google? Pretty well.
The site still has its glitches. For instance, a search for “roadrunner IBM” undertaken Thursday returned no results. But when the keywords were flipped to “IBM roadrunner,” the search results provided were all relevant, with IBM’s site filling in the top spot.
Queries for singer Jill Scott returned 1,104,450 results on Cuil versus 3,400,000 on Google. In this instance, however, one cannot judge a search engine on the number of results alone. For instance, Google’s result page returned links to sites where records and other merchandise was available for purchase.
On Cuil, however, the search produced three other tabs: “Jill Scott Lyrics,” “Who is Jill Scott” and “Jill Scott Concert,” in addition to the “all results” tab. Clicking on “Jill Scott Lyrics” revealed a host of sites with lyrics to Scott’s songs, naturally.
Also, Cuil offers an interesting tool with its “explore by category” feature. For this search the categories included Neo-Soul Singers, African-American Singers, American Rhythm and Blues Singers, J Records Artists and African-American Singer-songwriter. Very cool, especially if you’re doing research for a paper or want to explore a genre. Cuil’s default setting preventing any pornographic results is also a plus for parents.
Overall, after using the site for about four hours, I found its results to be analogous with those on other search engines like Google, MSN and Yahoo. While some things on Cuil really are cool — like the fact that the site does not retain any information on my searches — it would be nice not to have to worry about things like word order when I’m searching.
Cuil left me wanting for specialized searches on news, books, music, video, etc. However, Sollitto said, right now the company is focused on refining its search technology to provide the best text-based results and has not discussed how to apply to things such as video.
It could be useful for deep-digging searches when one wants to see some links other than what floats to the top of other engines’ results pages. But for now, Google will remain my go-to search engine of choice.
I tried the new engine and as the subject line says I left and I doubt I will be back. I own a small internet business in a unique field. When I Google I have 4-5 hits in the top 20 listings, in Cuil, zero for pages on end. The results of my seach were so far off base it made no sense. I think they have missed the mark.
The big issue IS that Company A’s images are placed next to Company B’s search results. If you click on the familar Company A image / logo, the link takes you to Company B – NOT COOL!
Also for my area of searches, the results are coming back all jumbled up and in many cases, the links take you to 404 error pages.
For what I search for: Tourism issues in the country of Latvia, I AM finding Cuil’s results totally useless.
Try searching for "tourist info riga latvia" and the results come back all jumbled – nonsense.
I AM also getting many "no results found" errors on things tht I normally search for and find results with other engines.
Overall, I plan to give up on Cuil and perhaps will never go back except for a laugh about some of the results.
Their excuses about too many people looking is – "too LAME" to use the younger generations slang.
Also, the lack of real serious communication from the Cuil team is very disappointing. Their silence is deafing. Most PR Experts normally recommend over communication in these types of situations.
Maybe its time for the NOT COOL – T shirt vendors to come alive!
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