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Monthly Archives: October 2006

Google takes on the "Find a Hotel" problem

If search is only 5% solved then searching for a hotel is most definitely in the 95% of unsolved problems. Below is a screenshot of the Google Search results for New York Hotel.

The extent of the problem is clear from the fact that the first organic search result isn’t even in New York.
Microsoft’s Live.com does [...]

Google Custom Search - more features than you think

Google Custom Search has recieved a lot of attention since its release. One thing I discovered while developing an implementation at work was exactly how customisable it is. It isn’t clear from the simple examples, but some of the more advanced examples and the documentation show how it is possible to do facet-based navigation of [...]

Comscore’s measurements are bunk

Comscore is a media measurement site similar to Hitwise or the Alexa site rankings. They do a decent job, but people are beginning to take their data way too seriously for the accuracy that their methodology delivers.
Essentially, they (like Alexa) rely on users installing software which monitors which sites they visit.
That methodology means your samples [...]

The Google/YouTube deal: What a bargain

When I first heard the rumours of the Google/YouTube deal I didn’t like it. Now that it  has gone though, I’m having second thoughts: they might have got a bargain.
Google were prepared to pay $900 million for 3 years of search advertising on MySpace, which makes $1.6 billion to own a site that gets (very [...]

Actually using Amazon EC2

Demitrious Kelly has an absolutely fascinating blog about operations in a modern web environment.
The whole thing is worth reading, but his comments on the use of Amazon EC2 is particularly compelling.

Traditional OPS VS Amazon AWS (part 1)

Traditional OPS VS Amazon AWS (part 2)

Traditional OPS VS Amazon AWS (part 3)

MySQL on Amazon EC2 (my thoughts)

Reading his [...]