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FamilyLink.com founder reviews Perfect Search Appliance

August 18th, 2010

FamilyLink.com was facing a problem. Its massive database of genealogical records was growing and so was site traffic. In a recent product review, FamilyLink Founder Paul Allen, said Lucene’s free open source search engine worked in FamilyLink’s early days, but as both traffic and the database grew, the “Lucene platform started to have its own performance and financial costs.”

He needed a search engine with a parallel system and one that could handle double the data as the curent system.

The answer was Perfect Search.

Allen pointed out three main strengths of the Perfect Search engine.

  1. Scalability. FamilyLink was able to reduce our query servers from seven down to one, while doubling the amount of data.

  2. Performance. Query performance went from multiple seconds per query to subsecond query speeds.
  3. Drop-In. Replacing Lucene with Perfect search was easy.

“Today, more than 1.6 billion records exist on one server, with an additional server for redundancy. The same 40GB of data that took more than 880 hours to index on Lucene is now indexed in approximately 36 hours by Perfect Search,” Allen said. “CPU utilization seldom exceeds 10 percent at peak query loads.”

See the full review.

Google Caffiene: Will Quality Suffer for Faster Indexing?

June 17th, 2010

Last week Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) announced a new web indexing system called Caffeine. This new index is designed to provide search results 50 percent fresher than the previous index, enabling users to find relevant content sooner after publishing.

Tom Nolle analyzed the affect of Caffeine, noting that the new index could be a double edged sword. On the one hand, fresher content and real-time news when catastrophe strikes is great news. One the other hand, the focus on speed of delivery as opposed to focus on quality and analysis “trivializes what the internet can do.”

He goes on to ask if by accepting results without any real depth of analysis and we lose the ability to have a real understanding of what’s going on.

“We can’t build an industry on Tweets…on small status updates,” Nolle said.

In an interview on Entrepreneur’s Daily Dose blog, Google engineer Matt Cutts indicated that Caffeine may provide fresher results, but Google has not thrown out it’s entire search algorithm.

“PageRank is [still] all important part of how we determine when to crawl a page,” Cutts said. He added that link backs and participation in social media are also ways to improve search visibility.

What do you think? Will quality suffer for faster indexing?


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