News:

GinGly.com - Used by 85,000 Members - SMS Backed up 7,35,000 - Contacts Stored  28,850 !!

Main Menu

Former Google staff promise 'new approach'

Started by VelMurugan, Apr 18, 2008, 08:43 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

VelMurugan

Former Google staff promise 'new approach'

A search company founded by ex-Google and IBM employees landed $25 million in new venture funding this week, but remains in stealth mode with no indication of when its technology will be publicly available.

The search start-up, Cuill (pronounced "cool"), has reportedly told investors that it can crawl the Web at about one-tenth the cost of Google. Cuill's website boasts of a "new approach to search" involving a Web crawler known as "Twiceler." Details beyond that are scarce and Cuill didn't immediately respond to an interview request from Techworld's sister publication, Network World, Wednesday.

"Cuill has assembled a premier team of search experts from Google, IBM, eBay, AltaVista, Xerox PARC, the Internet Archive and Stanford University," Cuill states in a press release. "The team is leveraging their own expertise in search architecture, relevance methods and data analysis to provide users with a better search experience."

Cuill secured $25 million this week in a funding round led by Madrone Capital Partners, bringing the company's total venture investments to $33 million.

The Cuill team members do have some interesting experience. President and founder Anna Patterson has a PhD in computer science and after joining Google in 2004 she managed Google's ad-matching technology and was in charge of Google Base, a system where users submit content so it can be made searchable on Google.

Cuill co-founder Russell Power worked on Web ranking and automatic spam detection at Google. Both Patterson and Power worked on TeraGoogle, which appears to be a social network.

Cuill CEO and co-founder Tom Costello in 1999 created Xift, a search engine with automatic clustering and page analysis, and later joined IBM where he developed the prototype of WebFountain, an Internet analytics engine that studies unstructured data on the Web. Costello has a PhD in computer science from Stanford University.

Cuill's vice president of products, Louis Monier, designed search engine technology for Google and eBay, while vice president of communications Vince Sollitto was previously a spokesman for California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Though it's not clear when Cuill will launch a search tool, Patterson says in a press release "we look forward to sharing Cuill with everyone on the Web."

Source : Techworld