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Posts Tagged ‘OneRiot’

OneRiot Announces $7 Million in Funding from Existing Investors

8/27/09 - Posted by admin under OneRiot News

Following is the official press release announcing OneRiot’s Series C funding led by Appian Ventures, Commonwealth Capital Ventures, and Spark Capital, our existing venture capital firms. Yes, we’re really happy about this.

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OneRiot Announces $7 Million Funding
Commonwealth Capital Ventures, Appian Ventures and Spark Capital invest in OneRiot Realtime Web Search

oneriottwitter Boulder, Colo./ San Francisco (August 27, 2009) – OneRiot, the realtime search engine, today announced that it has secured $7 million in Series C funding led by Appian Ventures, Commonwealth Capital Ventures, and Spark Capital, the company’s existing venture capital firms.

OneRiot delivers realtime web search results to millions of users, both at OneRiot.com and to 3rd parties who utilize OneRiot’s Search API. The company will use proceeds of this funding to further enhance its core search product and to support its fast-growing partner network.

“This commitment from our existing investors is a big vote of confidence in the realtime search market, OneRiot’s product offering, and our team’s ability to execute,” said Kimbal Musk, OneRiot’s CEO.

OneRiot’s partners include Yahoo and Microsoft, who recently released a version of Internet Explorer bundled with OneRiot realtime search.

OneRiot launched in November 2008. It helps users find the news, stories and videos that are most relevant to people right now. Search results are ordered using OneRiot’s PulseRank algorithm – a PageRank for the realtime web. PulseRank reflects the current social buzz associated with any content on the web. OneRiot indexes web pages that are shared in realtime by users on social services such as Twitter and Digg. In addition OneRiot manages its own panel of 3 million users who have opted in to share realtime information with the service.

“Increasingly, the web’s most relevant content is what our friends and other people are talking about, sharing and looking at right now,” said Musk. “Using OneRiot people can find that content in realtime.”
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About OneRiot
OneRiot (www.oneriot.com) is a realtime search engine. Users search OneRiot to find the news, stories and videos that people are buzzing about right now for any topic. Uniquely, OneRiot orders its search results based on PulseRank, reflecting the realtime social buzz around each result. OneRiot launched in November 2008 and is a privately held company headquartered in Boulder, Colo. with offices in San Francisco. For more information, follow OneRiot at http://twitter.com/OneRiot or read our blog at http://blog.oneriot.com.

OneRiot + Digsby // Haiku Mimobot Giveaway

8/12/09 - Posted by Carmel Hagen under Industry

digsbyDigsby, one of the web’s most popular IM clients, just released a sparkly new version - one that brings exciting realtime features to over one million users thanks to partnerships with OneRiot and Myspace. Now, using MySpace ID and OneRiot realtime search, Digsby fans have immediate access to the content their friends are buzzing about, and even easier ways to share it.

picture-2219 We’re really excited about this partnership, so we decided to celebrate with a giveaway - a mimobot giveaway. If you’ve ever prayed for a 2G flash drive that doubles as an art toy and triples as a death-ray shooting soldier in your elaborate Star Wars battle recreations, today is your lucky day - here’s how you get one:

Using your Twitter account (non-Tweeters, just leave us a comment), compose a haiku in honor of OneRiot and Digsby. (Be sure to use both “OneRiot” and “Digsby” in your haiku - that’s how we’ll find you.)

Here’s an example: OneRiot and Digsby, pour awesome everywhere, addicted i.m.

picture-2117If your haiku kicks the other haiku’s butts, we’ll send you a 2G mimobot to protect your most top secret files. We’re giving away two of these bad boys, so head to Twitter, wax poetic then check back here tomorrow for an update on our winners. While you’re anxiously waiting, you can check the full details on the new Digsby release by heading over this way or by keeping an eye on the Digsby blog.

Good luck, poets!

Q & A with Real-Time Search Engine OneRiot

8/10/09 - Posted by Carmel Hagen under Industry

picture-1224This post, an interview with OneRiot’s Tobias Peggs, was originally published at AltSearchEngines.com - thanks for asking such great questions, Charles!

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A short exchange with Tobias Peggs of OneRiot:

Q: Which search strategies do you think hold the most potential for advertisers/marketers?

OneRiot: Firstly, advertisers/marketers will benefit from being where the users are. And increasingly that is realtime search. Industry stats suggest that 40% of searches would be best answered by results from realtime search engines (these are people trying to find out “what’s going right now” for something as heavyweight as “Iran Election” or as entertaining as “Britney Spears”). Stats aside, you can see the stellar growth of services like Twitter (which shows you the conversation around a query) and OneRiot (which shows you fresh, socially-relevant web content related to the query) underlining that fact.

Secondly, advertisers/marketers will benefit from a particular user behavior found on realtime search engines. That is: users tend to search many more times per day for the same query than they do on a traditional search engine. The reason is simple. On a realtime search engine, the results change in realtime to keep up with the latest news and buzz. So users keep searching to stay on top of the latest information. Therefore advertisers / marketers working with realtime search engines will be offered many more opportunities to monetize and/or engage the user during a day.

Q: From a business perspective, how difficult is it to actually get a viable engine?
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The Whuffie Powered Search Engine

7/01/09 - Posted by Carmel Hagen under Featured, Industry, OneRiot News

picture-342Do a search for “The Whuffie Factor reviews” on a traditional search engine, and something interesting happens. In the area that SEO experts lust for – those glorified first five results - a blog post pops up. It’s a modest post, just a few flattering paragraphs covering Tara Hunt’s guide to social media for businesspeople, but there it is - smushed right between Amazon’s own review and the book’s official website. A quote from within the post unveils the significance of that blog’s page rank – and quite serendipitously proves the power of the “Whuffie” movement as a whole:

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“When Tara tweeted offering to send folks an advance copy of her book The Whuffie Factor to review I responded right away, though I didn’t expect to be chosen. Virtually nobody reads this site.”

No one reads this site. Right. As so many of us are exasperatingly aware of, things don’t just hit the front page of a traditional search engine by sheer luck. So how did one “readerless” blog become the go-to place for a review on a popular marketing book? Well, it was Whuffie.

Whuffie,” a term coined by the author Cory Doctorow, is a friendly word for a powerful concept: social capital. Social capital, also known as the return on investment that comes from gathering trustworthiness and approval online, is one of today’s most compelling reasons to be deeply entrenched in social media. But does the investment pay off? If that self-described small beans blogger turned Whuffie pro-evangelist* is any indicator, yes. However, that post didn’t SEO the heck out of itself just because Tara believed in investing in her community - it got there because her community had money of its own.

For a blog post to reach the top of a traditional search engine’s results, a rather huge, combined community investment must be made– one that is very rare to come across. Not only does a blogger need to write about the search topic, but they also must inspire a ton of other bloggers to write about it, linking their posts back to the original one so that it builds page rank. In terms of social capital, blogs are expensive, taking up tons of the time and effort of very nice, willing people. Thankfully, this mass investment is no longer needed in the area of realtime search, where significantly simpler shares are highly influential in the ranking of search results. Shares are effortless compared to blog posts, taking only seconds of user’s time (yet offering plenty of that same good Whuffie) - and everybody loves to share.

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Michael Arrington recently penned something like this: “Re-tweets are the currency of the web.” At OneRiot, where a realtime result’s PulseRank is influenced by those retweets, we agree – but we venture to take it one further. The currency of the web lies not in a simple re-tweet, but in sharing as a whole. Whether it’s via email, thru Twitter, across Facebook, over IM, or hyper-dispersed thru a tool like Yoono, a share indicates a web user’s assignment of value. When a person shares something of yours, they’re assigning that value to you. How awesome is that.

In business speak, shares are to the web what referrals are to the real world – they are the word of mouth marketing of the internet. Online friends listen to online friends because they have already built up the same complex rapport that forms the online backbone of Whuffie. They trust each other and they respect each other – so they click on each others’ links. A lot. And when people click on links, cool things happen. Articles get read. New products and tools are discovered. Links get re-shared. Sometimes, people even buy stuff. Sounds a bit like the kind of stuff you’d want a marketing campaign to achieve, doesn’t it? To us, it sounds like the building blocks for a new kind of SEO.

In business speak, shares are to the web what referrals are to the real world – they are the word of mouth marketing of the internet.

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Nambu Updates Feature OneRiot Realtime Search

6/11/09 - Posted by Carmel Hagen under Industry, OneRiot News

Do you Nambu? We do, because the social messaging app for Macs helps us streamline our sometimes hectic online social lives. It allows us to group our Twitter pals, thread our @mentions, shorten urls and track stats on them, and a whole bunch of other nice stuff.

If you Nambu as much as we do, you know all of this, and you may also already know about Nambu’s latest, most wondertastic feature - realtime search!

Yes, OneRiot has entered the building, and last we heard he was knocking out ladies left and right with his super fresh search results. Nambu users are loving it because it allows them to find news, blogs, and videos within seconds of their appearing on the web, allowing them to keep track of more than the usual conversations happening on Twitter. Eric Woodward, CEO of Nambu, is loving it because - oh, let’s just use his own words:

“OneRiot’s realtime web search engine is the best way to find fresh, socially-relevant content from across the web. Now our users can track realtime conversations on any topic, and discover new related content at the same time. It’s a great combination.”

…and we’re loving it because it marks another awesome use of our API (a party you can gain access to by joining the OneRiot Realtime Search Partner Program - just ping Tobias if you want to hear about it).

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We’re excited to hear our fellow Nambu users’ feedback about this integration, so if you’ve got some - share! More screenshots after the jump….

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OneRiot Partners Plug Bing into Realtime

6/02/09 - Posted by Carmel Hagen under OneRiot News

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Bet you’ve checked out Bing. Bet you’ve heard all the rumors about what it’s name might mean. Bet you’re kinda into it (and maybe not just secretly).

Bet you wish it had realtime search. Well…

Remember when WebMynd gave us a Firefox extension that placed OneRiot realtime results right next to our Google searches? They just did it again - right in the old Bing Is Not Google-nator. Surf Canyon, another member of our Search Partner Program, is already offering a similarly realtime-ready engine for Firefox and IE, and will have their Bing-able version out soon.

A nice quote from Mark Cramer, CEO of Surf Canyon:

“We are laser focused on improving traditional web search by delivering the most relevant results possible and our partnership with OneRiot is key to that strategy.”

Word up, Mark.

You can nab the WebMynd search extension by going here, and hang tight for the Surf Canyon edition - we’ll share the link as soon as we’ve we’ve got it.

Match it Up: Realtime Web & Realtime Search

5/27/09 - Posted by Tobias Peggs under Featured

At OneRiot we deliver socially relevant search results, fast. The stuff that people are buzzing about, right now; the news they want to find, right this second. This is the realtime web, and in order for a search engine to accurately reflect that web, its results must be as informative as they are reflective of the terms most current meaning.

For example, if you searched for “Champions League Final” on OneRiot this morning, you probably found previews of the game, tactics and team sheets. But if you search for “Champions League Final” this afternoon you’ll find post-match analysis, videos of the goals, and interviews with key players.

Same search query, different time - and results that change to reflect what people are buzzing about right now.

Traditional search engines struggle to surface these fresh, socially relevant search results. They index the web based on factors like links between webpages, which take time to build up. As a consequence, their search results tend to surface highly referenced resources like Wikipedia pages or official websites. Dependable stuff, but not necessarily reflective of what people are buzzing about right now.

OneRiot indexes the web in an entirely new way – by harnessing the power of the realtime social web. When people share a link on Twitter, Digg or other social sharing services, they are signaling that it is of interest to them right now. OneRiot takes that as a signal to index a particular page on the web. We also look at other “social signals” like the number of retweets or comments that a link has generated, and add some special measures such as “velocity” (is the link “hotter” right now than it was 2 mins ago, etc). All of these combine (with others) to help us create a realtime socially relevant index of the web. The end result is a search experience that allows users to find new, fresh, relevant search results – reflecting what people are buzzing about right now.

Of course, when people start buzzing about different things, our search results change to keep up with shifting interests. Here’s a pro tip: our search results pages let you know when new, fresher, more relevant results emerge. If you search for “Champions League Final” and keep the tab open all day, you can track the top results as they shift from match previews to post-match analysis. Try it. We’d love to know what you think.

Tweet This: OneRiot Now Diggs Up Realtime Search Results

5/12/09 - Posted by Carmel Hagen under OneRiot News

Hi. We’re not really sure what you’re doing on our blog on a day like today, because the party is most certainly happening over here. However, here you are, and we can only imagine that you’re here to find more info about the updates we dropped this morning.

Here’s our official press release, but if you’re hunting for something a little less press release-y, you can always check out what people are saying about us here, here, or here (thanks, guys!).

If you have any questions or feedback, just drop us a comment. You can also find us on Twitter, where we will do our very best to respond to every question, criticism, or high five you send our way.

Tweet This!

Tweet This: OneRiot Now Diggs Up Realtime Search Results

OneRiot Search Results Pages Update in Realtime as New, Fresh, Relevant links are shared on Twitter, Digg, and the Wider Social Web

Boulder, Colo. / San Francisco – May 12, 2009 – OneRiot, the realtime web search engine, today announced that its search results pages now update in realtime as new, fresh, relevant content emerges on Twitter, Digg and the wider social web.

OneRiot crawls the links people share on Twitter, Digg and other social sharing services, then indexes the content on those pages in realtime. The end result is a search experience on OneRiot.com that allows users to find fresh, relevant content from across the realtime web.

“The potential of realtime search reaches far beyond the conversation stream around a keyword,” says Tobias Peggs, general manager at OneRiot. “By digging, tweeting or sharing links to webpages, people are signaling that the content on those pages is relevant to them right now. OneRiot takes those signals, indexes the webpage content, and returns that information in our search results in realtime.”

OneRiot also filters for spam and de-duplicates links shared through Bit.ly, TinyURL, Tr.im and other URL shortening services. This makes its search results not only realtime but also reliable. “We help users find socially-relevant content, filtering out the spam and noise,” said Peggs.

“Increasingly, the web’s most interesting content is what our friends and other people are talking about, sharing and looking at right now. Traditional search engines struggle to surface these fresh, socially-relevant results. That’s the hole – and it’s a big one – that OneRiot is filling.”

Additionally, new advanced OneRiot search features include:

· Domain Buzz Query – Search for a specific domain name (e.g. www.CNN.com) to determine what articles/posts from that publisher/blog have the most social relevance right now.

· Page Buzz Query – Search for a specific URL (e.g. a blog post) to find how many times that link has been dugg, tweeted or shared on the social web.

· First Shared Identifier – Learn who was first to share a particular link on the social web, and see their Twitter or Digg profile.

· Expandable Conversations – See what people are saying about a particular search result, and engage in a specific conversation around content.

· Results Page Filters – View OneRiot search results by “Realtime” or by “Pulse” – the company’s proprietary score of current social relevance.

About OneRiot
Launched in November 2008, OneRiot is a realtime search engine. Users search with OneRiot to find the news, videos and blogs that are people are buzzing about right now on the social web. Uniquely, OneRiot delivers search results as they emerge, ordered to reflect current social relevance. OneRiot is a privately held company headquartered in Boulder, Colo. with offices in San Francisco. For more info, please follow OneRiot at: http://www.oneriot.com // http://twitter.com/OneRiot // http://blog.oneriot.com

Under Construction // Something Shiny This Way Comes

5/07/09 - Posted by Tobias Peggs under OneRiot News

Firstly – thank you!

We launched twitter.oneriot.com as an experimental site just over a month ago. We put it out there to ask for feedback, in hopes that you would help us build a product that was as fun to use as it was useful. You gave us a bunch of awesome feedback, and we learned a ton.

Note that “feedback” in that last sentence is hyperlinked, but “learned” is not. That’s because what it will link to – a new version that, hey, incorporates nearly all of your feedback – launches next week. (This, of course, is subject to the usual disclaimers, assumes that QA goes swimmingly well, and that our refrigerator stays stocked with enough Redbull to keep everyone going until then.)

If you want a sneak peak of what we’ve got coming, @tobiaspeggs for details (we’ll give the first 50 people a special invite code to test drive the new stuff). In the mean time, you can still use the standard OneRiot search engine to find the news, stories and videos that people are buzzing about right now across the social web.

So hang tight, Twitter Search die-hards - only a few more days until we drop a faster, sexier, share-ier (hint, hint) OneRiot. Until then, suspense be damned (see also: redirect), but it’ll be worth it!

Tweet It!

New at OneRiot // Welcome to Twitter Search!

4/02/09 - Posted by Carmel Hagen under OneRiot News

OneRiot is silly excited to announce our latest addition - a new twist on Twitter search. Currently in alpha, OneRiot Twitter Search takes a different approach to sifting through the world’s favorite microblogging site.

How it Works //

When people share stuff on Twitter, they often include links to the content they’re talking about. Most of the time, these links are shortened into tinyurls or bit.ly links, like this:

That post then becomes searchable via Twitter’s own search engine, which groups tweets by common words. So, were I to search for Guantanamo on Twitter, I’d see a bunch of related tweets in a list:

…which is awesome //

because I get to see what my fellow Twitterers have recently been saying about Guantanamo. But what if I wanted to see the conversation happening around the specific link that I had shared, or the uninterrupted passing of that link from tweet to tweet? Yesterday I would have had to do some digging by expanding those shortened links then searching for them, but today I can find it at OneRiot… woot!

Check out this search for “Guantanamo” on OneRiot. If you click on the downward facing arrow underneath each result, you’ll find the tweets related to that result, like this:

That’s the conversation //

that is forming around that specific link, all thanks to the lucky “First Finder” who shared it. From here, searchers can join the conversation, retweet the link, reply to fellow Twitterers - or just find out what the fuss is about by following the link.

There are lots of interesting uses for this, which is one of the reasons we’re opening the site up to everybody before we officially incorporate it into our existing search engine. We’re anxious to hear your feedback, so head over here, play around, and don’t ignore that big black button on your right.

And a friendly heads up to developers - we have an API. If you want it, ask Tobias.

Partnership

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Gossip

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