Search the realtime web - the news, stories and videos people are talking about right now.

Posts Tagged ‘Search’

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!

Guest Post // Tobias Talks Twitter Search

4/24/09 - Posted by Tobias Peggs under Industry, International Affairs, OneRiot News

Every so often, we welcome a OneRiot staff member to share some words on our blog. We have to be careful with this - because everyone’s always so high on dry-erase markers - but most of the time it works out pretty well. Here’s the latest - a deeper look at Twitter search from OneRiot GM (and acid house evangelist) Tobias Peggs.

It’s about time.

Before I got sucked into the internets, I spent several years as a magazine journalist mainly writing about music (and the occasional supermodel). Now Carmel has convinced me to start writing for the OneRiot blog on a regular basis. My initial thought is to write about what I’m doing – which essentially boils down to helping grow OneRiot, trying to keep up with a triathlon training schedule, and ambiently learning from other cool companies (like Twitter), collectives (like Cypher13) and random cool dudes (like @Jeffrey) that I stalk via social media but who probably don’t know who I am. Let’s see how it goes… and see what you think.

This first post is focused on the first theme. We recently launched a new twist on Twitter Search. We learned a lot from doing that – from so many angles. (I’ve got future posts in the mental pipeline on “doing a launch with and without a PR agency – pros and cons” and “how I was schooled to be authentic, by a social media pro who would hate to be called a social media pro.” But more of that later…). For now, the focus is on what we did and why.

Let’s start by echoing John Battelle, who has acknowledged the growing appetite for search results from the “super fresh” web. The web’s most valuable content increasingly can be found in what our friends and other people are saying, sharing and looking at online. Traditional Search Engines (TSEs) just can’t keep up with this new era of “people preference,” solely because their systems of gathering information don’t really support it. Broadly speaking, TSEs index the web based on variations of a web page’s “juice,” which builds up over time. So, logically, TSE’s will struggle to surface fresh, socially-relevant search results because the new, interesting stuff hasn’t been around long enough to build enough juice to rate highly in those indexes. That’s the hole (and it’s a big one!) that realtime web search engines like OneRiot are now filling.

Given its current – and justified – buzz, Twitter Search tends to be peoples’ first port of call to consume search results from the real time web. If you search for something like “Pontiac” on Twitter (ahem, RIP) you’ll see an explosion of conversation from thousands of people in relation to that query – which is pretty exciting to see. In other words, Twitter Search surfaces the conversations happening right now around that query. Your search results experience is essentially telling you “Your query is a hot term! Lots of people are talking about it!” If you parse through, or join, the conversation, you might find out why.

If you do that same search on OneRiot, the experience is quite different. OneRiot’s Twitter search surfaces the content that people are talking about right now, so your results experience is essentially telling you “Check out this page, or blog, or video! Lots of people are talking about it!” It’s search results as you know it, but the content is drawn from the realtime web (i.e. the results are based on what your friends are say, sharing and looking at online right now).

Now, of course, seeing – and joining – the conversation is a key piece of Twitter’s huge appeal. So you’ll also notice with OneRiot’s Twitter Search that we do show the conversation as well – but we group the tweets that have shared a link to a specific piece of content. (Of course, we de-dup all the shortening services for you, so links from bit.ly, tiny.url, tr.im etc that point to the same piece of content are treated as one by OneRiot).

Here’s where the two search opportunities really differ: From Twitter Search you could join a worldwide fast flowing conversation about Pontiac. From OneRiot’s Twitter search you could join a targeted conversation about a specific piece of content – for example, the NPR story that started the buzz (this is the top search result on OneRiot Twitter Search as I write… of course, because this the realtime web, it’ll probably be different when you look).

Our take on Twitter Search was a good experiment, and you’ll start to see some of the awesome things we’ve learned from it filter into the main OneRiot.com search experience soon. In the mean time, if you have any ideas or feature requests, feel free to @tobiaspeggs and let me know, or log them on our community wiki.

(That wasn’t so bad, was it?)

Tobias - you get a gold star.

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