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May 06, 2004

Amazon's A9 Search Engine

In case you missed it, Amazon has released a beta version of their new search engine called A9. That's right, Amazon is jumping into the search engine fray by adding their own unique content to the mix. Run a search on A9 and you'll see results from the Google database in addition to relevant extracts from the 120,000 books Amazon has available in full-text. (See Amazon's Amazon.com Opens the Books.) So if a searcher does a web search using A9 he may discover that the best choice is actually a book; and if Amazon sells more books, well that's what I call a win-win situation.

Wouldn't it be cool to have a legal version of A9 that combines a web search with results from electronic books/subscriptions using the Google relevancy ranking, based on how often that book/article is cited. Perhaps it only pulls the information available to you by subscription like a federated search engine, OR maybe publishers could sell pieces of information to a bunch of people instead of the whole enchilada to a select few, similar to what Northern Light was doing a few years back. But I'm getting carried away.

For more information on A9, see Barbara Quint's Newsbreak discussing A9's personalization features and enhancements and
Gary Price's Resourceshelf.

Posted by Cindy L. Chick on May 6, 2004 09:47 PM

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