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- Duration: 5:07
- Published: 28 Jul 2008
- Uploaded: 24 Jan 2011
- Author: micahtech
Name | Cuil |
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Logo | |
Screenshot | |
Caption | The Cuil homepage |
Url | www.cuil.com (dead link) |
Type | Search engine |
Language | Multilingual |
Owner | Cuil, Inc. |
Launch date | July 28, 2008 |
Current status | Down |
Cuil was managed and developed largely by former employees of Google, Anna Patterson and Russell Power. The CEO and co-founder, Tom Costello, has worked for IBM and others. The company had raised $33 million from venture capital firms including Greylock. In 2010, Cuil Inc. was recognized as one of the leading Silicon Valley companies by Lead411. Cuil's privacy policy, unlike that of other search engines, said it did not store users’ search activity or IP addresses.
Cuil worked on an automated encyclopedia called Cpedia, built by algorithmically summarizing and clustering ideas on the web to create encyclopedia-like reports. Instead of displaying search results, Cuil would show Cpedia articles matching the searched terms. This was meant to reduce duplication by combining information into one document.
Cuil was available in 8 languages: English, French, German, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish and Turkish. More were planned.
Some linguists are unsure of this derivation and pronunciation, and note that the modern Irish word for hazel is spelled coll (coill or cuill in genitive form, the former spelling having superseded the latter as a result of the Caighdeán Oifigiúil reforms of the mid-twentieth century). Foras na Gaeilge, the official governing body of the Irish language, doubted the assertion that 'cuil' means 'knowledge'. do not associate the cuil spelling with knowledge or hazel. Dineen only lists two nouns and one adjective with the spelling cuil: "f., a fly, a horse-fly...", "f., a venemous aspect; great eagerness..." and "gs. of col, as a., wicked."
The company name had previously been spelled Cuill.
According to an interview with a Cuil representative, while other Web 2.0 launches using massively parallel processing might fail with a slow down or crash, Many website owners reported that the Twiceler crawler repeatedly hit their site with randomly generated URLs in an attempt to find pages unaccessible by links. Others reported irrelevant images associated with their listing in Cuil's search results.
Category:American websites Category:Internet properties established in 2008 Category:2010 disestablishments Category:Internet search engines Category:Web crawlers Category:Entities with Irish names
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.
Playername | Chris Hogg |
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Fullname | Christopher Francis Hogg |
Dateofbirth | March 21, 1985 He captained England at under–15 level and then signed for FA Premier League team Ipswich Town for a fee of £100,000 in June 2001, which would have risen to £150,000 if he had made a first team appearance. He was subsequently prevented from playing for their first team, however, because of a clause in his transfer from York and the precarious financial situation at Portman Road. He joined Third Division team Boston United on a month's loan on 9 October 2003. He made his debut two days later in a 3–1 victory over Cheltenham Town. He made eight appearances before returning to Ipswich in November. He rejoined Boston on another month's loan on 12 December and made five appearances during this spell, leaving the club in February 2004. |
Name | Hogg, Christopher Francis |
Alternative names | Hogg, Chris |
Short description | Professional footballer |
Date of birth | 21 March 1985 |
Place of birth | Middlesbrough, England |
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.