The COOL (or CUIL) new search engine
August 12th, 2008According to an article in eWeek a bit ago, some former Google engineers have rolled out a new search engine…one that will index more of the web than Google…faster and cheaper. This is the first time another search engine has truly thrown down the gauntlet and made it known that they are taking on the giant. While Yahoo and MSN fight for second place, www.cuil.com has proudly made it known that they are going straight for first.
Cuil co-founder, Tom Costello stated, “Our significant breakthroughs in search technology have enabled us to index much more of the Internet, placing nearly the entire Web at the fingertips of every user.” From information taken from the CUIL web site, the search engine will use ‘content and relevance’ rather than the ‘popularity index’ that Google uses (inlinking and traffic patterns).
Personally, I love the look of the site.
But, I do have a bit of a problem with the results, probably because the terms I rank well for in Google, are no where to be found in CUIL.COM. In fact, when checking for our company name in CUIL.COM, we were number 3 in the rankings, something that is a bit hard to understand, considering the number 1 result SHOULD be the company site:
I checked this on a few other sites and found similar results. By no means is this a large enough sampling to be conclusive, but it does point to something I find interesting. Across all sites I checked, the site itself did not rank number one for it’s own URL. Now, this could be seen as a problem because how often does a site mention it’s own name and/or URL? Is it the content itself, or the lack of it, what is causing the site to not rank well for it’s own URL?
In fact, when I did a CUIL search for Talkism.com, there were 27 results, with the actual site itself ranking last. Some of the results in the list didn’t even contain the domain Talkism.com, so it’s really unclear how valuable this search would be.
When I tried this same experiment with Google, the first result was Google Maps and second was Google.com. Searching in CUIL for Google.com did bring the actual search engine as the first result but why? There isn’t any real content to speak of on the Google.com page….
The point I’m trying to make is this - for sites that are honestly trying to get their name out there, such as Cimmeron Studios, our website design company, if a potential client were to search CUIL for Cimmeron Studios and NOT link to our web site, how is this providing them with the best results? Perhaps a bit more digging into the science and philosophy behind CUIL.com is needed before this engine will be able to gain some market share in the search engine wars.


