Webhamer Weblog: Search & ICT-related blogging


links for 2009-04-24

Posted in LinkBlog by Staut on the April 24th, 2009
  • But Anyways Here is how you burn an audio cd:

    First grab k3b by clicking here

    Now once that is installed grab libk3b3-extracodecs by clicking here

    Click on audio cd project then navigate to your mp3 folder and just click once on the files u want copied over to disk, then click burn
    That was easy, now for the less easier part that still is pretty easy… Now open up k3b via Applications->Sound and Video->k3b

  • NetBase takes a sophisticated linguistic approach, actually diagramming sentences to determine the relationship between words and phrases. It does particularly well with causal relationships, allowing it to tease out cause and effect from raw text. For instance, in the sentence, “The calcium, potassium and magnesium found in yogurt can help reduce your risk for hypertension often resulting from stress, obesity, and other factors” NetBase can identify that “stress” and “obesity” are causes of hypertension and that “calcium,” “potassium,” “magnesium,” and “yogurt” can be used to counter hypertension.

links for 2009-04-22

Posted in LinkBlog by Staut on the April 22nd, 2009

links for 2009-04-20

Posted in LinkBlog by Staut on the April 20th, 2009
  • But I have to tell you I don’t see legions of boomers capturing their wisdom in wikis and blogs for the future benefit of the organization. These are important tools that will contribute to the constant dialogue which is the decision lifeblood in any department or company, but the reality is that email is still the place where issues are articulated, decisions made, and corporate credibility established. I know that email is being condemned as old folks technology, but I know that a well crafted email can lay out an enterprise position on a critical issue in a few paragraphs, save countless meetings, and establish an internal reputation. In addition buried in the minutes of meetings, the countless attached Powerpoints and Project Plans, is the true process backbone of the company.

links for 2009-04-17

Posted in LinkBlog by Staut on the April 18th, 2009
  • Despite this big growth in SharePoint use among the best intranets, the contest is far from over for intranet software platforms. Many other good enterprise software vendors offer widely used solutions. This year, for example, multiple winners used Autonomy, Google Search, and WebTrends.

  • the rest of this article will be devided into 4 parts :
    1. Bacis of Lucene : to give a brief introduction to Lucene
    2. Solr: what is solr, why we use it, how to use it, how to generate index file from exsiting data in database, make your own field type(the support for chinese charcter)
    3. Carrot: what is carrot, how to get it working with different source (in this case is Solr)
    4. Conclustions: what you can do with these three differently and what can be done more.

  • The features of the product are interesting. The system can acquire and index structure and unstructured information. The approach is to maintain two indexes. One allows access to the structured data from Oracle, SAP or other enterprise applications. The second index handles the unstructured information. One nice feature is the system’s ability to search other indexes, including Microsoft Search Server and Autonomy’s indexes. The company asserts that throughput is can hit 10 million documents in 24 hours. I don’t have the basic server configuration for this throughput rate, but most organizations running SharePoint environments will have to look for a solution once the documents in the SharePoint environment hit 50 million.

  • Goed dat je gekozen hebt voor phpBB3! Nu kun je aan de slag met het opstarten van jouw community!

    Als je niet weet hoe je phpBB3 het beste kan installeren vind je hier een uitleg om phpBB3 te installeren, meer informatie over phpBB3 vind je ook op onze wiki en de online documentatie.

    Voor al je vragen kun je terecht op het forum.

  • MOD Description: This mod changes the CAPTCHA to a more solid one, even if GD is not available. It comes with the following:

    * random fonts,
    * random colors
    * random sizes
    * random angles
    * noisy background with lines without GD, with lines and circles with GD
    * or random chars in background
    * random pics in background with GD

    You can add new truetype fonts (for non-GD users, check the contrib directory to create the .btf fonts used in this case)
    You can add new background pics (GD users only)

    (tags: phpbb todo Forum)

links for 2009-04-16

Posted in LinkBlog by Staut on the April 16th, 2009
  • At MaxxCat, we believe that from the performance and cost perspectives, appliance based computing provides the best overall value. The GSA and Google Mini are the market leaders, but provide only moderate performance at an expensive price point. We believe that by continuously obsessing about performance in the three major dimensions of search (volume of data, speed of retrieval, and crawl/indexing times), our appliances will continue to improve. Software only solutions can not match the performance of our appliances. Nor can software only, or general purpose hardware approaches provide the scaling, high availability or ease of use of a gray-box appliance. From an overall cost perspective, even free software such as Lucene, may end up being more expensive than our drop-in and use appliance.

links for 2009-04-08

Posted in LinkBlog by Staut on the April 8th, 2009
  • The World Wide Web turned 20 years old last Friday, and its creator, Tim Berners-Lee, says its potential is hardly reached. His next vision, a vision he’s been talking about for years, is the Semantic Web, which on the surface seems as simple as herding cats. But don’t let the specifics bog down a perfectly good concept with just the right amount of vagueness to drive it forward.

links for 2009-04-02

Posted in LinkBlog by Staut on the April 2nd, 2009
  • First, there is no widely accepted definition of search in general or enterprise search in particular. I have documented the shift in terminology used by vendors of information retrieval and content processing systems. You can see the lengths here to which some organizations go to avoid using the word “search”, which has been devalued and overburdened in the last three or four years. The issue of definitions becomes quite important, but I suppose in the quest for revenue, providing certification in a discipline without boundaries fulfills some folks’s ambitions for revenue and influence.

links for 2009-04-01

Posted in LinkBlog by Staut on the April 1st, 2009
  • Google's semantic search will lead to more relevant results. It makes search smarter, understanding associations and concepts related to search terms so that a user can search with words typically used in conversations. It will eliminate low quality page links and Web sites from search

  • Plain Old Search Results

    Let us consider the ubiquitous search result. Sometime around, oh 1994, the search result made its debut with the Web search engines Lycos, InfoSeek, Excite, and Alta Vista. A user would input words that the search engine would compare to an index of the words in Web pages (or “documents” in industry parlance), generate a list of documents that matched the user’s inputted words, relevance rank the document list with a secret formula, and then present the list to the user to browse along with a little summary of each document. The list of relevance-ranked, summarized documents - when translated into an HTML page and delivered to the user’s browser - constituted search results as the search engine industry conceived them in 1994, or as I like to call them, plain old search results.


. 2009 Medical Weblog adult downloads