Inktomi: Difference between revisions

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'''Inktomi''' was created by Eric Brewer, who was an assistant professors of computer science at University College of Berkeley and Paul Gauthier, who was a graduate student of the same college. The project was initially funded by the U.S. government's Advanced Research Projects Agency, but it became a commercial organisation in early 1996 and soon after it gained its first major customer with the HotBot search engine. Inktomi then became a commercial product. It then had its own highs and lows as losing the search partnership contract with Yahoo, AOL and Netscape Search. But in 2003 Inktomi, was acquired by Yahoo! World leading portals and now is a product of Yahoo.'''Inktomi'''s index size is approaching three billion documents, which is comparable to AllTheWeb and Google
'''Inktomi''' was created by Eric Brewer, who was an assistant professors of computer science at University College of Berkeley and Paul Gauthier, who was a graduate student of the same college. The project was initially funded by the U.S. government's Advanced Research Projects Agency, but it became a commercial organisation in early 1996 and soon after it gained its first major customer with the HotBot search engine. Inktomi then became a commercial product. It then had its own highs and lows as losing the search partnership contract with Yahoo, AOL and Netscape Search. But in 2003 Inktomi, was acquired by Yahoo! World leading portals and now is a product of Yahoo. Inktomi's index size is approaching three billion documents, which is comparable to AllTheWeb and Google


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Revision as of 04:49, 9 June 2005

Inktomi was created by Eric Brewer, who was an assistant professors of computer science at University College of Berkeley and Paul Gauthier, who was a graduate student of the same college. The project was initially funded by the U.S. government's Advanced Research Projects Agency, but it became a commercial organisation in early 1996 and soon after it gained its first major customer with the HotBot search engine. Inktomi then became a commercial product. It then had its own highs and lows as losing the search partnership contract with Yahoo, AOL and Netscape Search. But in 2003 Inktomi, was acquired by Yahoo! World leading portals and now is a product of Yahoo. Inktomi's index size is approaching three billion documents, which is comparable to AllTheWeb and Google

A spirit in the Lakota/Dakota Native American mythology, often identified by a Spider or a Coyote.