DocumentCode
1060207
Title
Multimedia search: ready or not?
Author
Goth, Greg
Volume
5
Issue
7
fYear
2004
fDate
6/26/1905 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
2
Abstract
America Online (AOL) bought the Seattle-based multimedia search engine Singingfish (www.singingfish.com) from global media and entertainment conglomerate Thomson for an undisclosed sum. However, whether the purchase marked the immediate beginning of the mainstream era for nontext-based search or was instead a long-term gamble in a market still getting used to the intricacies of text-based engines such as Google, remains an open question. From the researchers developing new speech, video, and image search software to workers encoding multimedia files for search engine indexes, industry observers say the learning curve may be steep.
Keywords
Internet; information retrieval; multimedia computing; search engines; America Online; Google; Seattle-based multimedia search engine; Singingfish; Thomson; image search software; multimedia file encoding; multimedia search; nontext-based search; search engine index; speech search software; text-based engine; video search software; Advertising; Computer industry; Humans; Image coding; Indexing; Microphones; Multimedia systems; Search engines; Speech recognition; Technology management; 65; audio search technology; image search technology; multimedia searches; non-text-based search;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Distributed Systems Online, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1541-4922
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MDSO.2004.14
Filename
1323037
Link To Document