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Dogpile: Engines
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Bellevue, Washington - (Website Hosting Directory) - January 4, 2006 - Metasearch engine company, Dogpile.com, is celebrating its 10th birthday by looking back at some of the other best and worst combinations that people have attempted over the years. Sometimes these combinations work, and sometimes they go horribly wrong. Today Dogpile.com is celebrating both.
The Dogpile search interface takes a single line for a query and processes it so that you will get the maximum benefit from your search. Currently twenty five search engines are supported. They are:
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Throughout 2005, Dogpile will continue to add a variety of content sources not previously available through Web search engines. These include specialized information on specific product categories, yellow pages content, movies, entertainment and more.
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office1 Currently, the two most popular sources of keyword data are Wordtracker, whose statistics come primarily from use of the meta-search engine Dogpile (which has ~1% of the share of searches performed online) and Overture (recently re-branded as Yahoo! Search Marketing), which offers data collected from searches performed on Yahoo!'s engine (with a 22-28% share). While neither's data is flawless or entirely accurate, both provide good methods for measuring comparative numbers. For example, while Overture and Wordtracker may disagree on numbers and say that "red bicycles" gets 240 vs. 380 searches per day (across all engines), both will generally indicate that this is a more popular term than "scarlet bicycles", "maroon bicycles", or even "blue bicycles."
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January 2000 group photo Singingfish was an audio/video search engine that powered audio video search for Windows Media Player[1],[2], WindowsMedia.com, RealOne/RealPlayer,[2], Real Guide[3], AOL Search, Dogpile, Metacrawler[4] and Singingfish.com, among others. Launched in 2000, it was one of the earliest and longest lived search engines dedicated to multimedia content. Acquired in 2003 by AOL[5], it was slowly folded into the AOL search offerings and as of February 2007 has ceased to exist as a separate service.
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