Visit speed website Wadd's PR and Media blog home
May 25th, 2011 by Wadds

Answer engines and the future of maths education

Conrad Wolfram, managing director, Wolfram Research Europe was one of the highlights of the first morning at Thinking Digital at the Sage in Newcastle.

He said that he is frequently invited to speak at conferences on the future of search but that answers not search must be the future.

Wolfram Alpha is an answer engine developed by Wolfram Research that answers factual queries by computing the answer from structured data, rather than providing a list of web pages as a search engine would.

Wolfram cited real world problems that could be tackled given access to raw data. He said computational models should be used to make sense of data and identify potential cost savings by Governments.

Wolfram is a vocal critic of maths education in the UK and has called for greater use of information technology to enable students to understand and solve problems.

Enhanced by Zemanta
May 28th, 2010 by Wadds

David Siegel on the semantic web (and the temperature in Venice)

We’ve spent the last two decades creating and storing more and more information.

David Siegel author of the Power of Pull reckons that the computer generation has digitised more than 500 Exabytes (500 followed by 20 zeros) of data. Siegel was speaking at Thinking Digital yesterday.

“In five years time we’ll have generated more than 20 years that amount. We’re builder bigger and bigger electronic filing cabinets. We’re spending trillions of dollars replicating old systems,” said Siegel.

Without context data has limited value and requires human intervention.

Here’s an example. Ask Google “What’s the temperature in Venice”. The answer will be somewhere in the 1.4 million search results but you’ll have to search manually.

Now try Wolfram Alpha “What’s the temperature in Venice”. The single result that you’d expect is returned immediately. That’s because the data that the search engine searches has been marked-up semantically.

The semantic web is the unambiguous web where data has context because of the way it is marked-up.

During the next 30 years Siegel said that we’ll make a considerable leap in productivity because information on the web will be organised so that computers can understand its context and meaning.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
May 22nd, 2009 by Wadds

Wolfram Alpha on Speed

Inspired by BlogStorm’s post I’ve had a quick look at what Wolfram Alpha knows about the Speed domain. The answer is that there’s work to be done. Its got the host owner completely wrong (Loewy not Amazon.com – see Network Solutions’ domain directory) and the page visits at 4,400 are closer to our monthly stats, rather than daily, but the site visualisation is neat.

wwwspeedcommunicationscom-blogs-wadds-wolfram-alpha_1243010861832

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]