There are still a lot of blemishes on Internet search engines even if it seems quite fascinating. They provide us too many facts that do not really help us.

No one would usually put themselves in the inconvenience of checking over most of the pages found by Google. There are some technologies that could put in order and make innovations on our styles in checking on the Internet for details.

At a glimpse, search results are automatically being assessed and grouped into class by present software which also provides better details than the ordinary textual catalog. One of the founders of an Internet establishment says they liven up the otherwise excruciating procedure of searching for information which speedily puts search results into clickable categories.

Its company in Pittsburgh distributes this automation to companies and intelligence agencies and also suggests free web searches at its site. If the internet is to be compared to an extremely large bookstore where books are piled in no arrangement on the ground, then our company is a lot like a high speed librarian who sensibly arranges books according to titles.

Regard it as a Dewey Decimal system of the century that is designed to finish the hassle of excess details. Different from libraries, the establishment in no way makes use of predefined categories.

Its software determines them on the fly, depending on the search results. Using a method proven to work across different languages, the filing happens with both statistical and linguistic analysis.

A similar procedure enables a downloadable program in a software to sort not just the search results into categories but to also holistically trace out the results and showcase these in attractive circles coming in different hues.

Within each circle, subcategories appear as more circles that can be clicked on and zoomed in on. Knowing how to use this only takes a little time. But then it can quickly make clear the value of its nonlinear approach.

An example is when you init
ially wanted to known about accommodations in France, you find yourself stuck on information about Paris Hilton. However, while Google may give you everything you need to find filed under regional Europe travel and tourism as well as hotel accommodation, it is also programmed to hit you with tons of viewed pages with links on the heiress Paris Hilton as well as her notorious exploits. The most accepted pages are placed above the others because Google's engine is broadly based on the number of sites linked to them.

But then if you opted to explore using another program, you will soon be bombarded by circles that will catalog all the pertinent categories apart from information on Paris Hilton since you will also find all the unnecessary comments, reviews, maps and online booking venues that might be suitable for people who want to get booked in a Hilton hotel in Paris after which have been stuck underneath the pile of websites ranked by Google. Now you can be led not to the sites only for Internet gawkers but to the sites you really need.

Google will not be replaced by the $49 advanced succeeding version that became a hit last year which was initiated and released by a company proudly composed of only 15 people. It is not in itself a search engine, it only analyzes and illustrates search engines' results.

For example, this program can categorize and map files on your hard drive arranging them by content, not by the folders you happened to put them in. Searching the web using this joins together results from six search engines like Yahoo and MSN.

By the year 2004, the corporation aims to release about two dozen downloadable plug ins that will set its colored circles free on a more broad assortment of catalogs, which includes the Library of Congress, news Web sites and Google itself. The ability to search anything is now in our hands.
This Google plug in is basically a tool that will test the waters while Google along with the other company will see how well it functions and only after will they talk if they can jointly develop a service. Google spokesman declined to comment on this. Neither was he able to reveal if Google would boost its existing services with visualization and categorization techniques.