Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

November 25, 2012

Complexificaton: Is ElasticSearch Making a Case for a Google Search Solution?

Filed under: ElasticSearch,Interface Research/Design,Search Interface,Searching — Patrick Durusau @ 10:15 am

Complexificaton: Is ElasticSearch Making a Case for a Google Search Solution? by Stephen Arnold.

From the post:

I don’t have any dealings with Google, the GOOG, or Googzilla (a word I coined in the years before the installation of the predator skeleton on the wizard zone campus). In the briefings I once endured about the GSA (Google speak for the Google Search Appliance), I recall three business principles imparted to me; to wit:

  1. Search is far too complicated. The Google business proposition was and is that the GSA and other Googley things are easy to install, maintain, use, and love.
  2. Information technology people in organizations can often be like a stuck brake on a sports car. The institutionalized approach to enterprise software drags down the performance of the organization information technology is supposed to serve.
  3. The enterprise search vendors are behind the curve.

Now the assertions from the 2004 salad days of Google are only partially correct today. As everyone with a colleague under 25 years of age knows, Google is the go to solution for information. A number of large companies have embraced Google’s all-knowing, paternalistic approach to digital information. However, others—many others, in fact—have not.

I won’t repeat Stephen’s barbs at ElasticSearch but his point applies to search interfaces and approaches in general.

Is your search application driving business towards simpler solutions? (If the simpler solution isn’t yours, isn’t that the wrong direction?)

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