For those of you who missed it, there is a new website called WolframAlpha, which was prophesized to be the Google killer, launched last Thursday. While the hype is mostly hot air, there are some important reasons why we should take note to this new service.
WolframAlpha is a computational engine. What this means is that it is a database of billions of pieces of information, along with thousands of formulas and models to analyze this data. Rather than having preprogrammed answers to quiries, it can actually create answers to unposed questions on the spot. For instance, you can type in “the weather in Bogotá on Obama’s date of birth.” Low and behold, it was 53 degrees and overcast. Similarly, it can complete complex calculations for engineering, physics, calculus, genetics, and more, all in less than a second.
What it’s not: This is not a Google Killer, it has a different business model and it is a completely different technology. While Google helps users to find websites based on content, WolframAlpha is completely in-house, as all the computations and information is done on their super-computer clusters. Furthermore, WolframAlpha is probably not useful to 80% of computer users, as most of use don’t have a need for indepth computation at a moment’s notice.
What it is: WolframAlpha is the beginning of a new technology that may revolution information dissemination in the coming years. As the technology becomes more concise with more data and better language-to-command, this is nothing short of revolutionary. Once adapted to include information regarding items of popular culture, it would become a tool of daily use for everyone with a computer and an internet connection.