Sponsorised links
This year
WordNet Search - 3.0
WordNet® is a large lexical database of English, developed under the direction of George A. Miller. Nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs are grouped into sets of cognitive synonyms (synsets), each expressing a distinct concept. Synsets are interlinked by means of conceptual-semantic and lexical relations. The resulting network of meaningfully related words and concepts can be navigated with the browser. WordNet is also freely and publicly available for download. WordNet's structure makes it a useful tool for computational linguistics and natural language processing.
2008
Sponsorised links
2007
2006
Happy Country - How Happy is the World Today?
Add the Happiness Banner to your Myspace, Blog, or Web Site! The banner always shows the current happiness level. To add the banner to your site, simply copy and paste the following HTML into your Myspace, Blog, or Web Page:
VivÃsimo // Vivisimo Clustering - automatic categorization and meta-search software
same company as Clusty
Boolgum : internet search engine, online directory, uk search engine
search engine and online directory for your request analyses with a dictionnay of synonyms, a price comparison chart, related search.
Clusty the Clustering Engine
metasearch engine, Clusty submits your query to a number of sources simultaneously--often including our own Vivísimo Velocity search engine, using our own crawls of Wikipedia, the New York Times, the Associated Press, and other special sources. By taking the average rank of each result from a number of search engines, Clusty provides a more reliable search that is immune to the quirks and vulnerabilities of one algorithm or another. This helps drop link spam lower in our results, and raise good results higher in the list. And by clustering your results, Clusty makes it easier for you to find the information you're looking for.
2005
About What\'s Related
From your Netscape browser you can access a list of pages also viewed by people who visited the page you're on! You can go directly to a related page by double clicking on a link in the "What's Related" sidebar (Netscape 6).
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