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Past Events

Forum on Quaero

Society of the Query conference

  • Upcoming Event

  • Recent Comments

    • Berliner Gazette: Suchen, Spielen, Lernen by Konrad Becker :: Society of the Query on Deep Search II: Vienna, May 28 2010
    • Geert Lovink in NRC Next :: Institute of Network Cultures Blog on NYU graduate class goes ‘A week without Google’
    • Geert Lovink in NRC Next :: Society of the Query on NYU graduate class goes ‘A week without Google’
    • Reza Sardeha on Florian Cramer on “Why Semantic Search is Flawed”
    • beaver on The Anti-Googlization: How Alternative Search Engines Find Their Way on the Web
  • Recent Posts

    • Ying Zhu and Bruce Robinson on Critical Masses, Commerce, and Shifting State-Society Relations in China
    • Berliner Gazette: Suchen, Spielen, Lernen by Konrad Becker
    • F.A.T. Lab topic week: Fuck Google
    • Conrad Wolfram on Information, Computation and the New Era of Knowledge
    • Geert Lovink in NRC Next
  • del.icio.us

    • Qi Lu (Microsoft Online Services Division) and Tim O'Reilly (O'Reilly Media, Inc.)
      Interesting video with a first-look at the Bing-Twitter integration, making Twitter searchable and ranking the tweets and tweeders.
    • Googled: The End of the World as We Know It
      Using Google as a stand-in for the digital revolution, Auletta takes readers inside Google's closed-door meetings and paints portraits of Google's notoriously private founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, as well as those who work with-and against-them. In his narrative, Auletta provides the fullest account ever told of Google's rise, shares the "secret sauce" of Google's success, and shows why the worlds of "new" and "old" media often communicate as if residents of different planets.
    • Open Call: Shadow Search
      Pertaining to the research we are conducting at n.e.w.s. in our forthcoming book, it is very important to be able to find art and artists that reflect the spirit of the query rather than just its literal content. We want to explore the use of natural-language search algorithms that are able to find people and activities that embody the self-understanding of the kind of art we are seeking without specifically using the word art or a related vocabulary. In particular this search engine would allow prospectors in the world of information and databases to discover ‘shadow art activities’ that are partially hidden, off-the-radar, stealthy.
  • #sotq on Twitter