Distributed search engine

A distributed search engine is a search engine where there is no central server. Unlike traditional centralized search engines, work such as crawling, data mining, indexing, and query processing is distributed among several peers in a decentralized manner where there is no single point of control.

History

InfraSearch

In April 2000 several programmers (including Gene Kan, Steve Waterhouse) built a prototype P2P web search engine based on Gnutella called InfraSearch. The technology was later acquired by Sun Microsystems and incorporated into the JXTA project.[1] It was meant to run inside the participating websites' databases creating a P2P network that could be accessed through the InfraSearch website.[2][3][4]

Opencola

On May 31, 2000 Steelbridge Inc. announced development of OpenCOLA a collaborative distributive open source search engine.[5] It runs on the user's computer and crawls the web pages and links the user puts in their opencola folder and shares resulting index over its P2P network.[6]

YaCy

On December 15, 2003 Michael Christen announced development of a P2P-based search engine, eventually named YaCy, on the heise online forums.[7][8]

FAROO

In February 2001 Wolf Garbe published an idea of a peer-to-peer search engine,[9] started the Faroo prototype in 2004,[10] and released it in 2005.[11][12]

gollark: As a somewhat more rule-abiding person I mostly don't, although the cost/benefit probably does come out in favour.
gollark: Yes. Quite a lot of people use them anyway and just deal with them being confiscated occasionally.
gollark: Also, I can have internet access all day - my school foolishly banned use of phones during lunch break (not just while eating, during the entire 1 hour 30 minute break).
gollark: I do less pointless busywork, less work generally, have a more comfortable home environment to work in, get to type things instead of foolish "writing", and don't have a 45 minute commute to school, which is all nice.
gollark: I quite like it!

See also

References

  1. Justin Hibbard. "Can peer-to-peer grow up?". Red Herring.
  2. Simon Foust. "Move Over Yahoo, Here Comes InfraSearch". Dmusic. Archived from the original on 2000-10-13.
  3. Sean M. Dugan. "Peer-to-peer networking is poised to revolutionize the Internet once again". InfoWorld. Archived from the original on 2000-10-18.
  4. John Borland. "Napster-like technology takes Web search to new level". Cnet.
  5. David Akin. "Software launched with a little pop". Financial Post.
  6. Paul Heltzel. "OpenCola-Have Some Code and a Smile". Technology Review.
  7. "YaCy: News". Archived from the original on 2005-11-24.
  8. Michael Christen. "Ich entwickle eine P2P-basierende Suchmaschine. Wer macht mit?". heise online.
  9. Wolf Garbe. "BINGOOO - Die Transformation des World Wide Web zur virtuellen Datenbank" (in German). Wirtschaftinformatik. Archived from the original on 2014-02-02. Retrieved 2010-12-21. ... Wir setzen dem das Konzept einer verteilten Peer-to-Peer-Suchmaschine entgegen [We counter with the concept of a distributed peer-to-peer search engine] ...
  10. Bernard Lunn. "Technical Q&A With FAROO Founder". ReadWriteWeb. Archived from the original on 2011-02-14. ... When I started to work on the first prototype in 2004 ...
  11. "FAROO: History". Archived from the original on 2008-03-22.
  12. "Revisited: Deriving crawler start points from visited pages by monitoring HTTP traffic". Faroo.
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