Vivisimo

Vivisimo was a privately held technology company in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, specialising in the development of computer search engines. The company was acquired[1] by IBM in May 2012 and is now branded as IBM Watson Explorer, a product of the IBM Watson Group. Vivisimo's public web search engine Clusty was a metasearch engine with document clustering; it was sold to Yippy, Inc. in 2010.

Vivisimo, an IBM Company
IndustryInternet
FoundedPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
June 21, 2000
HeadquartersPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
ProductsVivisimo Velocity Search Platform

Vivisimo specialized in federated search and document clustering. Clustering divides the results of a search for "cell" into groups including "biology", "battery", and "prison".

Vivisimo software supported both structured and unstructured information.

History

Vivisimo was founded in 2000 by three computer science researchers at Carnegie Mellon University: Chris Palmer, Jerome Pesenti, and Raul Valdes-Perez. The name was taken from the Spanish superlative adjective vivĂ­simo meaning "very lively" or "very clever."

In October 2008, Vivisimo was awarded the contract to power the search portion of FirstGov.gov (now called USA.gov), the official web portal of the United States federal government.[2]

In 2012, IBM acquired Vivisimo to boost its Big Data Analytics capabilities .[1][3][4][5]

Products

Velocity was sold as an installed or hosted application to enterprises, governments, and OEMs. With Vivisimo providing additional professional services.

Velocity's social search features allowed users to contribute to organizational content by tagging, voting, annotating and sharing search results. The contributions are instantly indexed in new searches.

gollark: Discord has less room to try and blare outrage bait at you, since it just directly shows what other users send, in real time.
gollark: There are better and worse kinds.
gollark: If you were designing a language specifically around time travel I guess you would want to split out the objective and subjective tenses. Hmm.
gollark: It's demonstrating that you can describe time travel fine without a 1000-page manual.
gollark: https://qntm.org/streetmentioner

References

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