Whozat’s semantic engine faces off with Powerset’s and Hakia’s, wins 5-0

We have previously noted that Whozat’s semantic engine provides better search results than Google. This is not surprising, as Google is not a semantic engine. But what about the semantic engines that have been raising so much hoopla lately, after Powerset sold to Microsoft for a rumored $100MM? Here is a comparison between Whozat’s, Powerset’s and Hakia’s semantic engines for the first five queries I tried on them:

First I asked the 3 engines “What company has Silvia Moos started?”. Silvia is my mother, and she started two companies: Centralab and Klik Mental Fitness. I picked that search to be fair to Powerset, as I knew that the answer can be found in Wikipedia, and Powerset only searches Wikipedia. Powerset found no results:

powerset-what-company-has-silvia-moos-started.jpg

Hakia found one of the companies but failed to find the other:

hakia-what-company-has-silvia-moos-started.jpg

Whozat found both, and put them front and central in the concept cloud:

whozat-what-company-has-silvia-moos-started-w-wikipedia-mouseover.jpg

Then I went for a non people search (did you know that you can use Whozat’s powerful interactive semantic engine for regular, non-people searches simply by using the keyword field and leaving names blank?). I did a search I had done before: Whittier compost (looking for a company called Whittier that sells compost). Powerset did not return anything –not surprisingly, as Wikipedia is a much more limited source of information than the WWW:

powerset-whittier-compost.jpg

Hakia did better, but failed to return the site sought (Whittierfertilizer.com):

hakia-whittier-compost.jpg

Whozat yielded the desired site

whozat-whittier-compost.jpg

I asked Igor for a search in Russian, and he gave me Владимир Ленин. Powerset asked me if I meant something else:

powerset-lenin.jpg

Hakia gave results in Russian, but failed to make the connection to Lenin’s English name, even when asked Who is Владимир Ленин:

hakia-lenin.jpg

Whozat gave the answer, Vladimir Lenin, front and central in the concept cloud:

whozat-lenin.jpg

At that point I did an SQL query, but forgot the command to sort, and used sort by instead of order by. So I searched for the right command in all 3 engines. Powerset had no clue that sort by was related to order by:

powerset-sql-sort-by.jpg

Neither did Hakia, at least not on the top 3 results:

hakia-sql-sort-by.jpg

Whozat gave the desired result in its first link and in the concept cloud:

whozat-sql-sort-by.jpg

A final one: I searched for how to buy a train ticket from Los Angeles to Albuquerque. Powerset gave relevant information, but no link to the Amtrak site (again, limited to the Wikipedia corpus):

powerset-train-los-angeles-albuquerque.jpg

Hakia gave lots of links, but not one of them was to Amtrak’s site (not on the 1st page, at least):

hakia-train-los-angeles-albuquerque.jpg

Finally, Whozat gave the relevant Amtrak links on results 1, 2 and 3:

whozat-train-los-angeles-albuquerque.jpg

Combine that with the fact that Whozat’s semantic engine, unlike Powerset’s, is language-independent…

’nuff said. Lots of work left to do.  And it’s only 1 AM.

–Alex

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