TechWeb - InformationWeek - Search engine expert Stephen Arnold believes the surge of interest in Cuil shows there's a huge pent-up demand for an alternative to Google. -- read full article
TechWeb - InformationWeek - Lightly populated areas are more prone to fostering online relationships because of travel constraints, a report from Gaebler Ventures suggests. -- read full article
TechWeb - InformationWeek - The service comes as automakers begin to embrace the Internet, starting with a wireless connection option on Chrysler models beginning next month. -- read full article
PC World - Readers try out a search engine named Cuil, debate whether Vista deserves a second chance, and mull over Guitar Hero's song list. -- read full article
USATODAY.com - The Internet is teeming with so much video that searching through it is becoming one of the biggest challenges on the Web. -- read full article
TechWeb - InformationWeek - The update features dual-monitor support, streamlined search capabilities and localized image correction. -- read full article
PC World - New search engine Cuil seems to be off to a rocky start, associating some unrelated logos and photos with other content. -- read full article
PC World - The European Environmental Agency and Microsoft have built a Web portal showing the water quality ranking for 21,000 sites... -- read full article
PC Magazine - If you are going to roll out a new search engine, please try to make one that has more going for it than a silly name and cheap, misleading PR. -- read full article
NewsFactor - The latest search war is being touted as a David and Goliath battle. In modern-day terms, that means Cuil versus Google. -- read full article
PC Magazine - Cuil isn't quite a Google killer yet, but give it a while and it could find a sizable user base. The new search engine launched Sunday night, with an index allegedly three times that of Google. -- read full article
TechWeb - InformationWeek - Cuil is offering a new search service that the company claims can index, faster and more cheaply, a far larger portion of the Web than Google. -- read full article