Fortunately, I had been devouring the work of two brilliant minds in the fields of computer science and network theory: JonKleinberg and Duncan Watts, who I've actually come to know personally all these years later.
Members of the Clever team read like a "who's who" of web search including JonKleinberg, Soumen Chakrabarti, and Prabhakar Raghavan who is now the head of Yahoo Research It features an article by Karen Schneider, the director of the Librarians...
JonKleinberg and the IBM Clever team. Take a look at this paper by Kleinberg and the Clever team. Kleinberg's home page yields even more interesting reading. Battelle interviews Kleinberg here. The Birth of Google at Wired, spotted
via Google...
But then search researcher JonKleinberg discovered what he termed "the abundance problem. As a searcher or search engine optimization specialist, do you really need to understand the algorithms and technologies that power search engines?
But then search researcher JonKleinberg discovered what he termed "the abundance problem. As a searcher or search engine optimization specialist, do you really need to understand the algorithms and technologies that power search engines?
Yes, the Google Guys deserve plenty of credit but so do JonKleinberg, Eugene Garfield, and others. 2005 will get underway with something we saw a lot of in 2004, media attention for Google. At the moment, the company is scheduled to profiled in a...
It's also mentioned in this article by the IBM CLEVER team (which preceded Google) that included JonKleinberg. With so much talk about PageRank, web link analysis, and citation linking these days, I think featuring a link to Jacso's interview with...
Here you can find JonKleinberg's groundbreaking "Authoritative Sources in a Hyperlinked Environment" paper that influenced Google and Teoma. Want to dive deep -- really deep -- into the technical literature about search engines?
Being JonKleinberg Searchblog, Feb.http://battellemedia.com/archives/000304.php Nice short update on happenings with JonKleinberg, whose work on search technology is widely cited and ideas considered by others.
JonKleinberg is the computer scientist instrumental in developing the HITS algorithm that profoundly influenced Google, Teoma, and other search engines. Hello Everyone-- It really has been an unprecedented month.
JonKleinberg is the computer scientist instrumental in developing the HITS algorithm that profoundly influenced Google, Teoma, and other search engines. The Search Engine Report is a monthly newsletter that covers developments with search engines...
JonKleinberg is the computer scientist instrumental in developing the HITS algorithm that profoundly influenced Google, Teoma, and other search engines. Hello Everyone-- It really has been an unprecedented month.
This term came out of link analysis work done by Cornell University researcher JonKleinberg and refers to a page that links outward to a variety of other pages on a particular topic. When I first wrote about Kleinberg's work back in 1998, I...
HITS stands for Hypertext-Induced Topic Search, and it was developed by Cornell University researcher JonKleinberg, while he was a visiting scientist at IBM's Almaden Research Center. Links have noise, and it's not always clear cut which pages are...
HITS stands for Hypertext-Induced Topic Search, and it was developed by Cornell University researcher JonKleinberg, while he was a visiting scientist at IBM's Almaden Research Center. Links have noise, and it's not always clear cut which pages are...
HITS stands for Hypertext-Induced Topic Search, and it was developed by Cornell University researcher JonKleinberg, while he was a visiting scientist at IBM's Almaden Research Center. Links have noise, and it's not always clear cut which pages are...
HITS stands for Hypertext-Induced Topic Search, and it was developed by Cornell University researcher JonKleinberg, while he was a visiting scientist at IBM's Almaden Research Center. Links have noise, and it's not always clear cut which pages are...
HITS stands for Hypertext-Induced Topic Search, and it was developed by Cornell University researcher JonKleinberg, while he was a visiting scientist at IBM's Almaden Research Center. Links have noise, and it's not always clear cut which pages are...