Let's face it: Nothing beats Google when it comes to Web searches, but its actual search-result pages could use some work. Specifically, it's not always easy to tell if you've found what you're ...
Mountain View based SearchMe has been around since 2005 and has raised $31 million from Sequoia, DAG Ventures and Lehman Brothers. But until last weekend when I met founders Randy Adams and John ...
An Update to our post yesterday about Sequoia-funded search startup SearchMe. The company needs a new round of financing or a quick acquisition to stay online, but so far neither are happening. CEO ...
New iPhone app Searchme brings its desktop sibling's Cover-Flow-style Web search to the small screen. It's fun and it works great. Josh Lowensohn Former Senior Writer Josh Lowensohn joined CNET in ...
Regarding how to display the search results, each company is still seeking various ways to show it, from the point where it keeps the necessary minimum information to the place where the related ...
In this segment of Lessons Learned, Bambi Francisco interviewed Randy Adams, CEO of SearchMe, a site that turns browsing the Web into the same experience as flipping through a magazine. Adams, who ...
The search engine company SearchMe has launched a new service, Wikiseek, which indexes and searches the contents of Wikipedia and those sites which are referenced within Wikipedia. Though not ...
Remember Searchme, the search engine that uses giant, scrolling thumbnails to display search results? It borrows heavily from Apple's Cover Flow concept, so it seems only natural that it should make ...
SearchMe is a visual search engine that offers category refinements to help remove some of the opacity around broad queries. Users searching for "cornish hens," for example, can refine their search by ...
Web search engine Searchme displays search results using the three-dimensional Cover Flow interface you've come to know and love in iTunes and on your iPod for web pages. Searchme also guesses related ...
The experience of using a search engine hasn't changed in about ten years. In the mid 90s, Yahoo! was the best because they had a simple ontology-based category search. It was all text links and the ...