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Dr. Franziska Brantner on LinkedIn: #teamrobert | 52 comments
Dr. Franziska Brantner on LinkedIn: #teamrobert | 52 comments
Dieses Wochenende war zweifellos eines der bewegendsten meines Lebens. Seit Samstag habe ich die Ehre, Bundesvorsitzende der Partei zu sein, fĂŒr die ich seit
 | 52 comments on LinkedIn
·linkedin.com·
Dr. Franziska Brantner on LinkedIn: #teamrobert | 52 comments
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The startup trying to turn the web into a database | MIT Technology Review

flip.it A startup called Exa is pitching a new spin on generative search. It uses the tech behind large language models to return lists of results that it claims are more on point than those from its rivals, including Google and OpenAI. The aim is to turn the internet’s vast and chaotic tangle of web pages into a lookup table, where queries return specific, precise results.

Exa already provides its search engine as a back-end service to companies that want to build their own applications on top of it. Today it is launching the first consumer version of that search engine, called Websets.

Related Story The ChatGPT-fueled battle for search is bigger than Microsoft or Google A frenzy of activity from tech giants and startups alike is reshaping what people want from search—for better or worse.

“The web is a collection of data, but it’s a mess," says Exa cofounder and CEO Will Bryk. "There's a Joe Rogan video over here, an Atlantic article over there. There's no organization. But the dream is for the web to feel like a database.”

Websets is aimed at power users who need to look for things that other search engines aren’t great at finding, such as types of people or companies. Ask it for “startups making futuristic hardware” and you get a list of specific companies hundreds long rather than hit-or-miss links to web pages that mention those terms. Google can’t do that, says Bryk: “There’s a lot of valuable use cases for investors or recruiters or really anyone who wants any sort of data set from the web.”

Things have moved fast since MIT Technology Review broke the news in 2021 that Google researchers were exploring the use of large language models in a new kind of search engine. The idea soon attracted fierce critics. But tech companies took little notice. Three years on, giants like Google and Microsoft jostle with a raft of buzzy newcomers like Perplexity and OpenAI, which launched ChatGPT Search in October, for a piece of this hot new trend.

Exa isn’t (yet) trying to out-do any of those companies. Instead, it’s proposing something new. Most other search firms wrap large language models around existing search engines, using the models to analyze a user’s query and then summarize the results. But the search engines themselves haven’t changed much. Perplexity still directs its queries to Google Search or Bing, for example. Think of today’s AI search engines as sandwiches with fresh bread but stale filling.

Exa provides users with familiar lists of links but uses the tech behind large language models to reinvent how search itself is done. Here’s the basic idea: Google works by crawling the web and building a vast index of keywords that then get matched to users’ queries. Exa crawls the web and encodes the contents of web pages into a format known as embeddings, which can be processed by large language models.

Embeddings turn words into numbers in such a way that words with similar meanings become numbers with similar values. In effect, this lets Exa capture the meaning of text on web pages, not just the keywords.

A screenshot of Websets showing results for the search: "companies; startups; US-based; healthcare focus; technical co-founder" Large language models use embeddings to predict the next words in a sentence. Exa’s search engine predicts the next link. Type “startups making futuristic hardware” and the model will come up with (real) links that might follow that phrase.

Exa’s approach comes at cost, however. Encoding pages rather than indexing keywords is slow and expensive. Exa has encoded some billion web pages, says Bryk. That’s tiny next to Google, which has indexed around a trillion. But Bryk doesn’t see this as a problem: “You don’t have to embed the whole web to be useful,” he says. (Fun fact: “exa” means a 1 followed by 18 0s and “googol” means a 1 followed by 100 0s.)

Websets is very slow at returning results. A search can sometimes take several minutes. But Bryk claims it’s worth it. “A lot of our customers started to ask for, like, thousands of results, or tens of thousands,” he says. “And they were okay with going to get a cup of coffee and coming back to a huge list.”

Related Story Why Google’s AI Overviews gets things wrong Google’s new AI search feature is a mess. So why is it telling us to eat rocks and gluey pizza, and can it be fixed?

“I find Exa most useful when I don't know exactly what I’m looking for,” says Andrew Gao, a computer science student at Stanford Univesrsity who has used the search engine. “For instance, the query ‘an interesting blog post on LLMs in finance’ works better on Exa than Perplexity.” But they’re good at different things, he says: “I use both for different purposes.”

“I think embeddings are a great way to represent entities like real-world people, places, and things,” says Mike Tung, CEO of Diffbot, a company using knowledge graphs to build yet another kind of search engine. But he notes that you lose a lot of information if you try to embed whole sentences or pages of text: “Representing War and Peace as a single embedding would lose nearly all of the specific events that happened in that story, leaving just a general sense of its genre and period.”

Bryk acknowledges that Exa is a work in progress. He points to other limitations, too. Exa is not as good as rival search engines if you just want to look up a single piece of information, such as the name of Taylor Swift’s boyfriend or who Will Bryk is: “It’ll give a lot of Polish-sounding people, because my last name is Polish and embeddings are bad at matching exact keywords,” he says.

For now Exa gets around this by throwing keywords back into the mix when they’re needed. But Bryk is bullish: “We’re covering up the gaps in the embedding method until the embedding method gets so good that we don’t need to cover up the gaps.”

Deep Dive Artificial intelligence This AI-generated version of Minecraft may represent the future of real-time video generation The game was created from clips and keyboard inputs alone, as a demo for real-time interactive video generation.

By Scott J Mulliganarchive page AI can now create a replica of your personality A two-hour interview is enough to accurately capture your values and preferences, according to new research from Stanford and Google DeepMind.

By James O'Donnellarchive page Introducing: The AI Hype Index Everything you need to know about the state of AI.

By The Editorsarchive page Google DeepMind has a new way to look inside an AI’s “mind” Autoencoders are letting us peer into the black box of artificial intelligence. They could help us create AI that is better understood, and more easily controlled.

By Scott J Mulliganarchive page Stay connected Illustration by Rose Wong Get the latest updates from MIT Technology Review Discover special offers, top stories, upcoming events, and more.

·flip.it·
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Why isn’t Britain a continent?
Why isn’t Britain a continent?
Claire Jordan's answer: It’s not the size: New Zealand is now considered to be its own continent, Zealandia. It’s the ocean floor. A continent is meant to have a continental shelf around it, dropping off to deep water. Yes, this isn’t always followed consistently. Europe and Asia are really one ...
·quora.com·
Why isn’t Britain a continent?
DIW Berlin - German Institute for Economic Research
DIW Berlin - German Institute for Economic Research
DIW Berlin - German Institute for Economic Research | 21,096 followers on LinkedIn. Das DIW Berlin ist seit 1925 eines der fĂŒhrenden Wirtschaftsforschungsinstitute in Deutschland. | The German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin) is one of the leading economic research instituts in Germany. Its core mandates are applied economic research and economic policy as well as provision of research infrastructure. As an independent non-profit institution, DIW Berlin is committed to serving the common good.
·linkedin.com·
DIW Berlin - German Institute for Economic Research
In aller KĂŒrze
In aller KĂŒrze
In aller KĂŒrze | 11,607 followers on LinkedIn. Politik - kurz, knapp & klar kommuniziert. Eine Marke von THE GOODFORCES. | Wir fassen tagesaktuelle Politik kurz und knapp zusammen.
·linkedin.com·
In aller KĂŒrze
Peter Jelinek on LinkedIn: In Tiflis 🇬đŸ‡Ș kĂ€mpfen die Menschen derzeit fĂŒr eine Zukunft in der
 | 19 comments
Peter Jelinek on LinkedIn: In Tiflis 🇬đŸ‡Ș kĂ€mpfen die Menschen derzeit fĂŒr eine Zukunft in der
 | 19 comments
In Tiflis 🇬đŸ‡Ș kĂ€mpfen die Menschen derzeit fĂŒr eine Zukunft in der EuropĂ€ischen Union und damit fĂŒr eine demokratische Freiheit, die Putin ihnen verwehren
 | 19 comments on LinkedIn
·linkedin.com·
Peter Jelinek on LinkedIn: In Tiflis 🇬đŸ‡Ș kĂ€mpfen die Menschen derzeit fĂŒr eine Zukunft in der
 | 19 comments
Dr. Franziska Brantner on LinkedIn: Wir sorgen dafĂŒr, dass es fĂŒr alle bezahlbar bleibt. Darum geht es
 | 14 comments
Dr. Franziska Brantner on LinkedIn: Wir sorgen dafĂŒr, dass es fĂŒr alle bezahlbar bleibt. Darum geht es
 | 14 comments
Wir sorgen dafĂŒr, dass es fĂŒr alle bezahlbar bleibt. Darum geht es letztlich: Eine vernĂŒnftige Politik, die Zusagen einhĂ€lt und Planbarkeit fĂŒr alle
 | 14 comments on LinkedIn
·linkedin.com·
Dr. Franziska Brantner on LinkedIn: Wir sorgen dafĂŒr, dass es fĂŒr alle bezahlbar bleibt. Darum geht es
 | 14 comments
why tiktok is polluting western culture
why tiktok is polluting western culture
TikTok is perceived as polluting Western culture in several ways: 1. Overconsumption and Environmental Impact: TikTok promotes fast fashion and...
·perplexity.ai·
why tiktok is polluting western culture
How Perplexity AI is Transforming Search: Recent Innovations, Strategic Partnerships, and Market Advancements in 2024
How Perplexity AI is Transforming Search: Recent Innovations, Strategic Partnerships, and Market Advancements in 2024
Founded in 2022, Perplexity AI has quickly emerged as a significant player in artificial intelligence, particularly in AI-driven search technologies. With a strong focus on innovation and user-centric features, the company has introduced groundbreaking advancements while securing notable investments to expand its operations. Recent developments in Perplexity AI's portfolio highlight its commitment to redefining how users interact with search engines and AI technologies. One of Perplexity AI's most notable releases in 2024 is its suite of AI-powered shopping features aimed at streamlining the online shopping experience. Among these features, “Product Cards” stand out for their ability to display detailed product
·flip.it·
How Perplexity AI is Transforming Search: Recent Innovations, Strategic Partnerships, and Market Advancements in 2024
Hearing Aids: “The way I use them while listening to music, they don’t sound like hearing aids. They just sound like the ears I used to have”: Session ace Tim Pierce on dealing with hearing loss as a pro musician and how hearing aids changed his life
Hearing Aids: “The way I use them while listening to music, they don’t sound like hearing aids. They just sound like the ears I used to have”: Session ace Tim Pierce on dealing with hearing loss as a pro musician and how hearing aids changed his life
Pierce says years of high stage and studio volumes had taken their toll but Widex SmartRIC hearing aids have restored his hearing, helping him in conversation and when dialling in a tone
·flip.it·
Hearing Aids: “The way I use them while listening to music, they don’t sound like hearing aids. They just sound like the ears I used to have”: Session ace Tim Pierce on dealing with hearing loss as a pro musician and how hearing aids changed his life
Aktuelle Wahl-Umfragen: Wie schneiden die Parteien in Deutschland derzeit ab? (28.11.2024)
Aktuelle Wahl-Umfragen: Wie schneiden die Parteien in Deutschland derzeit ab? (28.11.2024)
Eigentlich hĂ€tte die nĂ€chste Bundestagswahl im September 2025 stattfinden sollen. Nach dem Bruch der Ampel soll die Wahl jetzt vorgezogen werden. Aber wie wĂŒrden die BĂŒrgerinnen und BĂŒrger sich jetzt entscheiden? Ein laufend aktualisierter Überblick ĂŒber die Antworten auf die Sonntagsfrage der Meinungsforschungsinstitute.
·rnd.de·
Aktuelle Wahl-Umfragen: Wie schneiden die Parteien in Deutschland derzeit ab? (28.11.2024)