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I'm working on a premium research report regarding technologies classified as "the real-time web." I've spoken to 45+ companies in this space and am now writing up some of the most interesting as case studies. The report will be our 3rd we've published at http://ReadWriteWeb.com

Below is a draft write-up of Aardvark, vark.com, a company that provides an AI-powered social search service that I think is fascinating.

My question is this: If you could ask the Vark folks any question, what would it be? They are a remarkable team of engineers (Google, Yahoo, Hadoop) so I'm sure you can think of something interesting to ask them. I'm not a developer but I thought I could stir up some good technical questions here.

If I end up using your question in the report, I'll happily send you a copy of the whole report (20+ case studies, graphs, charts, etc.) as thanks. I'll also post the company's reply here below. More info about the report and my work is in my profile. I'll be posting other write-ups here as well.

Let me know what you think.

Thanks,

Marshall Kirkpatrick

http://readwriteweb.com

Aardvark and the Real-Time Web of People

Aardvark is a social search engine that combines artificial intelligence, natural language processing and presence data to create what the company calls "the real-time web of people." The end result is "a magical experience," CEO Max Ventilla says.

You can ask Aardvark any question and it will find a person in your extended social circles who knows about that topic and is available to answer at that moment. Aardvark facilitates these conversations through a very polite IM bot, an iPhone app with push notifications, the company's web site, via Twitter or by email.

Aardvark says that 90% of questions get answered in five minutes or less. Throughout our extensive use of the system and conversations with many other users, we've found the answers delivered are generally satisfactory or better. The system gets smarter the more you use it and Aardvark scores high on user experience, too.

"When users come in and have a magical experience," CEO Max Ventilla says, "that's more important than the info they get back, to know that there are people who would help you immeidately. This is social search as a compliment to web search. The billions of pages on the web are static data; that's just a fraction of what's available in peoples' heads."

Aardvark goes so far as to say in a blog post about the real-time web that, "What really matters is the increased accessibility of people online, not just information online."

Users are tagged with areas of interest or expertise by the friends that invite them to the system and then they add aditional tags on their own. Further information about what a person knows about is gleaned by analyzing a user's associated Facebook profile page or Twitter stream.

"Data gets stale, even your profile data," Ventilla says. "We want to keep that fresh, by taking advantage of all the data that's passing by. The things you're posting about [on other social sites] are things you have recent experience with. Being able to converse with someone who just had a learning experience ads a lot of relevance. Social graph and profile data built up over time, the fact that people are making that info available for building value with communication tools - that's a dramatic shift with the web."

In addition to user tags and social network profiles, Aardvark analyzes the text of inquiries to find related users to query and keeps track of response times and types. The service notes what vocabulary people use (including "off color" conversations), who likes little chats and who engages in extended conversation. It then pairs sets of users with questions and with answers that it believes will be compatible.

"This is a serendipity engine," Ventill says. "There's variability in peoples' user experience and we have to maximize the chance that something goes beautifully instead of bad. It's about designing a user experience to keep a conversation on the rails."

Founded in 2007 but just launched this year, Aardvark's got an all-star team of engineers from Google and Yahoo and high-profile investors. It's already cutting deals with major tech brands and the use-cases are just beginning to be explored. The Web 2.0 Summit had a dedicated Aardvark circle for attendees to answer eachothers' questions and Federated Media will soon roll out a campaign sponsored by Microsoft in which Aardvark will faciliate Q&A with relevant IT experts around the clock.

Filtering the flow of information from the real-time web is a concern that everyone touched by these technologies raises. Aardvark says it performs a filtering function by limiting the broadcast of a user's question to relevant people they are socially connected to.

"[With Aardvark] you have the ability to have a conversation," CEO Max Ventilla says. This is fundamentally different from other forms of real-time search.

Conversations are so easy to have on-demand with Aardvark that I once evoked and performed three extended, simultaneous, live interviews with topical experts around the world during a tech industry event, all through the Aardvark IM interface.

The primary contributions Aardvark makes to understanding the real-time web include:

  • leveraging presence data
  • communicating across platforms
  • emphasizing user experience
  • harvesting social data from 3rd party profiles
  • text analysis on the fly
  • mediating human interactions with machine intelligence
  • [sidebar: Questions Aardvark has answered well in testing.
  • Is there any good way to serve a butternut squash and a sweet potato in the same meal? I'm thinking maybe I should just do the squash. [I ended up making a great soup.]
  • What are some examples of publicly available real-time data still excluded from search after today's announcements by Bing and Google? [Best answer: commodities prices]
  • What's a good email address for Mozilla PR? [I should have had this already and it took one line of explanation, but a Mozilla employee gave me contact info for the head of PR there within minutes.]
  • I have 5 minutes to choose: what tech, business, news or art podcast should I load up to take on a walk with my dogs? [Best suggestion: Monocle Weekly]
  • What's in arm n hammer baking soda laundrey detrngnt and can I spread it on my carpet to vacuum up? [I would have been to embarrassed to ask this in other contexts, but Aardvark found just one person to hear my cry for help.]
  • Questions Aardvark has not answered well in testing.
    • What's a romantic ocean cabin rental near San Diego I might be able to get near new years? [No answer.]
    • What question should I ask the founder of blog talk radio podcast service in an interview? [A 15 year old gave me a generic question and I didn't resubmit.]
    • where can I get pizza delivered in North East Portland after 10pm? [To be fair, this may be an unanswerable question. I can't believe I bought a house in an area with such bad pizza coverage.]

    ]

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    Is this a press release or a question? – Tim Post Nov 3 at 6:29
    It's a question. The attached text is a draft profile I've written that I thought I'd add here for context. I'll add more context to the question up top. – Marshall Kirkpatrick Nov 3 at 6:31

    closed as spam by Quintin Robinson, Tim Post, Brian Rasmussen, OMG Ponies, Greg Hewgill Nov 3 at 6:30

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