knuru - home. From the website:
Using short descriptive sentences, you can find deeply relevant business information from top-tier academic and institutional sources that you might not otherwise have access to. Results are shown as contextualized summaries that you can quickly browse without having to click through to any outbound links, saving you time and letting you put your effort toward what's really important - making decisions.
The "blurb" makes it sound wonderful - the reality, in my opinion, is rather less than glossy. I'd be interested in your opinion on this one. Is it worth watching to see if it gets better?
Posted by: Hazel | May 01, 2007 at 04:51 PM
I discovered this knuru service about a month ago and have been using it frequently since. I would not describe it as a search engine in the traditional sense and it certainly makes no claims to have all information from all sources. It is a very specific service combining a certain amount of business school reseach and a very comprehensive database of news sources. No more than that. You will not find general web pages or other web sites. I'm using the service to help compile business presentations where I need fast and trustable information and data. It's still early days yet for this company and I am watching it with interest to see how it develops.
Posted by: Peter Walsh | May 03, 2007 at 11:52 AM
I like the instant summaries knuru creates in response to the search query. I'm researching on Asian economic development for a number of projects and this service cuts down on my workload substantially. I find sometimes that the extract (which seems to be dynamically created?) is good to the extent that I don't always have to read the full original article or paper. The news service is great - but I have to agree with Hazel in that this is not a source for everything. It seems very business and economics focused.
Posted by: Mary Holtzer | May 09, 2007 at 10:56 PM