Search engine Blinkx to challenge GoogleAugust 31, 2004 Blinkx is growing rapidly. Since its low-key launch at the end of July, some 800,000 people have downloaded the technology. Hundreds of thousands more are probably using it after downloading Blinkx from other websites or from CDs cover-mounted on magazines. Like Google in its early days, the number of users is multiplying fast. There is huge interest from venture capitalists eager to invest and grab a share of what could be the next hi-tech money-spinner. The technology the Blinkx team has developed originated from UK software company Autonomy, where her co-founder 26-year-old Cambridge graduate Suranga Chandratillake used to work. The difference between Blinkx and other search engines is that it does not just search the web, it combs everything from personal emails on your desktop through to video clips from TV stations such as the BBC. It is activated by the user asking it to carry out a search on a topic. But, if the user begins writing on a subject, it will automatically start a search. 'I think technology should take care of all the key words and be able to bring all the information to us before we ask,' says Rittweger. 'This is about technology serving us.' Blinkx, which is run from London and San Francisco, started life with just £2m of investment from business angels. Raising this cash was 'not really hard', says Kathy Rittweger, Blinkx's founder. 'Business angels are much more visionary and much more in favour of backing people and ideas.' But the company is on the brink of making a quantum leap. Less than three months ago an American technology writer was so enthused that he posted an exuberant piece about it on the internet. Within hours news had spread through the US venture capital industry and Rittweger found herself targeted by potential investors with very deep pockets. The recent Google float made billionaires of the founders, but Rittweger says she is 'in this to build a business and not to make money'. Her immediate ambition is to right what she considers to be a terrible wrong. During a meeting with an American analyst in San Francisco, she was told that she was only the fifth woman to walk through his door in five years. 'It is amazing,' said Rittweger. 'Now it is redemption time.' If her ambition matches her technology, she is likely to become a role model for the next generation of entrepreneurs. Source: This is London Read Serge Thibodeau's daily blogs on search engines at Serge Thibodeau Live. We strongly suggest you bookmark our web site by clicking here. Tired of receiving unwanted spam in your in box? Get SpamArrest™ and put a stop to all that SPAM. Click here and get rid of SPAM forever! Get your business or company listed in the Global Business Listing directory and increase your business. It takes less then 24 hours to get a premium listing in the most powerful business search engine there is. Click here to find out all about it. Rank for $ales strongly recommends the use of WordTracker to effectively identify all your right industry keywords. Accurate identification of the right keywords and key phrases used in your industry is the first basic step in any serious search engine optimization program. Click here to start your keyword and key phrase research. You can link to the Rank for Sales web site as much as you like. Read our section on how your company can participate in our reciprocal link exchange program and increase your rankings in all the major search engines such as Google, AltaVista, Yahoo and all the others. Powered by Sun Hosting Sponsored by Avantex Traffic stats by Site Clicks™Site design by Mtl. Web D. Sponsored by Press Broadcast Sponsored by Blog Hosting.ca Call Rank for Sales toll free from anywhere in the US or Canada: 1-800-631-3221
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