IBM and Yahoo are teaming up to offer a free enterprise search tool likely to
challenge Google's server appliances and similar alternatives that typically
cost thousands of pounds.
Called IBM OmniFind Yahoo Edition, the tool looks like Yahoo at the front end
and can be installed on Windows or Linux intranet servers, web servers or
general-purpose hosts. Enterprise data searches look and feel like Yahoo web
searches but without advertising links, while the same tool can be used to
search the web but will then show ads. Up to 500,000 documents or web pages can
be indexed.
IBM sees the free release as a way to seed the market for more scalable
products that can delve into even more pockets of firms' information stores.
"The ultimate goal is to sell more high-end software," said Marc Andrews,
programme director for strategy at IBM's information management group. "It might
start out with basic search but ultimately you need to be hooking into all
enterprise capabilities including content management systems and databases."
Although the software will be available as a free download, IBM will charge
for telephone support.
According to Mike Davis of analyst Ovum, OmniFind is aimed at the market
targeted by Google's Search Appliance (GSA) and Mini, and Microsoft's Office
2007 SharePoint Server for Search. "We believe that this could be highly
disruptive in the enterprise search space," he wrote in a research note. "A key
selling point for the GSA is the use of the same search interface as used on the
Google.com web site. By partnering with Yahoo, IBM has taken exactly the same
approach."
Content management analyst Alan Pelz-Sharpe of CMS Watch pointed out that
many people now want Google-like functionality on their desktop. "However,
Google was designed to look for content that wants to be found [and] has been
authored and tagged that way," Pelz-Sharpe added. "Enterprise search tools have
a very different challenge looking for largely unstructured and very sparsely
tagged content. In teaming up with Yahoo on this, IBM gives true enterprise
search but with a look and familiarity that typical users will like."
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