Press Release
Deep Web Technologies Awarded U.S. DOE Small Business
Innovation Research Grant to Help Science Community Search
the Rest of the Internet
SANTA FE, N.M., June 8, 2006 -- Los Alamos National
Laboratory spin-out Deep Web Technologies (DWT), founded in
2002, has been awarded a Phase I Small Business Innovation
Research (SBIR) grant by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
to investigate ways to scale Internet Federated search to
accommodate thousands of simultaneous users seeking
information from millions of documents and web pages, from
thousands of sources of information in real time.
The SBIR program is highly competitive. It encourages small
businesses to explore their technological potential and
provides the incentive to profit from its commercialization.
By including qualified small businesses in the nation's R&D
arena, high-tech innovation is stimulated and the United
States gains entrepreneurial spirit as it meets its specific
research and development needs.
Unlike surface web search engines, such as Yahoo and Google,
which ignore 98 percent of Internet content, DWT pioneered
searching the "deep web," which consists of public and
private databases, subscriber-only services, academic and
scientific publishers, and enterprise data from thousands of
sources.
Federated search is a relatively new field in knowledge
management, one that offers users the most current
information, through a single point of access, ranked and
presented in a manner which offers deeper insight into a
user's subject area.
According to Dr. Walter Warnick Director of the U.S.
Department of Energy Office of Scientific and Technical
Information, "If successful, the proposed research would
portend enormous benefits to DOE and beyond. For example,
the technology stemming from this research promises to make
possible, for the first time, the development of a search
appliance that could search 1,000 distributed databases of
knowledge in the physical sciences, all in parallel. This
could encompass all the important databases in the physical
sciences and thus accelerate the diffusion of knowledge to
researchers in this field."
About Deep Web Technologies
DWT, based in Santa Fe, New Mexico, is a leading developer
of software that mines, aggregates and ranks content from
difficult to access regions of the web, known as the "deep
web," containing the best content. DWT offers its global
customers Federated search solutions with sophisticated
relevance ranking, built on a standard service oriented
architecture (SOA), using next-generation scalable computing
technology. DWT's technology powers major sites such as
Science.gov (http://www.science.gov), the E-Print Network
(http://www.osti.gov/eprints), and the search engine for the
DOE Office of Science (http://www.science.doe.gov). In June
2005 DWT launched ScienceResearch.com
(http://www.scienceresearch.com), a free, publicly available
Internet web portal allowing access to numerous scientific
journals and public databases.
Links
Deep Web Technologies: http://www.deepwebtech.com
U.S. Small Business Administration SBIR program: http://www.sba.gov/sbir
DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI): http://www.osti.gov
Contact Information:
Deep Web Technologies
301 North Guadalupe, STE 201
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501 USA
Phone: +1 505-820-0301
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