Press Release
Deep Web Technologies' Founder Attends Signing of Global
Science Gateway Agreement
SANTA FE, N.M., Jan. 25, 2007 -- An international effort to
provide the most current findings in fields such as
sustainable energy, medicine, agriculture, environment and
basic sciences is underway. Users will benefit by receiving
quality, authoritative science information from the most
current research provided by participating nations. Ms.
Lynne Brindley, Chief Executive of the British Library, and
Dr. Raymond L. Orbach, Under Secretary for Science, U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE), signed a Statement of Intent to
partner in this global science gateway descriptively called
Science.world. The signing took place on Sunday, January 21,
2007 at the British Library in London, England concurrent
with the Winter Meeting of the International Council for
Scientific and Technical Information (ICSTI).
Mr. Abe Lederman, President of Deep Web Technologies, was
present at the signing. A pioneer in federated search
technology, he was excited about this big step forward and
said, "I have worked with Dr. Walter Warnick, Director of
the U.S. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information
(OSTI), and his staff for eight years developing
cutting-edge solutions to accelerate information discovery.
It's great to see this sophisticated search technology take
on an international collaborative dimension. Leveraging the
kinds of capabilities Deep Web Technologies designed into
the U.S. Government's Science.gov federated search portal,
launched in 2002, can help to provide a truly global
resource for scientists and science-attentive officials,
media professionals, entrepreneurs and citizens." Other
nations have been invited to make their scientific
collections searchable through the gateway.
Dr. Warnick explained how it will work: "The Global Science
Gateway, Science.world, will capitalize on existing
technology to search collections of science information
distributed across the globe, enabling much-needed access to
both prominent and smaller, less well-known sources of
highly valuable science. Users would simply submit a single
query into a search engine, launching simultaneous searching
of the databases of participating nations. Results would be
returned in relevance ranked order." Dr. Warnick also talked
about a prototype that will be built in 2007: "It will take
advantage of Science.gov, the U.S. gateway to major
government science information, hosted by DOE OSTI. Future
versions will be determined upon evaluation of the
prototype."
Federated search capabilities have been in use since the
late 90's according to Mr. Lederman: "Public search engines
do pretty well finding surface web content. However, when it
comes to finding high-quality scientific and technical
information you have to access the deep web by connecting
directly with appropriate sources. Doing that one data base
at a time can take forever, and that's where well-designed
federated search really hits its stride by delivering
high-relevance result lists through a single search page."
In its quest to help researchers accelerate the information
discovery process, Deep Web Technologies offers a free white
paper, "How to Maximize Your Strategic Investment in
Federated Search," on its website:
http://www.deepwebtech.com/whitepaper.
CONTACT:
Lance Danbe
VP Sales and Marketing
Deep Web Technologies, LLC
301 North Guadalupe Street, Suite 201
Santa Fe, NM 87501
505.820.0301 ext 239
lance@deepwebtech.com
http://www.deepwebtech.com
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