翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Single molecule real time sequencing
・ Single Mother
・ Single Mothers (album)
・ Single Mothers (band)
・ Single National Park
・ Single net lease
・ Single Non-Emergency Number
・ Single non-transferable vote
・ Singing Together
・ Singing Valentines
・ Singing vole
・ Singing Waterfall
・ Singing with the Enemy
・ Singing with the Red Wolves
・ SingingCoach
Singingfish
・ Singinkop
・ Singireddy Harivardhan Reddy
・ Singirikudi
・ Singiripalayam
・ Singisi
・ Singita Game Reserve
・ Singiwala
・ Singiya
・ Singjay
・ Singjhar
・ Singju
・ Singkaling Hkamti
・ Singkamas, Makati
・ Singkatigedang


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Singingfish : ウィキペディア英語版
Singingfish was an audio/video search engine that powered audio video search for Windows Media Player,(EcontentMag.com: Singingfish to Power Audio and Video Search in the Windows Media Player ) WindowsMedia.com, RealOne/RealPlayer,(Multimedia Search: Singingfish - ClickZ ) Real Guide,For queries on Real Guide, Singingfish search results appeared in the section "Audio & Video on the Web". The Singingfish logo was only displayed on the second and later result pages. AOL Search, Dogpile, MetacrawlerFor queries on Dogpile and Metacrawler, results from Singingfish were annotated next to the relevant result(s). and Singingfish.com, among others. Launched in 2000, it was one of the earliest and longest lived search engines dedicated to multimedia content. Acquired in 2003 by AOL,(AOL Buys Singingfish, Rolls Out More Search Changes - Search Engine Watch ) it was slowly folded into the AOL search offerings and all web hits from RMC TV to Singingfish were being redirected to AOL Video and as of February 2007 Singingfish had ceased to exist as a separate service.Singingfish powered audio search continues to live on for the time being at (AOL Search ) and other AOL properties. However, little if any development has been done since August 2006. Singingfish powered video search is no longer publicly available and is now being re-directed to AOL Video Search.== Overview ==Singingfish employed its own web crawler, Asterias,(Web Robot Articles by Janet Systems ) designed specifically to ferret out audio and video links across the web. In 2003 and 2004, Asterias discovered an average of about 50,000 new pieces of multimedia content a day. A proprietary system was used to process each of the discovered links, extracting metadata and then enhancing it prior to indexing as much multimedia content on the web has little or poor metadata. Many of the multimedia URLs used as seeds for Singingfish's crawlers and annotation engines came from cache logs from the NSF-funded National Laboratory for Applied Network Research (NLANR) IRCache Web Caching project.(IRCache: Frequently Asked Questions )

Singingfish was an audio/video search engine that powered audio video search for Windows Media Player,〔(EcontentMag.com: Singingfish to Power Audio and Video Search in the Windows Media Player )〕〔 WindowsMedia.com, RealOne/RealPlayer,〔(Multimedia Search: Singingfish - ClickZ )〕 Real Guide,〔For queries on Real Guide, Singingfish search results appeared in the section "Audio & Video on the Web". The Singingfish logo was only displayed on the second and later result pages.〕 AOL Search, Dogpile, Metacrawler〔For queries on Dogpile and Metacrawler, results from Singingfish were annotated next to the relevant result(s).〕 and Singingfish.com, among others. Launched in 2000, it was one of the earliest and longest lived search engines dedicated to multimedia content. Acquired in 2003 by AOL,〔(AOL Buys Singingfish, Rolls Out More Search Changes - Search Engine Watch )〕 it was slowly folded into the AOL search offerings and all web hits from RMC TV to Singingfish were being redirected to AOL Video and as of February 2007 Singingfish had ceased to exist as a separate service.
Singingfish powered audio search continues to live on for the time being at (AOL Search ) and other AOL properties. However, little if any development has been done since August 2006. Singingfish powered video search is no longer publicly available and is now being re-directed to AOL Video Search.
== Overview ==
Singingfish employed its own web crawler, Asterias,〔(Web Robot Articles by Janet Systems )〕 designed specifically to ferret out audio and video links across the web. In 2003 and 2004, Asterias discovered an average of about 50,000 new pieces of multimedia content a day. A proprietary system was used to process each of the discovered links, extracting metadata and then enhancing it prior to indexing as much multimedia content on the web has little or poor metadata. Many of the multimedia URLs used as seeds for Singingfish's crawlers and annotation engines came from cache logs from the NSF-funded National Laboratory for Applied Network Research (NLANR) IRCache Web Caching project.〔(IRCache: Frequently Asked Questions )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアでSingingfish was an audio/video search engine that powered audio video search for Windows Media Player,(EcontentMag.com: Singingfish to Power Audio and Video Search in the Windows Media Player ) WindowsMedia.com, RealOne/RealPlayer,(Multimedia Search: Singingfish - ClickZ ) Real Guide,For queries on Real Guide, Singingfish search results appeared in the section "Audio & Video on the Web". The Singingfish logo was only displayed on the second and later result pages. AOL Search, Dogpile, MetacrawlerFor queries on Dogpile and Metacrawler, results from Singingfish were annotated next to the relevant result(s). and Singingfish.com, among others. Launched in 2000, it was one of the earliest and longest lived search engines dedicated to multimedia content. Acquired in 2003 by AOL,(AOL Buys Singingfish, Rolls Out More Search Changes - Search Engine Watch ) it was slowly folded into the AOL search offerings and all web hits from RMC TV to Singingfish were being redirected to AOL Video and as of February 2007 Singingfish had ceased to exist as a separate service.Singingfish powered audio search continues to live on for the time being at (AOL Search ) and other AOL properties. However, little if any development has been done since August 2006. Singingfish powered video search is no longer publicly available and is now being re-directed to AOL Video Search.== Overview ==Singingfish employed its own web crawler, Asterias,(Web Robot Articles by Janet Systems ) designed specifically to ferret out audio and video links across the web. In 2003 and 2004, Asterias discovered an average of about 50,000 new pieces of multimedia content a day. A proprietary system was used to process each of the discovered links, extracting metadata and then enhancing it prior to indexing as much multimedia content on the web has little or poor metadata. Many of the multimedia URLs used as seeds for Singingfish's crawlers and annotation engines came from cache logs from the NSF-funded National Laboratory for Applied Network Research (NLANR) IRCache Web Caching project.(IRCache: Frequently Asked Questions )」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.