Developed by two graduate students at Stanford University, Infoaxe is advertised as a search engine for your web memory. This engine works by storing every page that you visit on the Internet into a personal web memory. This way, manual bookmarking is dispensed with.

An approach like this has various uses, the most immediate being letting you look up again something you accidentally stumbled upon weeks, maybe even months ago just by providing Infoaxe with the relevant query.

Speaking of search queries, these have the added advantage of being far more concise (or “lazier”, as the programmers put it ) than traditional Google tags. This means that pages you visited at least once will be very easy to look up and find, no matter how many websites are there on the WWW that share similar titles.

The site also includes a very thorough FAQ file, and through it you will be able to learn how to best accommodate Infoaxe to suit your browsing preferences.

Lastly, you can easily contact the programmers via the provided address. Bear in mind that they are looking for people with a strong background in web programming and software engineering, and they are currently accepting resumes, so if don’t think twice if you feel you have what it takes.

In their own words
“Infoaxe is a Search Engine for your Web Memory, founded by two graduate students at Stanford University. With infoaxe, every page that you see on the Web gets added to your Personal Web Memory and is now searchable. No more manual bookmarking!”
Why it might be a killer
It might stand as the future of information access on the web.
Some questions
Where can I read more about the way this search technology is implemented?
Posted 7 Months 11 Days ago by RogerH | Source: TechCrunch
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