The Man Behind Google's Ranking Algorithm Comments

Slashdot by CmdrTaco - Jun 3, '07 10:45am
Add to Favorites Add to Live.com Add to Google Add to del.icio.us Add to Yahoo! Add to Digg Add to Reddit Add to Technorati Add to StumbleUpon nbauman writes "New York Times interview with Amit Singhal, who is in charge of Google's ranking algorithm. They use 200 "signals" and "classifiers," of which PageRank is only one. "Freshness" defines how many recently changed pages appear in a result. They assumed old pages were better, but when they first introduced Google Finance, the algorithm couldn't find it because it was too new. Some topics are "hot". "When there is a blackout in New York, the first articles appear in 15 minutes; we get queries in two seconds," said Singhal. Classifiers infer information about the type of search, whether it is a product to buy, a place, company or person. One classifier identifies people who aren't famous. Another identifies brand names. A final check encourages "diversity" in the results, for example, a manufacturer's page, a blog review, and a comparison shopping site."

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