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    Home Latest News

      Mini Finds Its Search Bearings

      Written by

      Jim Rapoza
      Published August 21, 2006
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        eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.

        In the modern technology world, Google is the 600-pound gorilla. Companies from Microsoft to Oracle to Verizon are terrified that the reigning Internet search giant will move into their markets, wielding its massive user base and general willingness to give away applications for free as very potent competitive weapons.

        But there is one area in which Google is more of an eager chimpanzee than a massive gorilla, and that area, surprisingly, involves search—enterprise and corporate search, to be exact.

        Google is essentially synonymous with search when it comes to the Web, but its just another option when it comes to company Web sites, portals and intranets. And its an option that often isnt designed specifically to meet the needs of businesses, especially when compared with competing solutions from companies such as Autonomy, Thunderstone Software and, yes, Microsoft.

        eWeek Labs tested the recently updated Google Mini appliance and found that it showcases both the strengths and the weaknesses of the Google corporate search strategy. The new appliance has all the capabilities and features that one would expect from Google. Indeed, if a companys desire is to implement “Google” within its corporate environment (and that is exactly the desire of some companies), then the Google Mini is an excellent choice.

        However, if a business needs a corporate search solution that goes beyond standard Google Web search functionality—one that provides enterprise features such as categorization and taxonomies or that integrates with company collaboration, document management and sales tools—it should look elsewhere.

        The Google Mini, released this spring, features several improvements over the previous Mini. The new Mini is smaller (think of a small-pizza box versus a large-pizza box), and it can easily crawl documents on network file shares and allows unlimited collections.

        But the biggest change to the Mini platform is in pricing and deployment. The new Google Mini offers more tiered and high-volume pricing options, so businesses that exceed a 100,000-document limit will no longer have to jump to the much more expensive Google Appliance. Pricing for the Google Mini now starts at $1,995 for search indexes of up to 50,000 documents and goes to $8,995 for search indexes of up to 300,000 documents.

        Despite being a “mini” appliance, the Google Mini is still thankfully rackable, with a 1U profile that extends back only half as far as most appliances.

        During our tests, deployment was very simple—we just plugged the provided crossover cable into a laptop to perform initial configuration. Once this was done, we had the Google Mini creating document indexes in literally minutes. Within the browser-based administration interface, we merely added the URLs of the sites we wanted to crawl, defined filters and other configurations, and were off and running. We could schedule either full crawls or continuous crawls, where the appliance looked for changed content.

        While previous versions of the Google Mini could crawl networked directories only if the directories had been Web-enabled, the new Google Mini can directly access shares through the SMB (Server Message Block) protocol. We could therefore add networked directories in the same way we added Web URLs (entering, for example, smb://directory/to/crawl).

        The Google Minis administration interface has been tweaked slightly, but most configuration options remain the same as in previous Google appliances. We configured collections and front-end and search result interfaces as we always have, although there is now no limit to the number of front ends that can be created and deployed.

        The new Google Mini creates detailed logs that can be exported to advanced reporting systems, and it has built-in reports that, while useful, arent as comprehensive as those included in many other corporate-oriented search engines.

        Labs Director Jim Rapoza can be reached at [email protected].

        Evaluation Shortlist

        Autonomys Idol K2

        The former Verity K2 engine is the dominant search engine in the corporate enterprise market (www.autonomy.com)

        Microsofts SharePoint Portal Server

        In the Microsoft enterprise ecosystem, SharePoint has become the main answer for most questions, including search (www.microsoft.com/sharepoint)

        Thunderstones Search Appliance

        While it lacks the name recognition of many of its competitors, Thunderstone has a long track record in providing enterprise-ready search solutions (www.thunderstone.com)

        Jim Rapoza
        Jim Rapoza
        Jim Rapoza, Chief Technology Analyst, eWEEK.For nearly fifteen years, Jim Rapoza has evaluated products and technologies in almost every technology category for eWEEK. Mr Rapoza's current technology focus is on all categories of emerging information technology though he continues to focus on core technology areas that include: content management systems, portal applications, Web publishing tools and security. Mr. Rapoza has coordinated several evaluations at enterprise organizations, including USA Today and The Prudential, to measure the capability of products and services under real-world conditions and against real-world criteria. Jim Rapoza's award-winning weekly column, Tech Directions, delves into all areas of technologies and the challenges of managing and deploying technology today.

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