Israel and Australia lay claim to latest Google genius

Summary: Google has paid an Australian university to secure the services of an Israeli student who has developed a more efficient way of organising search responses

Google has secured the services of a student at the University of New South Wales who has developed a better way of searching data.

The 26-year-old doctoral student, Ori Allon, has developed a new search algorithm that will make the responses to searches more relevant and display more detail of a search, according to reports in the Sydney Morning Herald,  and in the Israel newspaper Ha'aretz.

Allon, who has named the algorithm Orion, is an Israeli who was headhunted by Google. Reportedly, Google has paid an "undisclosed sum" to the university to secure Allon's services. He is now working at Google's offices in the US after reportedly turning down offers from Yahoo and Microsoft.

When a user conducts a Web search using Orion, they receive expanded text extracts from the pages that it delivers, rather than just links to these pages. This, according to admirers of the service, means users don't have to click on multiple pages to see if they contain the information they're seeking.

Topic: Networking

Colin Barker

About Colin Barker

I have been a computer journalist for most of my working life although I did start in the wonderful world of accountancy. I have been editor of Compting magazine in London and prior to that held a number of editing jobs, including time spend at the late, lamented DEC Computing and was at one time London editor for Byte magazine.

Outside of work, my main interests are travelling, football and baseball. I lived for some years in Boston, Mass, and became an incurable Boston Red Sox fan as a result.

I have no particular qualifications for being a journalist other than a university degree and a lifelong curiosity about people.

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  • This sounds like another controversial move by Google
    anonymous