Cast your minds back - if you can - to the days when the Web was a jumble of random pages. 'Web surfing' consisted, quite literally, of somehow finding a web site and then clicking through links to other sites as the mood took you. Yes, really. That really was all you could do. Eventually Yahoo! came along to put sites into directories. But it wasn't really until Google came along that the 'long tail' of the the web started to be uncovered. Today it's 1994 all over again, at least in the world of mobile apps. Despite startups like Zwapp, Appsfire, Yappler, Apptizr, Appolicious and the rest trying their best to surface the long tail of mobile apps, the iTunes store, Google Play and Widows Market remain a chaotic jumble. I'm sure we are all familiar with the experience of literally surfing stores to find what app we want. It's in that context that startups are often to build search engines for the app world. Thus it was that app search engine Chomp got
acquired by Apple. Last week a few old Chomp features
made their way into the new iOS 6 App Store application. However Apple?s system for organizing applications remains more or less intact (although this is admittedly pre-release software). So the question has to be asked, has Apple missed a trick? Indeed, many wonder if app search engines are really the best approach. That at least is the contention of Zoe Adamovicz, Matthaus Krzykowski and Marcin Rudolf, the founders of Berlin-based
XYOLogic. And they have the language to match their claims. "Search, as a concept, is obsolete," says Adamovicz, sitting on a table in a office with a direct view of the Reichstag (pictured).
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/8pDG55hq8UQ/
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