Wolfram|Alpha – a computational knowledge engine in the cloud

WolframAlpha

This is a fascinating site that will no doubt be of interest to people reading this blog: Wolfram Research, the makers of Mathematica,  have just released an online computational knowledge engine called Wolfram|Alpha. To get a feel for some of the capabilities of the engine I recommend spending some time looking through their gallery of examples.


Just playing around with it proves a genuinely interesting experience. Here are some of my own example searches:

That said, you shouldn't expect it to know much about programming languages. 🙂


It turns out that this kind of tool is (one of) the brave new frontier(s) of search: Google is also due to launch its Google Squared service in the coming weeks, which will provide more interpretive, tabular display of data out there in the web.


This seems to be a key difference between the services: Wolfram|Alpha provides access to data that gets imported into its own servers (apparently 10 terabytes or so of the stuff) whereas Google Squared is about making sense of and tabulating the results of web searches. And from what I can tell I fully expect them to be complimentary: although not impossible for Google to duplicate, I can see Wolfram has made use of their twenty-odd year investment in Mathematica to create something really compelling. Time will tell.


Please do post your favourite Wolfram|Alpha searches (if we can really call them that – I suppose they should really be called "computations") as comments on this post – I'm sure people will be interested to check them out.







Oh, and it's also possible to embed access to Wolfram|Alpha in your website, if you so wish...


8 responses to “Wolfram|Alpha – a computational knowledge engine in the cloud”

  1. Ah, just posted about it myself. Enjoying trying it but a little depressing to see your age in weeks, days, hours*. Never knew I was born under a waning cresent moon

    * Enter date

  2. Here is the questions I posted:

    "Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything"

    evidently Douglas Adams was correct, because Wolfram|Alpha's answer was:

    "42"

    and it didn't take 7.5 million years either!

  3. Stephen Preston Avatar
    Stephen Preston

    Well, they're not using a quantum computer to calculate the meaning of "life, the universe and everything", because it doesn't know what to do with the search term "Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle" (or even "Planck's Constant").

    🙂

  4. I liked the question:
    "How old are you?"
    It actually comes up with a seemingly correct number in days (since the time it's service supposedly went online). One day after the public start I tried it and it came up with 0.8andSomething days. So it almost seems that it can reflect about itself 😉

  5. Lifehacker.com have a link to the mozilla addons site that means you can have WolframAlpha computational results show up next to your Google results: -

    lifehacker.com/5264111/wolfram-alpha-google-adds-computational-answers-to-google-results

  6. Kélcyo Pereira Avatar
    Kélcyo Pereira

    Very Good Kean.
    Now that was released the Beta 1 of Visual Studio 2010.
    You could demonstrate how to use it. Already we have new implementations Net Framework 4. Including the use WF in AutoCad.
    Grateful.

  7. Stephan Bartl Avatar

    Found another cool question for Wolfram Alpha:
    "What is your name?"
    Response:
    "My name is Wolfram|Alpha."

  8. Kean Walmsley Avatar

    Thanks, everyone (this has been fun :-).

    I just came across these two posts with some more fun Wolfram|Alpha easter eggs.

    Enjoy!

    Kean

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