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Texis Customer Spotlight: nMatrix

October 16, 2002
Texis Customer Spotlight: nMatrix

Litigation is a booming business in the United States. That's not good news to some, but it creates interesting technology challenges. Larger and more complex lawsuits entail larger and more complex document management needs.

Some of the largest U.S. law firms, such as Skadden Arps, rely on Texis to search and manage legal documents through an application developed by Thunderstone integrator nMatrix Inc. The specialty of nMatrix is managing the "discovery" phase of U.S. legal proceedings.

In discovery, the parties provide the court with documents that may contain evidence relevant to the case. In major cases, millions of documents may be collected. They will be in many different electronic formats, or on paper that must be scanned and converted to searchable text through OCR process. The lawyers involved must search through the documents looking for relevant information.

The nMatrix system, called DocuMatrix, is unique in providing both full-text searching as well as classification and tagging. At the beginning of the process, a document is imported as an unstructured text object. Lawyers can immediately search through the material using Texis's various advanced search techniques. The approximate pattern matching tools are especially important for searching through OCR'd material which typically contains many typographical errors.

But that's not all. After a document is reviewed, authorized users tag it with various structured information, such as the names of people mentioned, dates, subjects, and many other details. Each entry becomes immediately searchable itself. In addition, the entered data is used for browsing and sorting the documents.

Texis's database characteristics make all this easy to accomplish. An administrator may specify the needed data fields, which are different from case to case. For any field, the administrator may designate a list of values to select from; others fields, such as a description, may allow free text entry. Users may search across any combination of the original text and added data.

We studied other search engines and found Texis to be the best suited to these needs because of it's superior database integration. This system has grown to be quite complex, but Texis has accommodated all the new requirements. It is really very versatile.
Arthur Finkel, CTO of nMatrix

An example of the complexities involved is access control. Users may be restricted to viewing only certain documents or even certain fields. Also, nMatrix recently added a feature allowing users to define their own thesauri for each case. Searches will automatically search for all the specified synonyms of a term in the thesaurus.

nMatrix also has found that the system is applicable to needs beyond the discovery process. Its nSite! product is targeted at knowledge management applications for lawyers as well as bankers and other professions. This encompasses real-time notification of newly arrived data, insuring that users stay up-to-date about important business issues.

We're planning to expand our use of Texis in many ways. Perhaps what's most important about the role of Texis in our products, is the way it has adapted to new requirements. We provide features and functionality today that we hadn't even thought of several years ago when we started with Texis. The fact that it has kept up with our product evolution says a lot about its maturity and superior design.
Arthur Finkel, CTO of nMatrix

Thunderstone Attacks 'invisible Web' With First Javascript Link Crawler

July 30, 2002

Cleveland, Ohio, July 30, 2002 -- The industry's first search product to index JavaScript hyperlinks and JavaScript dynamic content was announced by Thunderstone Software. The new capability is bundled with Thunderstone's Texis search software, and is available immediately.

The need to index JavaScript links has become a serious challenge on the Internet. More and more web designers use JavaScript not only to add interactivity to web pages, but for basic site navigation as well. As JavaScript usage has become more mainstream, sites have grown increasingly dependent on JavaScript-enabled browsers. But since search engines cannot "see" JavaScript links, search-engine users are missing valuable content -- often without knowing it.

Neither the major web-search sites, nor specialized search products, currently collect JavaScript links for indexing. "JavaScript links are part of the 'invisible web' that most search engines miss," said John Turnbull, Thunderstone's general manager. "Making that information searchable may be especially important on corporate networks or portals."

Many organizations need to run large intra-net search engines, aggregating content from a variety of internal sources. "They may run an internal crawler and not even know they're missing all those pages linked by JavaScript." Turnbull said. "We've seen that occur, for example, at companies using Lotus's QuickPlace product, which creates collaboration sites navigable mainly by JavaScript links."

Thunderstone's support of JavaScript link indexing reinforces Texis as the most comprehensive and versatile search software on the market. Texis also provides a broad range of other data discovery and indexing techniques. That includes indexing 'deep' information such as database content and newswire feeds, or even results from other search engines, all of which may be continually changing.

Thunderstone is offering a free trial of the JavaScript link crawler through Oct. 30. The feature is included with Thunderstone's Webinator web-site indexing product. Anyone who administers a web site may download a full working copy via the link on Thunderstone's home page, at http://www.thunderstone.com/ .

ABOUT THUNDERSTONE
Thunderstone Software LLC is the premier provider of text-search technology integrated with SQL relational database functionality. Applications include publishing, catalogs, classified advertising, auctions, content management, and web-searching. Thunderstone is a 20-year-old company whose products are used on thousands of web sites worldwide. Major customers include eBay, QVC, About.com, ZDNet, HotJobs, and many others. For more information, visit http://www.thunderstone.com or call +1 216-820-2200.

Askme Corp. Acquires Thunderstone License

May 30, 2002

Cleveland, Ohio, May 30, 2002 -- Thunderstone Software announced that AskMe Corp. has acquired a perpetual license to integrate Thunderstone's Texis search software within AskMe's Employee Knowledge Network software solutions.

AskMe creates software that enables corporations to create and manage employee knowledge networks to deliver employee expertise, directly to other employees blocked on critical tasks, exactly when they need it. The Texis search engine within the AskMe Enterprise product helps users to find the expertise they need via sophisticated database searching.

Thunderstone's Texis software also powers the public AskMe expertise search engine. The original AskMe web site is one of the world's most popular expert advice websites for thousands of topics.

"Texis plays a crucial role within our products," said Digvijay Chauhan, Chief Technology Officer and co-founder of Askme. "The Texis relational structure is unique among search engines, and is key to effective integration with the AskMe SQL applications. We also take advantage of various Texis advanced search features such as fuzzy matching and natural language querying." Texis will be bundled with all AskMe Enterprise systems, said Chauhan.

"The AskMe enterprise solutions highlight Thunderstone's core competency," said John Turnbull, Thunderstone general manager. "Texis is designed with integration in mind. It is the only search engine to incorporate the full SQL data model. That makes it ideally suited to searching data within complex applications, especially those built on top of relational databases, or incorporating real-time updates."

ABOUT THUNDERSTONE
Thunderstone Software LLC is the premier provider of text-search technology integrated with relational database functionality. Applications of Thunderstone's system include publishing, catalogs, classified advertising, auctions, content management, and web-searching. Thunderstone is a 20-year-old company whose products are used on thousands of web sites worldwide. Web sites using the Thunderstone Texis software include eBay.com, About.com, and Corbis.com. For more information, visit http://www.thunderstone.com or call +1 216-820-2200.

ABOUT ASKME CORP.
AskMe builds software solutions that enable global 2000 companies to create and manage Employee Knowledge Networks. Employee Knowledge Networks are software systems that deliver employee expertise, directly to other employees blocked on critical tasks, exactly when they need it most. AskMe's solutions enable employees with business-critical problems to discover the best expertise within the organization, facilitate the exchange of that expertise, capture the outcome for re-use, dispatch the best practices to employees who need to know, and provide the tools to analyze the results to make the entire company more effective. Such blue-chip companies including Procter & Gamble, 3Com, and CNA have implemented the company's flagship product, AskMe Enterprise. Founded in 1999 by former Microsoft executives, AskMe is privately held with headquarters in Bellevue, Washington. (www.askmecorp.com)

Texis Customer Spotlight: Wordtracker.com

May 15, 2002
Texis Customer Spotlight: Wordtracker.com

If you manage a web site, you probably included certain "key words" with the aim of influencing search engine rankings.  But how do you know that you used the right words?  According to Wordtracker.com, you probably didn't.

"You probably are competing with too many other sites that use the same words," says Mike Mindel, founder of Wordtracker, which is based in London.  "That dilutes your effort to differentiate your offering.  And web users probably are searching related terms that could describe your business, but that you neglected to incorporate into your site."

Wordtracker has built a highly successful business dedicated to identifying which keywords are both popular and have the least competition. One of the most technically sophisticated services of its kind, Wordtracker relies on Texis to perform many important functions.  

Wordtracker provides a highly automated service, as opposed to the manual analyses offered by many "optimization" or "placement" consultants.  It starts with collecting millions of actual search terms typed by users on major metacrawlers.  Wordtracker continually refreshes this database so that it reflects popular terms, which shift on an ongoing basis.

With this data loaded in its Texis database, Wordtracker performs several related functions for its subscribers.  It takes advantage of Texis's thesaurus and morpheme processing to identify as broad a range as possible of terms related to one's business that people search for.  It uses Texis's fuzzy searching to find common misspellings.  It provides counts of how many times each word has been searched in recent weeks.  And it calculates "keyword effectiveness" -- the relationship between a term's frequency as a search and its frequency of appearance on web sites (the higher the former, and the lower the latter, the better).

"Wordtracker helps find keyword combinations that bear any relation to your business or service - many of which you might never have considered," Mindel says. And for customers of pay-for-placement services such as Overture, Wordtracker is more thorough in suggesting terms to bid on than tools those services provide themselves, he says.

To accomplish its statistical operations, a relational database was essential.  But the Wordtracker database also needed to behave as a search engine, allowing users to "search the search terms."  The two kinds of functionality, relational and search, needed to work together to sort the results and calculate various values for each word retrieved.

"Before we found Texis, we were using another SQL database for many of these functions and were having a terrible time, because its search capabilities were so weak."  Mindel says.  "Texis solved many technical issues for us."

Mindel also was impressed with Texis's high performance reindexing capability.  "Texis builds a database and two search indexes on 42 million keywords in under an hour which is nice," he says.  "And you can load up a second database without impacting performance on the first, which I've never seen before.

"Much of what we do depends on Texis.  It was a very wise purchase," says Mindel.

Ebay Renews Commitment To Thunderstone Software

March 28, 2002

Cleveland, March 28, 2002 -- Thunderstone Software announced that its customer eBay has renewed its license for the Texis search engine software. Texis provides the text-search capabilities for the ebay.com service and other eBay Inc. companies.

Texis has been eBay's search engine since before eBay became a household name with its 1998 stock offering. In that time the Texis software has "scaled up" to handle more than 30 million searches a day for eBay, against an ever-changing database of millions of items for sale. eBay.com features that are "powered" by Texis include the "smart search" and "advanced search" pages.

Texis also provides the search and power-search function of eBay's subsidiary Half.com. Texis was the original search engine of Half.com, beginning with its founding in 1999 as an independent company, before its acquisition by eBay.

eBay and Half selected Texis as their search engines because of Texis's superior database-related capabilities. Texis is the only text-search software built on a structured query language (SQL) framework. This provides superior tools for programmers, as well as vastly better performance than the text-search features of other relational database products.

ABOUT THUNDERSTONE Thunderstone Software LLC provides high-performance solutions for text-searching in conjunction with relational database applications. Applications of this technology include publishing, catalogs, classified advertising, content management, and web-searching. Thunderstone is a 20-year-old company whose products are used on thousands of web sites worldwide.

For more information, visit http://www.thunderstone.com or contact Thunderstone Software on +1 216-820-2200.

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