PDA

View Full Version : Text-Mining = Instant Researcher??


eperez43
02-28-2008, 01:50 AM
FREE AUTOMATED RESEARCH ASSISTANT!!

Please hold on, this isn't spam. Nothing for sale, here. Just an announcement about two FREE new research/information services new on the Web. This is an operational & easy-to-use text-miner and summarization engine.

The folks at Power Text Solutions, Inc. think these Web services can be of value to you in your studies, special information work areas, or professional research activities. And just in Real Life.

So, if you're interested in either description below, please try out either or both systems. I bet you'll find them of value. Hope you also "pass it forward" and tell your friends, family, and colleagues about them. ESPECIALLY students of all ages, for sure the ones from middle school through college. These systems both tell you what's important, really what you need to know, to learn on just about any topic.

The two Web information services are:

* iresearch-reporter.com - A "text-extractor and summarizer." iRR passes a search to Google, analyzes the most relevant documents, and quickly produces an easy-to-read, organized, objective, accurate, and concise summary report about your search.

The report is organized in text clusters (topics) under sections like "Key Topics," "In Depth,"and "Possibly Useful." All extracts and facts are fully linked back to original Web documents, so you can quickly verify accuracy, get more information, make a quick credibility check, or simply learn some more.

Best to use just a few, like 2 or 3 to 6 or 7 words or terms. No search language, no formal logic. Just narrow it down a bit to what you want to know about. iRR will figure out what you mean, most all the time. For the occasional "misfire," simply try another few words about the topic. iRR should catch on pretty quickly.

* newsfeedresearcher.com - The NFR service offers 24x7 instant Web-wide background research on every story covered in all the Google NewsFeeds.

No searching, just click on a story title, and you find out practically everything you want to know about whatever you clicked on.

NFR also automatically builds a "blog new" service for a few other topics of interest. Covers such as: Democratic and Republican campaigns, Business/Economics, Google, Apple.Mac, etc. Again, just click on a story headline, and presto, you'll see the automatic background research package.