The Top 100 Alternative Search Engines
I assume that most of AltSearchEngine’s readers are familiar with the Top 100 list. Here is the June Top 100 (attached spreadsheet), which we will discuss in detail below. For those who are new, here’s a very brief history of the list.
A brief history of the Top 100 Alternative Search Engines
Read/WriteWeb first published my list of the Top 100 Alt Search Engines (ASE) back in January, and this has been followed by monthly updates. ‘Alternative’ means that each entrant exhibits at least one characteristic that surpasses the equivalent feature in one of the major search engines. Ultimately, the final decision to be listed rests with me; and it’s a subjective choice, not an empirical one. 100 search engines are too many for any one person to practically tour, so I now tag ten of each month’s ASE with an ‘Honorable Mention’ symbol [HM]. If you can, try to at least check out the Search Engine of the Month and the ten Honorable Mentions.
And while it sometimes appears as if we have just reached into a bag and pulled out 100 random search engines, they actually come from our Master List of 1,000 carefully edited ASE. So each search engine truly has a 1 in 10 chance of being on the Top 100. It’s just like an iceberg with 90% of it’s mass underwater and the 10% tip showing above the water.
The Search Engine of the Month
The crowning feature of the List is the selection of the Search Engine of the Month from amongst that month’s Top 100. Previous winners have been Gosh Me, KoolTorch, and AfterVote. If you haven’t used those alt search engines, you should be sure to visit them sometime this month.
As for our June list on this, our launch day, we have a completely revised version of the Top 100 ASE attached as an Excel spreadsheet.
It’s a tie! Quintura and KartOO; Search Engines of the Month
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But the biggest surprise is that our award of Search Engine of the Month was a tie! The co-winners are Quintura and kartOO. As part of the two-dimensional clustering model, these two excellent ASE have been busy refining their products with recently announced features that keep them on the top of their game.
First: Quintura

First Quintura. Based in Moscow, Quintura is headed up by Yakov Sadchikov. The primary characteristic of a search engine like Quintura is that the search results are not returned as a list, something that about 90% of the ASE, even those on the Top 100, do. The WWW is just that, a web. And a 3-D one. In order to represent accurately a web whereby all the points, or pages, can link directly to each other one, you would need a 3-D object like a globe. A one dimensional list is like writing down all of the cities in the US in one long straight column and saying, ‘There. that’s what my country looks like.’ The #32 city may be close to the #98 city, but you’d never know it by scanning the list.
Clustering Search Engines are better
Clustering search engines, including tag clouds, take this a step closer to reality by spreading the results out onto a flat 2-D, X-Y map. Quintura does it with words, and KartOO with colorful icons. This is like an Atlas; the world isn’t really flat, but looking at a map of the US is far more intelligible than that list of cities.
Ultimately, search engines, possibly an ASE, will get it perfect with a truly 3-D interface. For a glimpse of the future, see SpaceTime or EveryScape. One concern that I have with clustering engines, and I know that it sounds like sour grapes, but having made that first leap forward from 1-D lists to 2-D maps, they seem content to stop there when they should keep pushing on and lead us in the real Search 3.0; Searching within a 3-D user interface.
How it works
Getting back to Quintura; after you enter your search query, you are presented with a tag cloud of words that looks like a just-finished Scrabble game. Moving your cursor to the word that most closely matches what you are looking for causes the to cloud to rearrange around that term. You glide though the Internet this way, until you have ’steered’ yourself to the best results; even if its something you did not know was there when you began your search. Yakov refers to this aspect of Quintura as a Web discovery engine.
He is constantly tweaking Quintura, adding a back/forward bar to the tag cloud, partnering with blinkx for their video search (as did ChaCha). In order to monetize his product, Quintura is able to lease out his tag cloud technology to other companies with large indexes. He is also looking to incorporate sponsor’s graphics and icons directly into the tag cloud - now that’s a slick idea! Finally Quintura has a kids version, and is developing a version tailored to women.
Next: KartOO

While KartOO functions much like Quintura, laying out your search results in a 2-D field of results, it’s obvious from the homepage and the search results page that KatrOO’s graphic artists have been working overtime producing colorful logos and glowing miniature pages that connect to each other in different ways as you navigate through the results. This is their trademark Semantic Map. And like Quintura, Kartoo’s technology can be adapted to all kinds of sources.
Constant improvement is the rule
And also like their peer Quintura, KartOO has just recently been refining their engine, which they announced in a press release on Friday. But call up Kartoo’s President Laurent Baleydier, and you’ll notice a key difference between our two winners: KartOO was developed at the French University Labs in Clermont, France. (Quintura is Russian, remember?)
Which one do you like?
Hopefully you’ll take time today to try out a few searches with Quintura and KartOO.
I think you’ll see why it was too hard to chose between them. I believe that in the Search community there are those who prefer the more traditional, text based tag cloud of Quintura’s, and those who like all the colorful graphics and cartoonish features of KartOO. The comments section below is your opportunity to come back after you’ve tried taking them both for a spin.
Please report back your impressions; but try to be concise, and please be polite. I will ask Yakov and Patrick to look in at your comments and make responses of their own, so be sure to check back and look for them; as well as those from your fellow readers.
The Top 100 Search Engines - any more?
Finally, if you think we missed a good alt search engine, please mention it as a comment,and I will follow up on it for next month’s list; or just email me directly: Charles@ReadWriteWeb.com.
Editor’s note: Quintura is a sponsor of AltSearchEngines.









June 4th, 2007 at 7:32 pm
[...] fact we’re launching AltSearchEngines with the latest edition of The Top 100, in which Charles has chosen not one, but two Search Engines of the [...]
June 4th, 2007 at 7:36 pm
[...] fact we’re launching AltSearchEngines with the latest edition of The Top 100, in which Charles has chosen not one, but two Search Engines of the [...]
June 4th, 2007 at 7:43 pm
[...] fact we’re launching AltSearchEngines with the latest edition of The Top 100, in which Charles has chosen not one, but two Search Engines of the [...]
June 4th, 2007 at 10:35 pm
I wanted to add that we going to turn Quintura into a social network where everyone can store and share searches using Quintura as a personal search adviser.
June 5th, 2007 at 3:15 am
[...] search, and with Read/Write Webs huge back archive of search related topics, including the list of 100 alternative search engines, it has a nice base to start [...]
June 5th, 2007 at 4:26 am
Thanks for including http://www.Answers.com in the Top 100 ASE! We’re honored to see the world’s greatest encyclodictionalmanacapedia listed.
June 5th, 2007 at 5:07 am
What happened to http://www.sputtr.com ?
June 5th, 2007 at 8:54 am
[...] A9 and then I’ll choose a few based on either your suggestions or a random walk through Read/Write Web’s alternative search engine listing. Maybe Google does have a secret search sauce, but I’m never going to know unless I test the [...]
June 5th, 2007 at 4:43 pm
Please note: The correct URL for Sugarcode the Web! is http://www.sugarcodes.com
June 6th, 2007 at 8:26 am
[...] We are pleased, that our FAROO peer-to-peer web search engine is now listed in the “Top 100 alternative Search Engines”. [...]
June 7th, 2007 at 4:26 am
[...] удостоился и KartOO. Говоря о российском поисковике, AltSearchEngines.com отметили особый подход к представлению результатов [...]
June 8th, 2007 at 4:41 pm
[...] past week we had a Feature story on Health search engines, the Top 100 Alternative Search Engines list, a Debate by three Continuous search engines; Allth.at , Swamii , and Searchbots . There was [...]
June 10th, 2007 at 2:43 pm
[...] try one of the alt search engines. The list of the most recent Top 100 is here. Then on Wednesday, please leave a detailed comment describing how it went, and share your [...]
June 10th, 2007 at 6:32 pm
[...] По словам зачинщика, данный необычный призыв должен помочь каждому испытать альтернативные поисковые системы из недавнего списка Top 100 Alt Search Engines. [...]
June 11th, 2007 at 9:46 am
[...] 100 เว็บ เป็นเวลา 1 วัน [...]
June 11th, 2007 at 3:32 pm
[...] Alternative Search Engines propone que el martes 12 de junio sea A day without Google? Se trata de no utilizar Google, Yahoo!, MSN, AOL, o Ask desde las 6 de la mañana hasta las 12 de la noche. En lugar de los grandes buscadores, debemos utilizar buscadores alternativos aparecidos en The Top 100 Alternative Search Engines. [...]
July 19th, 2007 at 5:23 pm
[...] people are familiar with the Top 100 Alternative Search Engines list that I publish here monthly. But not everybody knows that the Top 100 alts are culled from [...]
July 19th, 2007 at 5:29 pm
[...] off on using any of the five major search engines all day Tuesday, and instead, try one of the many alternative search engines out there. So Tuesday was dubbed the “Day without Google.” (Editor’s note: In this context [...]
July 19th, 2007 at 5:52 pm
[...] ASE of the Month for June (tied with [...]
September 2nd, 2007 at 7:56 am
Hi Yakov - vey neat and well focussed search engine but why the google analytics link? Is it just to tell them you exist and they better watch out? Or do you have some affiliation with a certain middle eastern country…?
September 20th, 2007 at 2:56 pm
[...] Top 100 Alternative Search engines - alternate to google - worth a spin. [...]
October 30th, 2007 at 4:53 am
Why search engines dont allow to save favorite links. i think there must be some sort of link saving mechanism like bookmarking, so that we can store our favorite links.It is a suggestion. Thanks
November 13th, 2007 at 9:32 pm
[...] best search engine of the month in June 2007 by altsearchengines.com Quintura [...]
January 30th, 2008 at 9:14 am
I am looking for a Pearson 27 owers manual, thanks
May 17th, 2008 at 6:30 am
& interesting
thanks
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