Free Newsletters
InfoWorld Daily

InfoWorld
Log-in | Register

Gaga over Google

Smart and simple, Google Search Appliance GB-1001 is a great find

By Chad Dickerson  
July 11, 2003
 

With the word Google being regularly used both as a noun and a verb around most offices these days, it's a safe bet that employees in your enterprise already appreciate the simple interface, quality search results, and overall speediness of the search engine. With the Google Search Appliance GB-1001, IT managers can now bring the power of Google into the enterprise. 

Free IT resource

Hear how top CIOs turn change into a competitive advantage.

Sponsored by HP

Free IT resource

Attend the SOA Executive Forum: Breaking SOA Bottlenecks SOAExecForum.com/may2007

Sponsored by InfoWorld



Google Search Appliance GB-1001

Google, google.com

Excellent  8.7
criteria score weight
Performance 9 30%
Value 8 20%
Ease-of-use 9 10%
Interoperability 8 10%
Management 9 10%
Setup 9 10%
Support 9 10%

Cost:
$28,000 for a two-year license for hardware, software, and support (supports 150,000 documents and 60 queries per minute); $50,000 two-year license supports 300,000 documents and 60 queries per minute

Bottom Line:
The Google Search Appliance GB-1001 brings the intuitive, familiar interface and powerful back-end search of Google.com into your corporate network. Its built-in self-learning spell-checker, KeyMatch and synonym features, quick setup, and hassle-free management make the GB-1001 a "buy today, implement tomorrow" solution.

About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology

I took a look at Google's newest offering, and my test results demonstrated why Google continues to dominate the relatively small search-appliance market over competitors such as the Thunderstone Search Appliance. The box boasts most of the features of Google.com but puts them under the full control of your IT staff. End-user training is not an issue with such a familiar front-end, making the GB-1001 a must-have for enterprises that want to buy a search solution today and have it running in production tomorrow.

After a cursory scan of the instructions and a quick, painless setup of the bright yellow appliance, I was ready to go. Throughout my test, I kept the small documentation booklet by my side but rarely needed it since the online help was sufficiently comprehensive.

For my first test, I pointed the GB-1001 crawler at a server mirroring InfoWorld.com. Configuring the search crawler demonstrated just how far beyond simple keyword searching the Google engine goes. In a corporate intranet environment, I might want all searches for "emergency contacts" to return a URL with our company's emergency contact list. Using Google's KeyMatch feature, I was able to set up the engine to do just that.

In a similar vein, the Google Search Appliance offers a synonyms feature, enabling an administrator to easily set up suggested synonymous terms for user's search words. In my test, I configured searches for "William Gates" to suggest "Bill Gates," and sure enough, all searches for "William Gates" returned a message that read: "You could also try: Bill Gates." I had similar success when I set up "OpenBSD" as a synonym for "FreeBSD."

In the familiar search interface, you'll find the same features you find at google.com, though you can change the look and feel via simple Web forms or XSLT (eXtensible Style Language Transformation) style sheets.

The GB-1001 comes with the same automatic spell-checker found on google.com, and I was pleased to find that it worked with information specific to my own company. When I deliberately misspelled my own name in a search as "Chad Dikerson," the search returned no results but asked, "Did you mean Chad Dickerson?" The built-in spell checker is self-learning and does not have to be configured in any way. Very nice.

In my second test, I indexed content from InfoWorld's production intranet, which includes a diverse mix of HTML, PDF, and Microsoft Word documents. The GB-1001 does an excellent job of unlocking the information inside the non-HTML documents that reside on most enterprise networks. My searches for "Peoplesoft setup" and "content management" returned a relevance-sorted list of links to HTML, Word, and PDF documents, and I found what I was looking for. The GB-1001 can deliver results chronologically, and users can also search within particular document types. The appliance caches all documents it indexes, so critical information is available when other network resources are down, though links to cached documents are easily disabled in the search results if you choose.

The GB-1001 can also be configured to send automatic status updates to administrators via e-mail, a feature that I found useful in keeping track of the daily crawl of the site.

The only downside to the Google Search Appliance GB-1001is that it lacks an API, which is surprising because Google has been a pioneer in the Web services arena with its SOAP-based Google Web API. Many enterprises will neither need nor want API access to the appliance, but for those wanting to integrate search results into enterprise applications, this feature is notably missing. In a similar vein, API access to manipulate the search index on a per-URL basis would be useful.

Despite this shortcoming, the Google Search Appliance GB-1001 promised power, simplicity, and the quality search results you expect from Google and it more than delivered. With an API for the system, the Google Search Appliance would be close to perfection.





 


 
Chad Dickerson is CTO of InfoWorld.

  More of Chad Dickerson's column
  Chad Dickerson's Weblog

Newsletter Get Chad's column delivered weekly.
Enter e-mail address:




 

TOP NEWS:


»  Four quick tips for choosing an IM security product
71 percent of businesses will invest in real-time messaging this year. If you're one of them, be sure to protect your enterprise

»  Forrester analysts ID hot IT jobs
Research group finds 16 IT roles with a promising future

»  Nvidia claims 10 hours of HD video on Tegra chip
The Tegra 600 and 650 can be used with hard disk drives and are designed partly for mobile Internet devices

»  Database vendors add Google's MapReduce
Greenplum and Aster Data Systems will support Google's programming technique, developed for parallel processing of large data sets across commodity hardware

»  Network management: Tips for managing costs
New technologies, changing requirements, and ongoing equipment maintenance and upgrades cost money, but there are ways to manage expenses

»  EMC targets SMBs, branch offices with new low-end storage
Celerra NX4 highlights include thin provisioning, snapshot technology for data recovery and backups, and Web-based console for management of storage volumes




REMOTE ACCESS: MAINTAIN SECURITY AND DECREASE THE BURDEN ON IT
Join this interactive webcast to discover how IT Managers can control access rights, end-user security settings and end-point authorization. Sponsor: Citrix(R) GoToMyPC(R) Corporate

»  Click here to view this Webcast
  WAN Emulation Sponsored Solutions Guide
WAN emulation technology enables IT organizations to predict reliably how applications will perform in a networked environment, before application rollout, mitigating development risk and costs.This Sponsores Solutions Guide has everything you need to now about WAN emulation and WAN and how to best implement it in your organization. Sponsored by Shunra

»  Click here to download now

- Special Advertising Partners -
WHITE PAPERS
 

» Technology White Papers Library

Technology White Papers by Topic

Technology White Papers E-mail Alert

Find out when the latest white paper is available:
 
 
INFOWORLD MARKETPLACE
 
» BUY A LINK NOW
 

FIND PRODUCTS AND COMPANIES
» COMPLETE PRODUCT GUIDE



TECHNOLOGY INDEX
• Applications
• Application Development
• Security
• Networking
• Wireless
• Platforms
• Hardware
• Data Management
• Storage
• Web Services
• Business
• Telecom
• Professional Services
• Standards

TECH WATCH 


What's the 411 on GOOG-411?
Just as Google has become synonymous with "performing a Web search," 411 is understood to mean "information" -- as in "what's the 411?" I was thus surprised to discover, from a billboard, no less, that the king of search is taking on the ...

Apple HTML source reveals 'iPhone Extreme'
"This one's a stretch..." reports AppleInsider. Um, yeah. Reporting on HTML code sightings of product names could be called a stretch, but iPhone Extreme has a ring to it. Now, that sounds like the product Apple should have released first, rather ...

COLUMNISTS

Unified under law
Ephraim Schwartz's Column and Blog (InfoWorld) - In the litigious world we live in, deploying a unified communications platform in your enterprise could...
» MORE COLUMNISTS

MORE INFOWORLD BLOGS


Open Sources 
Product Management
When I joined MySQL four years ago, there was quite a lot of debate about product management. We didn't actually have ...

Zero Day 
Botnet herders tending smaller flocks
New research backs up the theory that botnet operators are keeping their networks smaller in a continued effort to keep ...



• Advice Line
• Database Underground
• The Deep End
• Enterprise Mac
• Geeks in Paradise
• Grid Meter
• The Gripe Line
• InfoWorld Daily
• Inside IT
• IT Troubleshooter
• ITXtreme
• Open Sources
• ProdBlog
• Real World SOA
• Reality Check
• Security Adviser
• SMB IT
• The Storage Network
• Tech Watch
• Virtualization Report
• Zero Day

ADVERTISEMENT


RESOURCE CENTERadvertisement 

GOVERNMENT IT & POLICY
'If you don't go after the network, you're never going to stop these guys. Never.'
From the State Department, All the News for Inquiring Minds
TechPresident, the Internet Citizenry's New Consensus Taker



Sponsored Technology Links

 
 
 HOME  NEWS  BLOGS  PODCASTS  VIDEOS  TECHNOLOGIES  TEST CENTER  EVENTS  CAREERS   About | Advertise | Awards | RSS | Contact Us 

Copyright © 2008, Reprints, Permissions, Licensing, IDG Network, Privacy Policy, Terms of Service.
All Rights reserved. InfoWorld is a leading publisher of technology information and product reviews on topics including viruses,
phishing, worms, firewalls, security, servers, storage, networking, wireless, databases, and web services.

CIO :: ComputerWorld :: CSO :: Demo :: GamePro :: Games.net :: IDG Connect :: IDG World Expo
Industry Standard :: IT World :: JavaWorld :: LinuxWorld :: MacUser :: Macworld :: Network World :: PC World :: Playlist