What’s Cooler than Cuill?
April 17th, 2008 by John CrenshawNo, that’s not a typo in the title, that’s the name of the relatively new search engine company that is getting whispers all over the web about being a potential real competitor to Google (pronounced “Cool”). Aside from the name of the company gushing with that Web 2.0-style weird naming convention, they claim to have something pretty serious up their sleeves…the ability to index websites at 1/10 the cost of Google.
Based out of Menlo Park, California, and, according to Michael Arrington, they were originally funded with a $5 million dollar chunk of money out of the owner’s pockets. According to the company’s website, they’ve also received one $8 million dollar investment from Tugboat Ventures and another, more recent, $25 million dollar venture capital investment from Madrone Capital Partners (although the wording is unclear, it appears that Madrone isn’t putting up all $25 million, but the largest chunk of that among several other investors).
The company’s staff, again, according to Michael Arrington, is comprised of a husband and wife team, formerly of Google, Tom Costello and Anna Patterson. The two were joined by Russell Power, formerly of Xift and IBM, and creator of the Xift search engine and the WebFountain Prototype from IBM. Apparently they’ve got somewhere in the realm of 10-15 employees now at their Menlo Park office.
In case you’re wondering if Cuill is crawling your site, check your stats for “Twiceler,” the name of their experimental crawler. In case anyone’s interested, their site says the it crawls from the following IP addresses:
38.99.13.121 38.99.44.101 64.1.215.166 208.36.144.6 38.99.13.122 38.99.44.102 64.1.215.162 208.36.144.7 38.99.13.123 38.99.44.103 64.1.215.163 208.36.144.8 38.99.13.124 38.99.44.104 64.1.215.164 208.36.144.9 38.99.13.125 38.99.44.105 64.1.215.165 208.36.144.10 38.99.13.126 38.99.44.106
So, the big question is, do they stand a chance against the force that seems to be taking over the digital universe right now? Well, who knows, but Google’s power isn’t all wrapped up in its search engine. The reason Google is so huge is because it’s effectively expanded into lateral markets and they have quite a foothold at this point, so it’s going to be tough for a competitor to take over. It could happen, but certainly not for a while. I guess we’ll just have to wait and see.




