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Now, enjoy Internet, without the Net
Surf the Internet without going online? It sounds like a bad joke,
but the Seattle (Washington, U. S.) and Mumbai-Delhi-based
start-up-co-founded by two Indians, which "Unplugged" web based search
and put it on the user's computing device Webaroo, is the brainchild of
the Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai graduates Rakesh Mathur and
Beeru Sheth.
Mathur became famous as the co-founder of the "virtual" database
company, Junglee, that he sold to Amazon, the Web's biggest bookshop, in
1998.
Sheth founded an early online services marketplace, Elance.
They have joined with American Bradley Husick to start Webaroo (as in
kangaroo) and their first major product has created huge waves with its
cheeky premise: "Why go online every time you want to do a search?
Why not store the parts of the Web that you need for reference
frequently, on your own desktop, laptop or hand-held computer and go
online only to update it every now and then?" Webaroo has created a
unique algorithm or mathematical formula to do just this. Once the pack
is installed, users can search its contents whenever they like, without
having to go online. When they do get connected, the contents are
quickly updated.
The idea was so compelling that a Taiwan-based PC maker has since
decided to bundle it with the laptops which it sells in the future.
The rest of us can download the software for free.
The software works with Windows XP or Windows 2000 on all desktops
and laptops and the website gives a list of handheld computers and smart
phones on which subsequent searches can be done, if required.
The download occupies about 7-10 MB of space. Initially, the user
needs to download one of the dozen readymade web packs available, or
specify a web address to search. This correspondent found that the first
time, the download can take 30-90 minutes. Subsequent searches within
the pack are very fast, since it is done on one's own machine.
Each web pack on a chosen subject will need between 60 MB - 250 MB of
disk space, a small price to pay to have the stuff of the worldwide web
on one's own computer. Well almost!
The Hindu
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