AT&T Business Services and its Norwegian search engine partner failed to meet the deadline for installing the new search engine
Search not for the new FirstGov search engine. It's going to arrive a bit late.
AT&T Business Services and its Norwegian search engine partner, Fast Search and Transfer, failed to meet the March 31 deadline for installing the new $10.5 million search engine on the federal government's Web portal.
So the General Services Administration, which runs FirstGov, will pay about $18,000 a month in the interim for the Inktomi Corp. search engine that the site had been using for free since September 2000, when it went online. Use of the engine was a gift to the government from Inktomi founder Eric Brewer.
Under terms of a contract awarded March 7, the AT&T and Fast Search engine was to be "ready for implementation by March 31." However, a search of the Web site April 1 produced no sign of the new engine.
"It's taking longer to move [government-provided] equipment into place" than expected, GSA spokeswoman Eleni Martin said. She was unable to say when the new engine is now scheduled to go online. FirstGov officials were unavailable for comment, and representatives from AT&T and Fast Search did not return telephone calls.
The new search engine is expected to do a better job of finding and returning federal and state government documents on the Internet. The current Inktomi search engine has been criticized for overwhelming its users with too many search results and for retrieving documents that match the search terms but are irrelevant to the context of the search.
The Fast Search engine is supposed to do a better job of sorting documents by relevance.
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