Reflections & analysis about innovation, technology, startups, investing, healthcare, and more .... with a focus on Minnesota, Land of 10,000 Lakes. Blogging continuously since 2005.

Tag: Krugle (Page 2 of 3)

Yahoo! Kisses Krugle

This just in…news on Valentine’s Day about a company I follow named Krugle, of code-search fame. Seems they’ve chosen this hallowed day to announce they’ve been tapped to supply search functionality for the Yahoo! Developer Network. This is a centralized resource that offers open APIs and Web Services to make it easy for developers to extend and build on Yahoo!’s products and services.

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The Yahoo! Developer Network hosts the publicly-available code and documentation for Yahoo!-owned properties, and provides tutorials, code samples, and other resources for developers. With this partnership, developers can now take advantage of Krugle’s code search engine and interface when they’re working with Yahoo! APIs and data — specifically, to find, save, and share code written in six languages: ActionScript, JavaScript, .NET, PHP, Python, and Ruby.

A kewl thing about Krugle is it also provides users with contextual information as they browse the code, such as associated documentation and dependencies, bug reports, commentary, and user-tagged code and search results, which they can then easily share with their colleagues.

“One of the reasons for Yahoo!’s success has been the company’s strong belief in opening up its products for third-party developers,” according to my old buddy Steve Larsen, who’s the CEO of Krugle, based in Menlo Park, CA. Stevelarsen_1 “By publishing open APIs and helpful documentation, they create an active and engaged community and encourage developers to create applications which utilize Yahoo!’s technology in new and innovative ways. With this partnership, Krugle will make it easier than ever to leverage the true potential of Yahoo!’s open APIs and Web Services.”

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To check out Krugle code search on the Yahoo! Developer Network, just go to http://developer.yahoo.com.

One other thing I like about Krugle: not only the management, but the investors and advisors behind this outfit are pretty darn awesome, too.

Gugle, Kroogle – What’s the Diff?

I asked Steve Larsen, CEO of Krugle, Menlo Park, CA, for his reaction to the big news today….that Google was launching “Google Code Search.”

Tech~Surf~Blog: What’s your take on this bomb, Steve?

Larsen/Krugle Inc.: We’ve been saying for 18 months that Code Search is an important new category. Stevelarsen The massive benefits that can be realized by both developers and corporations when robust code and technical search is available is becoming increasingly obvious. Google’s entry, along with O’Reilly’s entry a few months back and the existence of koders.com — it all signals we’re on the right track.

Tech~Surf~Blog: What are some other reasons you believe that?

Larsen/Krugle Inc.: Well, for one, developers spend 20-25% of their time just looking for stuff. Krugle users report saving significant time due to us helping them find code and technical information fast. Second, code search is the key to making code-reuse a reality. Vast amounts have been spent to modularize and make code componentized, but little has been spent on how to find and connect the modules. Good code search fixes this. Thirdly, companies who care about developers — like IBM, Sun, Microsoft, and others — have spent the past several years attempting to provide better access to their code archives and high-value technical information. This is a big issue for them. We’re helping.

Tech~Surf~Blog: What do you have to say specifically about Google’s code-search product?

Larsen/Krugle Inc.: First, it could be characterized as a better version of koders.com. While it does simple code search, developers tend to be more exploratory in the search process. They first search and review potential answers, then research these answers to better understand the project and review the technical documentation. Our three channels — code, tech pages, and projects — are based on how developers really use search.

Second, searching and finding code alone is not all that compelling. To be truly useful to developers, you need to show code in the context of its project, the meta data around the project, as well as license information. Krugle does this with an easily browsable project directory and rich technical information that relates to the code and project.

Thirdly, search engines ultimately are judged on the accuracy and relevancy of their results. The same indexing and page-rank algorithms used to search text, images, video, and books come up short when faced with the demands of professional programmers. At Krugle, we’ve found the key to great search results is to parse the code, collect and analyze project information and statistics, and use all of this to more accurately order our code search results.

Fourthly — is that a word? — we think collaboration around code is very important. And we provide users with the ability to create, add, and save notes to code and sets of related results, providing a level of interaction with code that developers heretofore have just not had.

I even have a fifth point: While other code search engines offer the ability to search for a code file if you know its name or something about it, Krugle goes well beyond that by supporting common programmer use cases that revolve around: (a) exploring a new technical project or concept in an effort to quickly “come-up-to-speed”…(b) finding code or code snippets to use or to have as an example…or (c) helping find what’s wrong when your code doesn’t work and you need to know how to fix it.

There you have it, friends. Krugle should be liking all this attention. I think this code-search game is just now beginning to get interesting…

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Krugle and Others vs. Google Code Search

Well, the Google Code Search announcement is sure abuzzin’ out there. This CNet story popped up…

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And Nik Cubrilovic posted about it at TechCrunch a few hours ago, quoted herewith:

“All of these search engines have a long way to go before they become a shortcut way for developers to find code – especially considering that most developers are astute at using ordinary search engines to find what they are looking for. Searching for a phrase like “drop-down menu in ajax” won’t return anything usefull, so developers who don’t know which specific string within code they are looking for will have a hard time. Track record would suggest that Google are the company to most likely get this right, by combining the information they have in their main search engine with the source code data for better results … This looks like bad news for the startups in this space who will need to further innovate, but it is good news for Google, a company that hasn’t really been hitting home runs recently with some of it’s (sic) recent new products.”

But in an earlier post this morning on Digital Alchemy, Krugle gets a nice review:

“Krugle’s search interface is much more sophisticated, incorporating ‘sub-tabbed’ browsing and tree navigation of source code, which makes code a lot easier to read and interpret. Google does have one interesting feature: it indicates how many identical files are in its database, allowing you to see how widespread a piece of code is.”

More soon from Krugle on their reaction to this announcement. One can only surmise the startup had a crisis plan of sorts in place for the prospect of this day arriving….

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Google Does Code Search – Busy Day at Krugle?

Google dropped a bomb today when it announced it was launching “Google Code Search,” which Yahoo News was kind enough to tell us about in the wee hours this morning via this Reuters story. Googlecodelogo Not much at the Google Code Blog yet — the latest entry there is October 3rd. But I’m sure it’s all over the Google watch blogs by now…

Of course, code search is not a new idea, as Krugle launched its service with much hoopla at Demo ’06 in February. Kruglelogo_1 See some of my coverage here, and this was Dylan Tweney’s take at Wired.com at the time.

Me thinks it will be a busy day at Krugle as the sun starts to rise in Menlo Park…. I’ve asked Steve Larsen, CEO, for some comment. Stand by.

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Tales of an Out-of-Town ‘Blog Wrangler’

Some people blog for themselves, some people blog for companies. Chris Locke does both — the latter of late for Krugle Inc., Menlo Park, CA, a promising new code-search site. The man is multi-talented. [For those who don’t recognize the name, think book titles Cluetrain Manifesto and Gonzo Marketing, not to speak of the crazy web site EGR…and other antics too numerous to mention.] Suffice it to say, he knows how to have fun, tweak the righteous, and, well, how does one describe what Chris (aka Rageboy) does?

Anyway, a couple hours ago, I got an email from my old buddy Steve Larsen, CEO of Krugle, asking me and some of his blogger friends to basically check out this unauthorized post, and “Should I fire him?” I LOLed bigtime! The mad blogmeister was at it again. Loose in Silicon Valley, on an escape from his home base in Boulder, meeting with Steve’s new VP of marketing, and posting about his favorite subject: himself. But I have to give him a pass (and told Steve so) for wanting to break out a bit from his blog-for-hire gig, to “exercise (his) urge to cast aside (his) low-profile ways.” Hah! And do post a comment for Chris…he loves hearing from his fans. Best of all, he can also take anything any unsuspecting first-timer non-fan can dish at him. It only makes him more playful…and inclined to write more raging, inspired prose.

Meantime, what’s the latest with Krugle? Well, most significantly, they raised a $6.1M Series B, on the strength of their success earlier this year, including winning a “Demo God” award at the DEMO2006 event I covered in Feburary, and subsequently signing up 35,000 developers for their new service. Steve, by the way, is yet another former Minnesotan who found opportunity (and venture money) elsewhere. Someday, I’ll get him back here to talk about his experiences.

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