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Technology Stocks : WCTI - WordCruncher Internet Technologies - Info Only -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Trooper who wrote (1)7/24/1998 3:35:00 PM
From: Joseph Waligore  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24
 
When I went to the website, it seemed they do not yet have internet searching capability. They can search emails, and texts on CD-Roms, but their webcruncher (for searching the internet) is still being developed.



To: Trooper who wrote (1)7/25/1998 3:56:00 PM
From: Mags  Respond to of 24
 
Article #1

SOFTWARE CRUNCHES WORDS

Reprinted from the Provo Herald, May 12, 1997, Page B5
ÿ

Alpine, Utah - May 12, 1997: The license of a software program developed at BYU in 1982 and mainly used at the university for the past 15 years has recently been purchased by a local company.
WordCruncher Internet Technologies, founded by Dan Lunt and James Johnston, is already bursting at the seems of its Alpine office. The two have been working since November with WordCruncher's co-developer, Jim Rosenvall, who is on temporary leave from BYU while he trains the company's owners and staff to take over the software. Rosenvall was a programmer from BYU when he was hired by Monte Shelley to develop WordCruncher.

"WordCruncher is a software to act as an aid to scholars and students who are searching for text databases to find citations, quotes, etc.," Rosenvall explained. Anther software package, Folio, was developed at BYU at the same time as WordCruncher, each unknown to the other. But whereas Folio has more of a business-based clientele because its focus is on dynamic (changing) data such as legal documents, Rosenvall said, WordCruncher's Technology "takes advantage of static data - materials that don't change. Consequently, our search engine is very, very fast; a word or phrase can be found almost instantaneously."

Explaining how WordCruncher helps narrow frequently-used words. During a search by also identifying words around them (context), Rosenvall mentioned how an unsigned sonnet was "proved" to be Shakespeare's after WordCruncher was used to analyze the word patterns. ABC News carried the story worldwide a few months ago.

The Software is being used by FARMS (Foundation of Ancient Research and Mormon Studies) at BYU and by three major companies in Utah Valley, in addition to five other places around the world including a company in McLean,Va., which provides supporting technology to Arabic world.

"The thing that makesWordCruncher unique," said Rosenvall, " is our ability to deal with many languages. We may be the only software product in the world that can do retrieval from any language." WordCruncher licensees have used the software with Oriental and Middle Eastern languages. It has also been used with classical Greek and to assist scholars studying the Dead Sea Scrolls, which were written in Hebrew.

The software is unique, said its co-developer, in that it can access not only individual languages in the same document. That includes the technical problems of inverting such language as Hebrew and Arabic, which read from right to left.

WordCruncher has also met the challenge of languages which use symbols. Compared with perhaps 250 in English, Chinese has a complex set of 3,000, with no spaces between the words. And a single Arabic verb with its prefixes and suffixes can take hundreds of forms. But WordCruncher handle such "agglutinized" languages. "It's one of the things we've worked hardest on," said Rosenvall.

Closer to home, Covenant Communications, based in American Fork, is one of the value-added retailers who bundle WordCruncher software with their product. Covenant's Ultimate LDS Library on CD-ROM boasts almost access to some 850 works at the stroke of a key. A Provo company, MultiLing, uses WordCruncher as it specializes in providing translation tools. WordCruncher has also helped the American Genealogy Lending Library (AGLL) in Bountiful manage its huge library that had more than a million listings beginning with a single "W" alone.

WCTI in Alpine, to whom BYU has turned over not only the license but the source of code and development ("a watershed," according to Rosenvall) is both a provider and a publisher. A new version of its library went online Friday (www.wordcruncher.com).

"Our next focus is getting publishing tools ready to ship," said Lunt, who has eight fulltime employees handling development and marketing. Lunt worked for WordPerfect for 13 years, the last 10 marketing and sales. He and his partner met a decade ago in Orem to propose a joint working relationship. They stayed in touch as Johnston was living in Indiana, and went into business together last fall.

WordCruncher has since been used for a wide variety of applications. They include protein analysis ( from a description of the different protein chains --- "the most unusual use of technology that I've ever heard of," said Rosevall) and school psychology, where troubled students' writings are analyzed and the basis of what words appear around certain other words such as "friend," "love," "hate," etc.

WCTI's Lunt told how Michael Lamonico, an AP English teacher in Long Island, N.Y., has used the software to teach Shakespearean literature to exited studentswho become experts on a chosen word, then find it in context and analyze its usage. "He's found it to be a very effective teaching tool for the classroom," said Lunt, adding that WCTI will offer an interactive classroom on the Web this month, taught by Lamonico.

In addition to classes on Websites, WCTI expects to announce a new technology that will allow the company to service the web by letting users access and will remote library sites, or purchase texts and load them on their own computer. "Our long-term goal," said Lunt, "is to have all textbooks (even school texts) available for reference so that a person with an account could log on and get access to a whole library or materials."



To: Trooper who wrote (1)7/25/1998 3:57:00 PM
From: Mags  Respond to of 24
 
Article #2



Small Utah Co Tries 'Craziness' With
Search Engine Auction

By MARK BOSLET
Dow Jones Newswires
PALO ALTO, Calif. -- Silicon Valley executives like to break new ground with their products and technologies. Now a small Provo, Utah, software company aims to break new ground with its sales method.

WordCruncher Internet Technologies Inc. wants to auction to thehighest bidder a license for its WordCruncher search engine software - technology developed by Brigham Young University researchers for finding computer information.

So last week it faxed rather breathless bulletins, without the company's name attached, to the chief executives of 41 prominent technology firms, including Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO) and Internet navigation market leader Yahoo! Inc. (YHOO). The bulletin - to be followed this week by a more detailed mailing that will identify the company and include a software sample - made the claim that come Groundhog Day, the day of the auction, all other Web search technology will become obsolete.

It's no surprise that industry executives find the assertion hard to believe. But it's no surprise, either, that WordCruncher sees a need to go to such lengths. Internet navigation is dominated by several large, well-established sites, such as Yahoo and Excite Inc. (XCIT), and this unusual promotional effort reflects "how tough it is to establish an identity in search-and-retrieval technology," said Ron Rappaport, an analyst at Zona Research Inc.

"It's a giant marketing attempt to draw attention to another technology," he said.

But there actually may be some truth to the WordCruncher claim. Mark Cannon, a former project manager at General Electric Co.'s (GE) Schenectady, N.Y., research center, was sent by GE to examine WordCruncher, and came away impressed.

"Nobody has done what they've done," said Cannon, who now runs a small business in Utah. "They've still got a couple years lead" on other search technologies.

Any advantage would clearly be valuable to Internet surfers, increasingly frustrated by the hundreds, and many times thousands, of responses they get to Web queries.

Cannon said the software stands out for its ability to search in numerous languages. Beyond English, it understands Chinese, Japanese, Hebrew, Eastern European languages and many other tongues, WordCruncher officials say.

The search program also does better proximity searching, allowing users to whittle down the number of responses they get, Cannon said. For example, someone interested in the migratory patterns of North American butterflies might type in the keywords "butterfly" and "Mexico," and expect the search engine to find information about butterflies that winter in Mexico.

WordCruncher Executive Vice President James W. Johnston also said the software gives users greater information about responses by printing surrounding sentences and phrases with keyword searches.

Still, industry executives are skeptical. Yahoo! Looks at interesting technology, said Farzad Nazem, senior vice president, but "I wouldn't say the door is way open." Far too many people have technology they think is revolutionary, he said.

"We always look at technology," agreed Infoseek Corp.'s (SEEK) Leo Jolicoeur, vice president of product management and business operations. But Infoseek already offers proximity searching, he said.

In all likelihood, "it's too late" for a company such as WordCruncher to break into the Internet navigation business, said Keith E. Benjamin, an analyst at BancAmerica Robertson Stephens. "The game is over."

But WordCruncher Chief Executive M. Daniel Lunt, a former vice president at WordPerfect Corp., isn't dissuaded. Already Oracle Corp. (ORCL) and Sun Microsystems Inc. (SUNW) have expressed some interest in looking at the technology, he said.

And while the auction idea "has a slight aura of craziness about it," he admitted, "I think it will get some attention."

And if the attention generates a sale, that could mean - depending on the type of license a company wants - anywhere from $10 million to $60 million for WordCruncher, he said.

-Mark Boslet; 415 496-1366




To: Trooper who wrote (1)7/25/1998 3:58:00 PM
From: Mags  Respond to of 24
 
Article #3

And the winner is...

ÿ

By MATTHEW BROERSMA
January 19, 1998 3:02 PM PST
ZDNN
If you believe their hype, a tiny Provo, Utah, startup's new software will make almost every search engine "obsolete" overnight.

WordCruncher Internet Technologies Inc. is preparing to auction off an exclusive license to its new search-engine technology. And in promoting the sale, it is using some unusual tactics.

Two weeks ago, the startup mailed off a flyer to a long list of chief executives -- including heads of all the major search engine companies. The flyer announced the upcoming auction with the large, bold headline: "On Groundhog Day, all but One of the Following Web Engines Will Become Obsolete," followed by a list of search engines.

The flyer, which did not disclose WordCruncher's name, made great promises for its search engine, such as "The winning bidder will own this market, practically overnight." It promised more information on Jan. 20.

WordCruncher's promotion was designed to raise eyebrows -- indeed, the company's own president said it had a sense of "craziness" about it. Industry watchers call the unusual strategy a sign of how overcrowded the search-engine market already is.

But while the company's sales force is getting all the attention, much time and effort has actually been invested in the product itself."

WordCruncher says its technology will help make Web surfing easier and more intuitive than before. Essentially, it is a collection of features aimed at making Web search results easier to read, with far more information than present search engines offer, and more clearly presented.

"The current search services are like the yellow pages," said James Johnston, WordCruncher's chairman. "You have to call each service listed to find out if it's what you want. [WordCruncher] will show you exactly what's there, you can see the hidden context. And that's just the tip of the iceberg."

Other features include the ability to categorize search results by subject. WordCruncher analyzes words immediately surrounding the search keyword, and uses its analysis to separate results into groups. The user can then decide to look at only one group of results.

"Say you're searching for 'butterly,'" said Johnston. "It will categorize [the results] by what kind of butterfly, the monarch butterfly, or butterfly surgical closure. Then if you just want to find out about those five results about the monarch butterfly, you can click on it and it will show only that category."

Some who have tested WordCruncher say they are impressed with the engine, and the company's executives clearly believe it will be a quantum leap for the Web.

But pure technological advance isn't the only motive here: WordCruncher President Daniel Lunt, a former vice president with WordPerfect Corp., says his company could net from $10 to $60 million for WordCruncher, depending on what kind of a license it sells.




To: Trooper who wrote (1)7/25/1998 3:59:00 PM
From: Mags  Respond to of 24
 
Article #4



Whew! - Releif for People Drowning in Email

ÿ

By CRAIG MENEFEE
02/24/98 ALPINE, UTAH, U.S.A.
1998 FEB 24 (NB)

(NEWS)(PC)(SFO)(00054)

Utah firm WordCruncher Internet Technologies (WCTI) has created a little $9.95 downloadable utility program called Whew! to keep track of information that could otherwise be lost in a rising flood of e-mail.

The firm's president, Dan Lunt, told Newsbytes it seems to him it's about time someone offered an inexpensive solution to people drowning in a sea of formatted electronic messages.

Lunt knows about formatting problems. He was one of the first four people at WordPerfect in the early 1980s, back when that program took corporate word processing away from then-dominant WordStar. He rose to become vice president of marketing in the glory years before Microsoft stepped up with Office, leaving WordPerfect out in the same kind of cold place WordPerfect had left WordStar, years before.

Nothing lasts forever. Lunt says a year and a half ago he helped found WCTI specifically to go commercial with some technology created over a 10-year span at Utah's Brigham Young University. He sees the WCTI filtering and indexing technology as similar to the early WordPerfect.

When WordPerfect was developed, he explained, using WordStar to print documents was largely a matter of guesswork. Lunt describes the original WordPerfect as an attempt to solve that problem and as "an early stab at a WYSIWYG [what-you-see-is-what-you-get] word processor."

"That's pretty much where e-mail is now," he adds.

What Whew! does is maintain a searchable index of every e-mail message on a user's machine, even if messages are created by multiple e-mail programs.

Users then can search for single words, word lists, exact or partial phrases, and word combinations. The program supports proximity searches (find coyote within 10 words of roadrunner) and fielded searches (find coyote in the Subject field).

When a search term is located, the program returns a "Reference List" showing a paragraph from the "hit" with search terms highlighted. Showing "hits" in context helps users screen out the irrelevant ones.

Clicking an item then brings up a full screen with the message.

The Whew! program is actually a subset of a much larger publishing-related WCTI program suite but can be downloaded separately. It currently works with Microsoft Outlook, Exchange, and Internet Mail, n Netscape 3 and 4, Eudora 4.0 and cc:Mail Version 8.0 (using Windows Messaging), the firm says.

A downloadable version that times out after 14 days is available on the World Wide Web at wordcruncher.com. Reported by Newsbytes News Network: newsbytes.com .

Press & Reader Contact:
James Johnston
WordCruncher Internet Technologies, Inc.
801-756-8833
johnston@wordcruncher.com




To: Trooper who wrote (1)7/25/1998 4:02:00 PM
From: Mags  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24
 
Article #5

San Jose, Calif. February 3, 1998-- WordCruncher Internet Technologies has announced that it did not accept a bid at yesterday's history-making high-tech auction, held at the San Jose Fairmont.

"We received one bid in the range of several million dollars to acquire the company, which we declined, since our goal was never to sell," said Dan Lunt, Wordcruncher president.

"We are in continuing discussions with three firms on licensing. We originally set out to sell an exclusive license to our patented search technology for use on Internet search engines. What's making the negotiations complex is that the interested parties are actually bidding for different, and sometimes overlapping, applications of our search technology. We need to see these conversations through to their complete and natural conclusion, so we've decided to let these negotiations run their course.

"We continue to believe that our search technology has the potential to set the industry standard for next-generation Internet search engines," Lunt continued. "We will continue to pursue a joint venture partner in the Internet search engine business, based upon our strong beliefs that this technology can fundamentally change the way this sector of the business works."

About WordCruncher

WordCruncher Internet Technologies, Inc. software products support electronic publishing and services, and provide efficient, accurate, and lightning-quick information retrieval and analysis. The company's strengths include innovative technology, a seasoned management team, and a history of successful applied uses.

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