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The Jewish Chronicle

Ori Allon Googled for his web search technique

Israeli-born computer scientist Ori Allon has come up with a way to make internet searches quicker and more efficient. Bill Gates offered him a fortune for it, but he’s just pleased he’s made his parents proud

May 27, 2009 13:02
Ori Allon’s invention helped millions of queries since March launch

By

Dan Goldberg,

Dan Goldberg

2 min read

If you have searched for, and successfully found, something on the internet over the past couple of months, you should say a little thank you to Ori Allon. The 29-year-old Israeli-born computer whiz is the man responsible for inventing a technique to make web searches far quicker and more efficient, earning himself a fortune in the process.

Allon, who left Israel after army service to study in Australia, is not the stereotypical geek one expects of a computer scientist. He sports a healthy mop of semi-styled hair, some stubble, blue jeans and a semi-crumpled shirt. He smiles as he relives how internet giants Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft threw money waged a bidding war to acquire
the rights to his revolutionary invention.

It was late 2005 and the doctoral student at University of New South Wales in Sydney had just come up with a complex algorithm for internet search engines that could understand the meaning behind internet queries as opposed to simply identifying individual words. Within weeks he was in Silicon Valley in California meeting a team of technical engineers at Google.

“We don’t try to match keywords,” explains Allon. “We try to understand the meaning behind the query and find the good web pages that correspond to it.”