Kagi is partnering with Wolfram Alpha to enhance accuracy and tackle misleading AI answers
Mar 6, 2024 at 3:15 PM

Kagi is partnering with Wolfram Alpha to enhance accuracy and tackle misleading AI answers

Kagi, the premium search engine developed by the Orion web browser team, has announced a strategic partnership with computational knowledge engine Wolfram Alpha. The collaboration aims to enhance Kagi's search capabilities and tackle the issue of potentially misleading AI-generated answers.

Wolfram Alpha boasts an extensive knowledge base and robust algorithms, which will now be integrated into Kagi's search platform. The goal is to deliver more accurate, reliable, and comprehensive search results to users. Kagi stated, “This partnership represents a significant step forward in our goal to provide a search engine that users can trust to find the dependable information they need quickly and easily.”

The integration of Wolfram Alpha into Kagi began two weeks ago and is already being utilized for many computational queries. Wolfram Alpha now powers quick access to mathematical calculations, time, unit conversion, and factual information within the Kagi platform.

The partnership has enabled Kagi to promptly answer more complex computational queries and even supports the direct evaluation of commands. Kagi is also launching rich knowledge graph widgets powered by Wolfram Alpha, along with instant summary boxes that display information as users type, eliminating the need for a full search.

Kagi has plans to incorporate these enhancements into the Orion browser and has offered to make them available for implementation in other web browsers.

Mar 6, 2024 by Paul

ma
mariediveja found this interesting
  • ...

Kagi Search is a premium web search engine where every element on the page is of importance. Notable for its focus on privacy, Kagi Search operates without ads and does not track user activity, resulting in a clean, distraction-free browsing experience. It holds a rating of 4 and is often compared to alternatives such as DuckDuckGo, Google Search, and Searx.

No comments so far, maybe you want to be first?
Gu