The name AltaVista refers both to an Internet search engine company and to that company's search engine product. The engine, whose name means "a view from above" or "high view", originated in 1995 with Louis Monier and Mike Burrows, both currently at Google, and a small team of scientists at Digital Equipment Corporation's Research lab in Palo Alto, California. The original idea came from a remark by Paul Flaherty (died March 16, 2006 at 42) that Alpha servers would be just perfect to create a Yahoo!-like search engine.
Launched on December 15, 1995 at http://altavista.digital.com AltaVista was misunderstood by its parent company. Digital Equipment Corporation, a hardware company, missed the potential of the Internet and instead rationalized that AltaVista would be a showcase for its new line of servers.
At launch the service had two innovations that set it ahead of the other search engines. It used a fast multi-threaded crawler (Scooter) that could cover a lot more Web pages than were believed to exist, and an efficient search back-end running on advanced hardware with many Gigabytes of memory. These made AltaVista the first searchable, full-text database of a large part of the World Wide Web.
The company's product BabelFish offered the Web's first Internet machine translation service that could translate words, phrases or entire Web sites to and from English, Spanish, French, German, Dutch, Portuguese, Italian and Russian. Babelfish is still one of the most popular free translation tools online.
The search engine went online in 1995 and soon surpassed Lycos and Excite in popularity. It was the first-ever multi-lingual search engine. It was also the first major search engine to support non-Latin languages, such as Japanese or Chinese. AltaVista later extended this by introducing localized portals in many countries.
AltaVista pioneered a number of common search features, such as searching for phrases using quotes. The multimedia search was for many years the largest available, as was the database of indexed URIs. AltaVista was rated as the largest search engine in 1995, and again between 1997 and 1999*. Before its switch to the Yahoo! database, AltaVista had about 1 billion indexed URIs.
In 1996, AltaVista became the exclusive provider of search results for Yahoo!. In 1998, Digital was sold to Compaq, and in 1999 Compaq relaunched AltaVista as a web portal, abandoning their streamlined searchpage and alienating their core userbase. In June of the same year, Compaq paid *]3.3 million for the domain name altavista.com, but it continued to lose marketshare, especially to Google. It was subsequently floated from Compaq as an independent company.
In February 2003, AltaVista was bought by Overture Services, Inc. The failed attempt at a "portal" was dropped and the website was again revamped to provide simple search functions. In March 2004, Overture itself was taken over by Yahoo!. Shortly after Yahoo!'s acquisition, the AltaVista site started using the Yahoo! Search database.
AltaVista was also one of the numerous websites which promised "free email for life", only to subsequently reverse this policy by charging a subscription fee for its email services.
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