You can search by keyword, content type or time, and it displays all related information based on relevancy. You can search for "wedding," and Atlas Recall will pull up calendar appointments, emails from your wedding party, websites of flower companies, photos of wedding dresses, the Spotify playlist you listened to when emailing your fiancé, and the Facebook wedding planning group you're a part of. This includes web pages, emails, Slack chats, Netflix films, Spotify songs, or anything else that's appeared in front of your eyes on your screen. Once installed, Atlas Recall displays personalized search results from the app, desktop search, or Google ( GOOGL, Tech30)search. To make it easier to find things, Seattle-based Atlas Informatics launched Atlas Recall, which lets you search for anything you've ever looked at on your computer.Ītlas Informatics founder and CEO Jordan Ritter calls the software "a photographic memory for your digital life." In a demonstration to CNNMoney, that proved to be a fairly accurate assessment. Our brains often forget where we saw something among the countless tabs and documents on our computers each day. This search engine remembers literally everything that's been on your computer Get six of our favorite Motherboard stories every day by signing up for our newsletter. It has a very profound paradigmatic shift once this vision is fully realized." "We know we've arrived in nirvana when the save button is obsolete and you just don't worry about it anymore. "The system gets to know you in a way like never before, it starts to be able to identify intents and can start recommending things in real time across all of your apps," said Ritter. The goal for Ritter and his colleagues is to eventually implement a strong machine learning component so that Atlas can find things for you before you know you need them. When you search for something in these apps, Atlas can also make recommendations based on your past activity. The real success of Atlas Recall is found in its integration with Google and Spotlight searches. Eavesdroppers are also kept out of the loop because all of the data collected by Atlas is encrypted in motion as well as when it comes to rest in Amazon cloud. Read More: We Need to Make Digital Data That Dies Like Usįurthermore, Atlas Informatics can't actually see the digital items you interacted with, just how you interacted with them, and users can always remove any indexed items from the repository. This may feel a little invasive, but Ritter was quick to point out that Atlas Recall can be "paused" at any time so that it stops collecting data about what a user is doing. "We can literally index anything you see, which is effectively how our memories work," said Ritter. Anytime a user interacts with a digital item on the device, be it an app, webpage or word document, Atlas indexes the interaction, recording the time, type and length of engagement with the item. When a user downloads Atlas Recall, it constantly runs in the background of each device it is installed on. " thought of it as an accessibility support mechanism when in fact it's the API that everybody can see." "That was the thing that people hadn't really realized," said Ritter. We can literally index anything you see, which is effectively how our memories work Since accessibility standards are the same regardless of platform, device or application, it creates a common interface that can be read by Atlas to determine what is on your screen at any given time. As the technological barriers to a multi-platform, multi-device index fell, a computational architecture revolution called cloud computing began and laid the groundwork for Atlas Recall.Ītlas Recall uses this distributed file storage model and accessibility paradigm-common to almost every application used today-to create a searchable index of a user's digital life. "Why don't just remember everything and index it? Why do I have to save or bookmark this stuff? So the frame for Atlas Recall was very simple: if you saw it, you can search it."Īccording to Ritter, computer engineers have been trying to solve this problem for decades, but until recently they had been limited by the state of technology: there simply wasn't enough bandwidth and processing power to feasibly make a searchable index that spanned multiple devices. "I have all these devices, apps, services, and operating systems and I'm dying from all this digital chaos," Ritter told Motherboard. The company's flagship product, Atlas Recall, started with a complex problem and a simple solution. Founded in 2012, Atlas Informatics is the brainchild of Jordan Ritter, a co-founder of Napster and Silicon Valley angel investor.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |