There is one more based on lucene
http://www.elasticsearch.org

On Apr 12, 2:55 pm, Adam Sah <[email protected]> wrote:
> actually, after a year+ watching things develop, I'm glad we chose to roll
> our own from Apache/SOLR/Lucene and *not* go with a cloud service:
>  - finer-grained controls over which fields are included and how they're
> weighted
>  - very fine-grained controls over ranking
>  - use of the search engine as (another) data source for datamart/warehouse
> queries, e.g. stats about our database.
>  - extremely fast
>  - very very cheap-- $20/mon including redundancy.
>  - near-zero maintenance (in practice)
>
> adam
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Thursday, April 12, 2012 3:08:00 AM UTC-7, Ugorji wrote:
>
> > Just got this email from Amazon (I signed up for AWS).
>
> > We are excited to announce the immediate availability of Amazon
> >> CloudSearch, a fully-managed search service in the cloud that allows
> >> customers to easily integrate fast and highly scalable search functionality
> >> into their applications.
> >> Amazon CloudSearch adds search capabilities for your website or
> >> application without the administrative burdens of operating and scaling a
> >> search platform. Amazon CloudSearch seamlessly scales as the amount of
> >> searchable data increases or as the query rate changes, and developers can
> >> change search parameters, fine tune search relevance and apply new settings
> >> at any time without having to upload the data again.
> >> Built for high throughput and low latency, Amazon CloudSearch supports a
> >> rich set of features including free text search, faceted search,
> >> customizable relevance ranking, configurable search fields, text processing
> >> options, and near real-time indexing. Amazon CloudSearch offers low,
> >> pay-as-you-go pricing with no up-front expenses or long-term commitments.
> >> With Amazon CloudSearch, you get:
> >> Rich Search Features
> >> Automatic Scaling for Data & Traffic
> >> Low Latency, High Throughput
> >> Easy Administration
> >> Low Costs
>
> >http://aws.typepad.com/aws/2012/04/amazon-cloudsearch-start-searching...
>
> > I think it's unfortunate that AWS (which started from IAAS and is now
> > branching into PAAS) has released rich search functionality before GAE
> > (which has always been PAAS only). AWS Dynamodb as of now does not compete
> > favourably against the datastore, but ... it's software. And the value
> > proposition (feature-set wise) of AWS PAAS is getting better quickly, while
> > still affording full IAAS functionality with regular price reductions to go
> > with it. And the AWS team has always been a big team, and constantly hiring
> > (we always used to hear GAE team talk of its small size).
>
> > I know I'm ranting. Folks here know I've invested a lot into GAE and only
> > want its success, if nothing else so my investment didn't go in the drain.
> > Take this for what it is.

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