Why GuruNet is a Natural Born Killer
Published: 02 Mar 2000 14:48 GMT
Nicci persisted. She told me GuruNet is like having a reference assistant at your side. Its system tray utility works in any document -- email, word processor, Web page, spreadsheet. You highlight a word. The software analyzes the words around it -- the context -- to find the right definition. Through partnerships, the GuruNet database has dictionaries, encyclopedias, biographies, sports data, weather, real-time company info, word-for-word language translations and more. Nicci was right. GuruNet is very simple, very slick, very useful. Which is why I'm nominating GuruNet as one of my Natural Born Killers. As with all my Natural Born Killer nominations, I am not recommending the company, the product or predicting whether or not it will succeed. Rather, I'm suggesting you study its innovations and approaches. Reminder: My NBK series is not about reviews or lab tests. It's about discoveries and new ideas that will be important whether or not the particular product succeeds.
Go to the next page to find out the basics and the drawbacks... THE BASICS
Using GuruNet is straightforward:
- Download the free utility (see link in sidebar); it runs in the background
- When you're in a document, press the Alt key and click on any word you want to know more about
- A window pops up with a definition, plus relevant news, links, stock prices, weather
- If you want more information, you can search from within that same window
There are limitations:
- The results you get are only as extensive and as accurate as the info in the GuruNet databases
- You have to be online to get access to the definitions, so it isn't as useful with slow, dial-up connections
- If you run a lot of other programs in the background, you could experience conflicts or problems






