Friday, January 27, 2012

MuMik(e) is the Word of Today

Singular Movement
String Base Identity: kim

Index

Current Snapshot

Google 181,000,000
Yahoo 671,000,000
Bing 655,000,000

Singular Movement
String Base Identity: tim

Index

Current Snapshot

Google 1,200,000,000
Yahoo 732,000,000
Bing 731,000,000

Singular Movement
String Base Identity: jim

Index

Current Snapshot

Google 933,000,000
Yahoo 631,000,000
Bing 626,000,000

Singular Movement
String Base Identity: vestor

Index

Current Snapshot

Google 1,380,000
Yahoo 251,000
Bing 257,000

Singular Movement
String Base Identity: dotcom

Index

Current Snapshot

Google 20,900,000
Yahoo 23,500,000
Bing 23,400,000

3 Index Snapshots (3IS)
Irregular Snapshot schedule
This snapshot was taken January 27, 2012 at approximately 4:46 a.m.

From this starting point, the following collection points have been gathered for further trend analysis:

MuMik(e) SEIS January 27, 2012 at approximately 12:02 p.m.
MuMik(e) SEIS January 27, 2012 at approximately 10:32 p.m. 

The MegaUpload Microphone (MUM) comes with backwards/forwards treat for examiners - the string "microphone" being commonly truncated into the 3-letter "mic," of which the pronunciation of the 3 letters when an "e" attached to the end is the same pronunciation as "mic."  So where is the backwards feature of today's string derivative?  The first name of the key figure in the MUM circumstances is "Kim" or "mik" backwards.

What could this possibly matter in such an exact-match world as a search engine?  It means plenty when theory after theory is applied to sculpting semantic accuracy at an attractive rate and ratio in terms of converting the concept into its most attractive packaging to as wide of an audience as possible.  Semantic relevance relies on interaction from an end-user to define what "works" for one may not "work" for another.  So whether or not these types of results are to be classified as outright failures of the program design compared to any other consideration is entirely in the hands of the end-user and reliant on a large variety of variables.

With linguistics and semantics aside, MuMik(e) reflects merely a matter of convenience for a proof of concept creator such as myself to explain this next set of string derivatives to be used for snapshot purposes.  This time around, each string will remain in their singular forms for each snapshot and were selected for their identity weight when referencing the alleged mastermind behind the fraudulent megauploads schematic.