| Platform Rewrite Not Planned for Thomson Research Products |
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| Written by Bob Scott | |||
| Tuesday, 22 December 2009 20:14 | |||
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Rival CCH is in the middle of rolling out Intelliconnect, a new tax research platform that utilizes search technology being implemented across the business That's a big contrast with both the competition and much of Thomson Reuters. Earlier this month, CFO Robert Daleo discuss his company's plans, including next year's new Westlaw interface, called Cobalt, and the new Markets platform, currently known as Utah. Utah is aimed more at integrating disparate platforms. Daleo made his comments at UBS Investment Bank's 37th Annual Global Media and Communications Conference held on December 9 in New York City. Coblalt "will provide a more effective way for customers to do research," said Daleo. He described the approach as Google-like, utilizing filters "upfront to use common [search] terms." He also said the system learns from user searches. If a particular bankruptcy case had not ranked high on searches, but it was being accessed by more and more users, its search ranking would improve. The description strongly resembles words used by CCH officials to define Wolters Kluwer's new search approach, which has had some first-year difficulties, judging from the speed with which the company introduced a round of fixes in November. But while Mackintosh says no one can rule out the possibility that Cobalt might someday hit the tax and accounting market, Thomson Reuters has no plans to replace the current platform. | |||
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About the Author: Brett Owens is CEO and Co-Founder of Chrometa, a Sacramento, Calif.-based provider of software that records activity in real time. Previously marketed to the legal community, Chrometa is branching out to accounting prospects; gains include the ability to discover previously undocumented billable time, save time on billing reconciliation and improve personal productivity. Brett is also blogger and founder at CommodityBullMarket.com and ContraryInvesting.com, as well as a regular contributor to two leading financial media sites, SeekingAlpha.com and BeforeItsNews.com. |