Now here’s one you don’t see every day: Wordnik , which launched out of private beta on Monday and states its mission as “discovering all the words and everything about them.” Taking the basic premise of a dictionary, Wordnik supplements each entry with Web 2.0’s tastiest treats–relevant Flickr images, Twitter search matches, user-contributed tags and comments–and then invites users to add their own words, too. Calling itself a “project” rather than a company, Wordnik’s origins are sort of like a dot-com fairy tale. CEO Erin McKean, then serving as editor-in-chief of Oxford University Press’ American dictionaries, was giving a talk at the elite TED conference when she raised an issue for lexicographers–dictionary scientists–that, in her opinion, the digital age hadn’t solved yet. “There are so many more words than dictionaries can handle,” McKean said to CNET News about the issue she raised at TED. “There’s no program for anyone to go out and try to find all the words. People have been conditioned to be more or less content with what they’ve got.” She has a point: many online dictionary sites are little more than digital replicas of their print predecessors. As is often the case with TED, some pretty important people were listening in, including Silicon Valley venture capitalist Roger McNamee–now one of the investors in Wordnik, which McKean promptly co-founded with two lexicographers and an engineer. Now the Bay Area-based company has six full-time employees, and

Go here to read the rest:
Old-school word nerds meet the digital age



Gregory


