Everything changes and evolves until a new potential is revealed. The Internet could be no exception to that.
Not so long ago, it used to be a place where people looked up information by way of any of the conventional engines available, but now it has moved a step forward. That was only natural. Today, it stands as a place where people not only search but also share information. Actually, to most people the latter is what applies. And information today has two clear key aspects: it is multi-media, and it has more complexity than ever before. Information today has a true real-time and social hue, as it is the people you know the one who recommend it. The LeapFish team calls this new place “The Living Web”, and they have designed an evolved engine to help users get the most from it, or (as they put it) “a service to help you live the new web”.
The basis of this new engine is that although today we have many ways to locate and share information, the current experience is too fragmented to be effective. The experience is fragmented owing to two different reasons. First, when it comes to searching there are a growing number of sites which are unconnected (traditional search portals and niche interests sites), and that necessarily produce fragmented results. In second place, when it comes to sharing there is a whole universe made up of segregated (and differing) social networks and blogs. This disconnection and segregation is what the LeapFish team have set out to tackle. They provide a unified and connected multi-media experience for both searching and sharing traditional and real-time content with the aim of making the whole process not only faster but also as effective as it should be.
The web has changed and evolved. It only makes sense that the way we process the information to be found there should evolve too. And LeapFish might just as well be the natural way to do it.
LeapFish.com In Their Own Words
“Living the web.”
Why LeapFish.com It Might Be A Killer
It makes any search process something truly vital and flexible, and something which accommodates the current dynamics of the Internet.








