
It was created by Stephen Wolfram, an accomplished British scientist, in 2009.

You can also get a PDF of the results that looks great, and could be easily slipped into a report. Some of Wolfram Alpha's best features: On the results page, you can actually click “sources” and see the sources that the engine used to get the answer that it gave you. It takes a while to get used to how it works, since you want to treat it like a search engine or a database, but, again, it’s not one. The most useful way to try and learn what the tool can do is to browse the Sample Topics located near the bottom of the page, or try a few of the sample searches on the side. They are using the open web as a part of that knowledge base, but from interviews it sounds like the majority of the information that is being crunched is curated by the Wolfram team.

Then they linked it all using the Mathematica language, so that the system itself can make inferences for you that you may not have thought to ask about. Wolfram has taken a huge amount of data about the world-geography stuff, economic stuff, name databases-just tons and tons and tons of facts. It’s more an answer engine or a knowledge engine. Wolfram Alpha is assuredly not a search engine, even though it looks like one. This new tool was designed by Stephen Wolfram, the wunderkind who developed Mathematica. After months of anticipation, a new tool emerged this past week that should be of interest to reference librarians everywhere: Wolfram¦Alpha.
