The Cuil Theory is a humorous concept that suggests the existence of multiple levels or "cuils" of reality, each more abstract or absurd than the last. It posits that as one moves up in cuils, the logic and coherence of the previous level become increasingly distorted. The theory is often illustrated through surreal or nonsensical examples, emphasizing how ideas can become more complex yet less relatable. Ultimately, it serves as a playful commentary on the nature of perception and understanding.
Cuil ended in 2010.
Cuil was created in 2008.
yes it wins.. WOOT!!!
In Irish it's: cuileog / cuil (the insect) eitil (the verb to fly)
1. Google 2. Dogpile) 3. Kewl 4. Cuil
It is personal opinion really but I think Google is the best.
That does not make sense in French. That means literally 'coffee of salt'. It's probably something like "XX cuil. à café de sel", which means "XX teaspoons of salt". "cuil. à café" is "cuillère à café", which is a spoon for coffee, which is a teaspoon in English.
121,617,892,992 web pages it will be updated on July 28,2009 and will have 200,000,000,000 right now google has 17,834,394,934 web pages while Microsoft has 4,936,945,947 web pages Cuil has the most web pages the total amount of web pages there are 748,395,395,496 as of August 3,2008 at 11:46 A.M. Georgia time
I'll give you more than two: Yahoo!, Google, Altavista, Dogpile, Bing, Cuil, and Lycos.
'une cuillère à soupe de sucre en poudre' means 'a tablespoonful of powder sugar' in French.
Cuil (pronounced "cool") is a search engine that officially launched on July 28th, 2008. Founded by a husband and wife team with a seasoned search team of many former Google employees the site claims to the largest index of all search engines.From the Cuil.com's about page:Philosopy:Cuil's goal is to solve the two great problems of search: how to index the whole Internet-not just part of it-and how to analyze and sort out its pages so you get relevant results.Features:We've created the world's biggest index, and we've also developed useful features to help you search. They're simple to use and help you explore the variety and complexity of the Web.
It is a scientific theory