Many in the blogosphere are likening the pairing of Bing and Wolfram Alpha to that other search engine that threatened to shake the timbres ofGoogle -- the ill-fated Cuil.For example, in a blog by Barney Pell, Pell lists different search results from queries using Wolfram Alpha:
Querying "ISS:" generates a graphic rendition of the international space station orbiting earth and updating in realtime.
Querying "gdp france" showed amount and graph of how it changed over time. "gdp france/germany" showed graph with both amounts and the ratio.
Querying "internet users in Europe": showed total, and a chart of usage by country in Europe, at the current time, specifically highlighting the biggest and smallest.
The question arises, though, outside of scientists and engineers, who makes queries that specific in nature?
Wolfram Alpha is great for very specific query search results or returning statistical data. For example, an input of the word "Google" yields Google's last stock trade price, a stock price history chart and other numbers like revenue, amount of employees and net income.
So what about searching on topics or people? A query of "van gogh" yields a table that displays the artist's full name, dates of birth and death and place of birth and death. A query using the phrase "how to bake bread" yields a chart on the nutritional information on bread.
Meanwhile, Google's page rank-oriented and natural language search technology is what the Web surfing populace has grown accustomed to.
Microsoft will most likely incorporate Wolfram Alpha into Bing's current search in such a way as to give more "real-life" searches as well as the very specific data Wolfram Alpha churns out.
However, as a draw to pull the average Web surfer away from Google, it seems like the Bing Wolfram Alpha team may be too late on the trigger in the search engine market.
Wolfram Alpha is a search achievement but most likely will mainly impress those in the fields of computer science, engineering and math and may be just confounding to the masses more used to Googling.
credited to www.crn.com

At this point it is quite obvious that only Facebook can challenge Google and to a certain degree. things are too high now for anyone else to intervene.
Google is obviously has now a lead that not even Facebook can diminish. The internet depends on Google.
i never heard of Wolfram Alpha and Bing is too small to take on the mighty Google.
Well this is the first time I am hearing anything of this sort.but one think for sure no one can Google.
Google has the ultimate stability and power over every competitor....:)
google is really a classic search engine, plus the blog is well organized..
Bing is too small to take on the mighty Google. HCG Blue Drops, the Faster and Natural way to lose weight...