US AI startup Exa has officially launched its new AI search tool, Websets, generating significant industry buzz due to its powerful complex search capabilities and data processing efficiency. According to recent X platform posts, Websets not only executes highly complex search tasks but also presents results in an intuitive tabular format, showcasing technological prowess far surpassing traditional search tools.

Exa's official account announced: "Exa Websets is now live! Experience the ultimate search." The announcement explains that users can execute complex queries like "information on CEOs of the top 50 AI startups in the US by market capitalization." The tool can read and analyze data from over 1000 web pages simultaneously, generating structured result tables. In comparison, OpenAI's "Deep Research" function only handles a few dozen pages at a time, making Websets' processing capacity tens of times greater.

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X user @WilliamBryk previously stated during the product's pre-launch phase: "We built the slowest search engine ever, but that's why you need it. With each search, we deploy thousands of AI agents, recursively calling Exa, verifying over 20,000 sources to ensure comprehensive results."

Today, @ExaAILabs further revealed that Websets outperformed Google and OpenAI in testing, finding 20 times more correct results than Google and 10 times more than OpenAI Deep Research in complex queries. Details of the evaluation have been published on the official website.

User @shao__meng also praised on X: "Deep Search and Deep Research both require higher-quality data sources, and Websets was created for this purpose. It avoids data contamination issues; even the best LLMs rely on high-quality search data." Currently, Websets is available for trial; users can apply for access via the Exa website (websets.exa.ai).

Industry experts believe that the launch of this tool not only provides researchers and businesses with an efficient data retrieval solution but also marks a new milestone in AI search technology. Interested users can visit the website to explore this remarkably powerful search tool.