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How To Use Google To Search Information
The Internet today
is an ever growing database of knowledge. But as with
almost anything in life there are some negative things
attached to this aspect of Internet.
First, the Internet is not an ordinary
encyclopedia, i.e., an organized knowledge database.
The Internet is more like a disorganized database to
which everyone can contribute. Because of the diverse
and widespread information input and the requirement
to find specific information when one needs it, there
is a need to bring some sort of organization to the
Internet community. Today there are web directories
and search engines as two of the most useful mechanisms
responsible for bringing order to the Internet.
Web directories organize links to many
places on the Internet where information about a specific
topic can be found. Web directories can have a general
or topic specific focus and are usually organized into
several categories based on the topic. Web directories
are good sources of information if they are well-maintained
with regular updates. They are usually maintained better
by human actions than by automated software. Computers
still cannot determine the relevancy of certain text
as effectively as humans. A good example of a human
edited directory is dmoz - Open Directory Project, (http://www.dmoz.org).
It is the largest and most comprehensive human-edited
directory on the Internet, maintained by thousands of
volunteer editors.
Search engines are yet another tool
that helps you find information on the Internet. There
are many search engines on the Internet but the biggest
and the most popular are Google, AOL/Netscape, Lycos
and MSN. Some of them also have their own web directories,
which are often comprised of dmoz data combined with
their own data.
Search engines, however, are different
from web directories. They do not categorize links to
web places like web directories do but they allow users
to "search the internet" using specific search
terms. However, it should be noted that what is really
being searched at the moment you submit your inquiry
(in the form of a search term) is, in fact, a database.
These databases are constantly updated and upgraded
with so called 'search engine spiders' which search
the Internet all the time looking for new and recently
updated websites.
So what search engines can help you
do is to find which pages contain, and are the most
relevant to, the search term you have used. For determining
the relevancy of a page to the search term, they use
complex algorithms which are not completely revealed
to the public. The reason for this is that these algorithms,
once known to public, could then be used to adjust a
site's ranking, ignoring the fact that the content of
the website must be relevant to what people are searching
for. Search engines want visitors to return to their
websites and thus need to provide quality. This quality
is relevant results for a visitor's search inquiry.
With the basic operation of web directories
and search engines now explained, what are effective
ways to use them to obtain relevant information?
Here are a few simple tricks that many
people do not know when searching the Internet for information
using various search engines. Let us look at Google,
since at the moment Google (http://www.google.com) is
the most popular, and thought by many the most comprehensive,
search engine.
When you search for something on Google
you may get a variety of results, some more and some
less relevant to the original search inquiry. For example,
you may end with results from various newspaper articles
that merely mention the search term, but the content
may be totally unrelated to the search inquiry. A good
technique to minimize those unrelated results are to
place "intitle:" or "allintitle:"
before your search terms.
The "intitle:" option is used
when you search for a single word search term and anything
you write after that word will not be affected by the
intitle option. So if you want a phrase to be affected
by the intitle option you will use "allintitle:"
instead. E.g. "intitle:cars" but "allintitle:used
cars" (without the quotation marks). Note that
there should be no space between the colon and your
search term.
A similar effect can be accomplished
with the options "inurl:" and "allinurl:"
but here Google will restrict the results to show only
those results where the URLs contain the word or phrase
you have searched for.
If you are searching for a definition
of a term, Google offers help here too. You have to
type "define:" (without the quotation marks)
followed by the word or words you want defined. If Google
has come up with that definition on the Internet it
will be displayed for you at the top of the search results.
Please note that if you enter more words after "define:"
Google will see those words as a phrase.
When you have a URL of a website that
interests you (e.g. www.example-url.com) you can find
all the websites that link to that site, all the websites
related (similar) to that site and check what info Google
has on that particular site.
You will use "link:" followed by the URL of
your choice (e.g. "link:www.example-url.com"
- without the quotation marks) when you want to find
all websites that link to that site. The prefixes "related:"
and "info:" are used in the same way.
Should you wish to search only a certain
website, not the whole Internet, you can use "site:"
following with the URL of the website you wish to search.
But note that the search term here comes BEFORE the
"site:" which is followed by the URL of the
website. E.g., "download linux site:www.linux.org".
The only time the quotation marks are
used in searching is when you are searching for a phrase
and not combined with any of the above mentioned prefixes.
For example, "searching the internet" with
quotation marks will search for the exact phrase and
"searching the internet" without quotation
marks will search for the places where the words "searching",
"the" and "internet" appear not
strictly in that order. Logically by using quotation
marks when searching you will get fewer results but
more relevant ones while without the use of the quotation
marks you will get more but usually less relevant results.
This explanation and these little tricks
should help you use the Internet more efficiently in
the search for information and should improve the quality
and relevance of your search results.
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