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I Can't FIND That!
How To Search the Internet—The
Right Way
by Linda Johnson
I thought I’d take a break from my normal Office-related articles and
talk about searching the Internet. I’m amazed at how many of my students
in my college classes are trying to do research on the Internet and
can’t find anything. So here are some suggestions that might help
any of you who have the same problem.
In my opinion, hands down, the best Search Engine on the net is
Google http://google.com,
so I am going to use Google as the search engine for this tutorial.
Why do I feel this way? Many reasons:
Google does not accept "payment for placement". This does not
mean Google doesn’t allow listers to pay for their listings. But, Google
puts these listings in a separate area and it is very clear that they
are listed there because they paid to be included when particular search
words are used. Many other Search Engines do accept payment for
placement, which means these advertisers will
show at the top of the results for your search, not because they
are necessarily the best result for your search, but because they paid
to be there. The more they pay, the higher they appear in the list.
Google’s spiders look at more than just keywords. When Google
does its homework to update its databases, it uses many criteria to find
websites related to specific search words. It sends out spider
robots and searches websites for keyword tags, title tags, actual
words in the text of the site, words in the alt tags attached to
pictures in the sites, and it also looks at how the site is ranked (for
popularity). All of these criteria contribute to how high up in the
results the site will be. So, when you search Google, the odds that the
first few sites listed will actually have the information you want, are
much greater than some other search engines. And the popularity rank
gives better odds that this site has a good reputation among its peers,
since the popularity is determined by how many other sites link to this
site.
Google lets you search for more than just websites. At the top
of the Google page, you see tabs for Web, Images, Groups, Directory, and
News. So, instead of just searching the WWW, you can instead look for pictures related to your search words
(using the Images tab), newsgroups where your question may have been
answered (Groups tab), Directories related to your search topic
(Directories tab), and current news articles about your search topic
from just about every major newspaper in the world (News tab).
Google’s Advanced Search makes it so easy. No need to
know how to use all those Boolean search parameters like AND and OR and
NOT, and no need to remember when you need to put the phrase in quotes
or parentheses in order to narrow down your search. Just click on the
Advanced Search link and look at all your choices:
- Note that you can search for all of the words
you type, and Google will show you only the pages that include every
word you typed. Example: searching for excel vlookup will
find all the pages that have excel and vlookup in
them, but not pages that only have excel in them, nor pages
that only have vlookup in them.
- You can search for an exact phrase, so only
pages that include that full phrase or sentence will be found.
Example: searching for excel vlookup will only return pages
that have “excel vlookup” as a phrase, and not pages that
have excel in one place on the page and vlookup in
another location on the page. (This is especially helpful if you are
searching for an error message you received on your computer.)
- If you search for at least one of the words,
Google will find you all of the pages that included ANY of the words
you typed. (This is the default you get when you just use Google’s
home page search box, and this is why you may get pages that only
include one or two of the words you typed, instead of all of them.)
Example: searching for excel vlookup will return pages that
have excel and vlookup, but will also find pages that
have only excel in them, or only vlookup in them.
- Without the words
allows
you to eliminate pages from your search that include specific words.
So, if you wanted to search for all sites that included one word,
but not another, this option allows you to do this. Example:
searching for excel vlookup in one of the top boxes, and
entering error in this box, will return all of the pages that
include excel and/or vlookup, but do not include error. This would probably eliminate sites that troubleshoot
problems in vlookup formulas and, instead, give you tutorial-type
pages instead. (Be careful using this feature, because, in this
example, you might eliminate good tutorials that include instruction
as well as troubleshooting.)
- Next, you can specify the language of the sites
you want returned. Example: choosing English would eliminate sites
written in any other language.
- You can also specify what type of files
you
want to find. Example: by choosing Only and select
“Adobe Acrobat pdf” as the type if you would prefer to only find pdf
files. Or you can choose Don’t and select “Adobe
Acrobat pdf” if you want to find all types of files, but not
pdfs.
- The Date field is where you can find only pages
that have been updated recently, so your search will be less likely
to return outdated information.
- With Occurances, you can choose
in the
text on the page to eliminate sites that use keywords in
their html code that do not match the actual text in their page.
- The Domain option allows you to narrow your
search to a particular domain. By selecting Only
and typing "microsoft.com", you will only get results from
Microsoft’s website. Alternatively, by selecting Don’t
and enterting "microsoft.com" you get all pages except those in
Microsoft’s website. You can also just use a portion of the domain
name. Example: you can choose Only and type in ".edu,
.org," if you wanted to restrict your search to educational and
corporate sites, and eliminate commercial sites. If searching for viagra
and excluding .com, your search would allow you to see
technical pages on the research done concerning Viagra, without all
the commercial sites that are trying to sell you Viagra. Just type
in the domain names and/or suffixes, separated by commas.
- Safe Searches allows you to filter your search
to exclude “adult” content from your results. However, like any
other filter, I find this does not usually work and ends up removing
the wrong sites from my search, so I recommend you leave it set at
no filtering and use your own good judgment.
You can see that choosing different options will return very
different results. So, if your search is not finding enough results, or
finding too many unrelated results, you need to use the Advanced Search
to modify your search parameters.
There are more ways to increase the success of your search. One way
is to include the invisible web. Unless you are a
librarian or an educator, you may not know about the mysterious
invisible web. Most of us know about the "visible" web
....that's all the websites you find when you use a traditional Search
Engine in the traditional way. However, there's also an "invisible" web
which includes a wealth of information you will never find if you search
the net in the traditional way. There are many extensive databases
filled with technical papers and reports that never show up in search
queries because the pages are not really stored on the Internet, but
instead, come up dynamically when you search a particular database.
Therefore, these pages will never come up when you search using Google
(or any other Search Engine), unless you know how to include databases
in your search. One of the easiest ways to do this is to simply add the
word "database" to the keywords you search by. For more information on
The Invisible Web, read my article in my own newsletter, ABC, here:
http://personal-computer-tutor.com/abc3/v25/linda25.htm
One last tip I want to add: Once you are at the site that your
search brought you to, to easily find the information you are looking
for on that page, just go to Internet Explorer’s Edit menu and choose
“Find on this page” (or simply hit ctrl+F) and type a word or phrase and
you will jump right to the location on the page where that word or
phrase appears.
I hope this article has helped you and makes your searching
experience more fruitful. The Internet is full of information, but
knowing how to find it is the key.
Happy searching!
Linda |
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