Find Your Needle in the Haystack
By
Amy Dent Beebe
Tired
of wading through thousands of results that don't seem to have anything
to do with what you were searching for? Use these tips to increase
your searching productivity! These commands should work on all the
major search engines, a few exceptions are noted.
Use
more than one search engine
No one search engine indexes all websites and pages. So if your
first search doesn't produce the results you want, try searching
with at least one other search engine - the results may often vary
widely due to each search engine's methods of compiling. Many search
engines now offer links other search engines at the bottom of your
search results.
Here
are the current top search engines by their percentage of overall
usage, according to SearchEngineWatch.com and MediaMetrix, August
2003:
Google:
32%, Yahoo: 28%,
AOL Search:
19%, MSN: 17%,
Ask: 2%, Others:
2%, Lycos: 0.4%,
Overture: 1%,
AltaVista:
1%, , CNET:
0.2; AllTheWeb:
0.2%
Read
the About page
Many search engines have a link that leads to detailed information
about how the search engine compiles and searches through information,
and how to get the best results from it. Reading this page can save
you a lot of time and headaches. Also, visit search engine home
page links with names like How To, Search Help, and Advanced Search
for searching tips.
Don't
be afraid to be specific.
The more information you give a search engine, the easier it will
be to find what you want. If you want information on a recall pertaining
to your car, search for "1995 Mercury Mystique LS recall."
Often, typing in your exact question will actually produce great
results - for instance "Is the ignition in my 1995 Mercury
Mystique LS being recalled?"
Add
it up
When you want to find pages that have all the terms you enter, rather
than any one of them, use the + symbol. This means that the words
with + before them MUST appear in the title or body of a web page.
For
example, imagine you want to find pages that have references Star
Wars: The Phantom Menace. Typing in just Star Wars: The Phantom
Menace will likely get you results with everything from the Regan
Administration to the Phantom of the Opera.
Typing
in:
+star +wars +phantom +menace
would
narrow down your search to pages that specifically refer to only
the Star Wars movie in question, weeding out pages that only refer
to Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back or Return of the Jedi.
Here's
another example using recent events:
+china
+crash
Narrow
it down further by adding on:
+china
+crash +spy +plane
Now
if you want to know how this incident may impact trade relations,
find only pages that include that information:
+china
+crash +spy +plane +trade
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