Search Engines Can Cut
Time You Waste on the Web
STUDIES SHOW that people who use the Web spend
much of their time just trying to locate useful material by employing search
engines. That's a sign of both the vastness of the Web and its confusing
lack of organization. It's as if book readers spent most of their time
at the table of contents and index.
Not
surprisingly, given this trend, search engines have been seen on Wall Street
as potentially lucrative businesses in a sea of online duds. Dozens of
new search engines have sprung up to challenge the established leaders,
including Yahoo and Excite. Some are organized on principles very different
from those of the leaders, yielding results based on widely varying criteria.
I thought I'd take a look at a few of them.
If you have a question you want answered, or any other comment or suggestion
about Walter S. Mossberg's column, please send e-mail to
mossberg@wsj.com.
My own Web searches are pretty much confined to just two venerable search
sites, Yahoo (www.yahoo.com)
and Alta Vista (www.altavista.com).
I like Yahoo because it isn't an automated, machine-driven engine at all,
but a directory written by humans who have applied some intelligence to
their selections. It's great for looking up whole generic topics or big
names likely to be widely covered, like "bicycles" or "Steven Spielberg."
I use Alta Vista, owned by Compaq Computer, when I'm looking for a narrow
term or phrase or name that is unlikely to have many whole sites devoted
to it, but that may be hidden in sites on other topics. Since Alta Vista
uses computers to index individual words, it's great for this. If you type
in something like "Buddy Cianci," you get a manageable 200 hits on the
feisty mayor of Providence, R.I. But if you try to use it like Yahoo, you'll
get swamped with mostly useless responses -- the phrase "Steven Spielberg"
yields over 30,000 hits, compared with 36 on Yahoo.
A DIFFERENT approach is taken by Goto.com (www.goto.com).
This clean, simple, site charges other sites a fee to promote them in its
search results, and then lets the user know what each site has paid for
a prominent place in the results list. The result is full disclosure, but
it also may be a useless and distorted set of hits.
I typed in "MiniDisc," looking for a Web site devoted to explaining
the new digital recording technology and comparing the equipment on the
market. Goto.com listed mainly dealers hawking the stuff, but buried the
noncommercial, explanatory MiniDisc Community Page (www.Minidisc.org)
that Yahoo suggested.
At HotBot (www.hotbot.com),
you'll find a first-rate search engine that makes it easier than most to
qualify your search terms, by specifying whether they are a phrase or a
name or by looking only for material within certain dates. Nevertheless,
my search for a noncommercial MiniDisc page wouldn't have been easy here,
either, except for a new HotBot feature called "Direct Hit."
Direct Hit is a "popularity engine," which presents the top 10 sites
other people have visited for any search term. The MiniDisc Community Page
was No. 1 on this list, though it was 85th on HotBot's normal results list.
You can also try Direct Hit at
www.directhit.com.
It's the brainchild of a company of the same name located in Wellesley
Hills, Mass.
More and more Web surfers are turning to "meta" search sites, which
blast your request to numerous search engines then create one huge list
of hits. A good example is Dogpile (www.dogpile.com),
which listed the MiniDisc community page as No. 2 in its results.
Even cooler, however, are meta search engines, which you operate right
from your PC desktop without even opening your Web browser, as long as
you're online. One that I liked is WebFerret, a free software program from
FerretSoft, of Pickerington, Ohio, which can be downloaded at
www.ferretsoft.com.
It's small, easy and generates a list of hundreds of hits very, very quickly.
IN MY TEST, it listed the MiniDisc Community Page third. WebFerret
can be upgraded to a $26.95 version with lots of added power and features,
and the company also makes a line of other search products.
If you want to search for photos instead of text, you might try a new
image-searching engine from Virage Inc., of San Mateo, Calif. Located within
the Alta Vista search site, Virage's AV Photo Finder brings up thumbnails
of photos on topics you type in. The same company also has two prototypes
of a video search engine on the Web.
One, also at the Alta vista site (http://video.altavista.com/cgi-bin/avsearch),
allows you to search for specific phrases in President Clinton's videotaped
grand jury testimony and then watch the relevant video clip. A second,
at CNN's site (http://www.cnn.com/TECH/computing/video/gates/),
lets you do the same with the videotaped antitrust trial testimony of Microsoft
Chairman Bill Gates.
These are just a smattering of the various search sites now populating
the Web. So find one you like, and search away.
Addendum: Last week's column advocating the rise of simpler information
appliances to replace PCs drew numerous e-mails asking where more can be
learned on that topic. I recommend a new book from MIT Press, "The Invisible
Computer," by Donald A. Norman. During a long career in academia and the
computer industry, Don Norman has established himself as high technology's
leading thinker on user interfaces and on why PCs are too complex.
-
For answers to your computer questions, check out my
Mossberg's
Mailbox column in today's Tech Center.
|