DEPARTMENTS
Internet Search Engine Update
by Greg R. Notess
Reference Librarian, Montana State University |
Internet
Search Engine Update goes up on the Web
at http://www.onlinemag.net as
soon as it is written, approximately one month before
the print issue mails to subscribers.
Ask
Jeeves joins the push for local search. Ask has
announced a partnership with Citysearch, in which
Ask Jeeves licenses Citysearch's local content and
business data. This information is included in the "Smart
Search" answers that show up at the top of the search
results screen. Local results currently are available
for maps, driving directions, weather, people search,
and movies. Once the Citysearch data is integrated
sometime this autumn, the local search content will
be expanded to include editorial and user reviews
and ratings of local businesses.
Blogs being the hip communication technology
of the day, both Google and Yahoo! now have their own
[www.google.com/googleblog and www.ysearchblog.com].
Fairly routine and not too informative yet, the blogs
are another source for news on the search efforts of
these two companies. Neither of the two was the first
to have a search engine blog. Gigablast [www.gigablast.com/rants.html] has had one since 2002, although it's not been updated
in months. In the past, it has included some of the
most interesting search developments.
Google has been all over the news lately,
but the news has all been about its initial public
stock offering. This in turn has meant more than the
usual silence from Google on plans for the future and
new search offerings. However, it has added a few new
features. Most important, after years of displaying
a cached copy with no mention of the date that the
page was crawled, Google has finally added this information
to the cache's header. (In Google's very early days,
it used to include both the date when Google crawled
the page and the reported date stamp on the page at
that time.) In addition, Google now offers a text-only
version of the page. Again, this link is in the header
of the cached page within the following statement: "This
cached page may reference images which are no longer
available. Click here for the cached text only." The
text-only cache version uses the alternate text information
from the HTML images tags of a page in place of the
images and may also identify Web bugs placed on pages
to track usage statistics. For Google Toolbar users,
a new feature gives the option to add keyword browsing
to the Internet Explorer address bar. Local search
has been enhanced with a new, cleaner interface, zooming
and panning for maps, more links, and improved relevance
technology.
Lycos has introduced two new focused search
engines: People Search and Discussion Search. The People
Search [http://peoplesearch.lycos.com] combs U.S. white
pages and also links to a few commercial people search
companies such as Eliyon for business professional
profiles and Intelius for background checks and public
records searches. The Discussion Search [http://discussion.lycos.com] offers one of the best options for targeted searching
of discussion forums and bulletin boards. It has limits
for Yahoo! Groups, MSN Groups, and dot-orgs. While
it retrieves some PDF files and plain Web pages, most
of the discussion group pages rise to the top. One
major discussion area not included is the Usenet news
discussion groups, which remain searchable only at
Google Groups.
MSN Search's technology preview of its new
search engine is now gone, replaced with a thank-you
message to those who tried it and sent feedback. However,
it did launch a U.S. version of its MSNBC Newsbot news
search engine [http://newsbot.msnbc.msn.com]. Previously
available for the U.K. and a few other countries, this
broader launch is also linked from the main MSNBC page.
It defaults to an AND search. It also tries to keep
track of which stories are viewed and what searches
are run. It uses this information to try and personalize
its headline selections, but users can also delete
their viewing history. It is still in beta and has
several bugs, but it covers over 4,800 sources.
Yahoo! has been busy on several fronts. It
launched the new design for its results page. It has
joined Google in including records from the Open WorldCat
project [www.worldcatlibraries.org]. These results
will occasionally appear with a heading like "Find
in a Library:" followed by the book title. Click on
one, and the resulting page prompts a user to enter
a ZIP code to find nearby libraries that hold the book.
The Yahoo! results often include a "See which libraries
own this" note, which makes it more obvious than Google's
results listing. But few users are likely to find these
records in either database, and a direct search of
the local library catalog will be far more comprehensive.
The Yahoo! Toolbar's Anti-Spy has been upgraded and
is out of beta. It now automatically scans for both
spyware and adware by default. It also added an optional
scan for tracking cookies.
In keeping with the local search trend, Yahoo! has
expanded its local search offerings with a test release
of Yahoo! Local Search [http://local.yahoo.com]. Like
most other local search offerings, Yahoo! offers only
U.S. local listings. The search form has two boxesone
for the search term and the other for the address,
city, state, and/or ZIP code. The results include phone
numbers, address, extract, distance, map, and even
some reviews. Searchers can save several locations
for frequent searches.
Greg
R. Notess (greg@notess.com;
www.notess.com)
is a reference librarian at Montana State University and
founder of SearchEngineShowdown.com.
Comments? Email the editor at marydee@infotoday.com.
|