Martin Ryder
  University of Colorado at Denver
  School of Education

Understanding Search Utilities

search engines

Just-In-Time Search Engines

These are search engines whose aim is dynamic updates (up to the minute changes). The content sources tend to be news organizations and journals.

A search engine empowers the Internet user. Search engines provide raw access to the Web, structuring its contents within the constraints of a specific query. Search engines shift the balance of power from authors, editors and publishers to readers and users of information.

The utility of a search engine can be evaluated by five essential criteria:

  1. How exhaustive? (How many websites were searched?)
  2. How thorough? (were all pages searched? full text? including links?)
  3. How precise? (Does it return information relevant to the query?)
  4. How often? (Frequency of updates determines timeliness of results)
  5. How easy? (Is it easy to submit a query and interpret the results?)
  6. How flexible? (Can I customize a query? Can I filter the results?)

What is the measure of an indexing crawler?

How do you measure the power of a search engine? While there are multiple criteria, one that is easily measured is the frequency and scope of crawler visits to a specific web site. It is the web crawler that actually scans the raw data residing on the web to build its search database. Like politicians in an election year, we feel that those who come to call are the ones who are most in touch with our own thoughts; it is they who must have the best pulse of our community. Who comes to crawl at your web site? My particular site has approximately 100 separate pages. If a web crawler were to visit every page, coverage here would be 100% and everything I have would be accessible to you via the corresponding search engine. The frequency of crawler visits determines the freshness of the information returned in response to your search query.

Internet Subject Catalogs

Catalogs are structured directories which often include reviews to guide you. Because they are indexed manually, these resources are likely to overlook obscure sites, they index titles and abstracts rather than the full contents of sites, they artificially "pigeon hole" sites into categories, and it is a challenge to keep them up to date.

About Searching and Search Tools

The skill of using any tool comes with practice. But it also comes through an understanding of what the tool can do and what it can't. The following resources offer good insight into the nature of search utilities, how they work, why one might be preferable over another, and how we can best make use of them.

Searching Strategies

  • Searching the Net PC Magazine
    See also Adding Your URL to the Web

    All links verified July 02, 2008.


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    July 02, 2008