SEARCH ENGINES

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Introduction:

The Web is potentially a terrific place to get information on almost any topic. Doing research without leaving your desk sounds like a great idea, but all too often you end up wasting precious time chasing down useless URLs. Almost everyone agrees that there’s going to be a better way! But for now we’re stuck with making the best use of the search tools that already exist on the Web.

If you’re ore interested in broad, general information, the first place to go is to a Web Directory. If you’re after narrow, specific information, a Web search engine is probably a better choice.

Searching by Means of Subject Directories

Think back to the library card catalogue analogy. In the old card files, and even in today’s computer terminal library catalogues, you find information by searching on either the author, the title, or the subject. You usually choose the subject option when you want to cover a broad range of information.

Example: You’d like to create your own home page on the Web, but you don’t know how to write HTML, you’ve never created a graphic file, and you’re not sure how you’d post a page on the Web even if you knew how to write one. In short, you need a lot of information on a rather broad topic--Web publishing.

Your best bet is not a search engine, but a Web directory like Yahoo. Yahoo is a subject-tree style catalogue that organizes the Web into 14 majors topics, including Arts, Business and Economy, Computers and Internet, Education, Entertainment, Government, Health, News, Recreation, Reference, Regional, Science, Social Science, Society and Culture. Under each of these topics is a list of subtopics, and under each of those is another list, and another, and so on, moving from the more general to the more specific.

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