Search Strategies: Search With Peripheral Vision "affirmative action", specific, accepted meaning in word cluster have NO distinctive words or phrases you thinking about your topic before you start searching is to determine what http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/Strategies.html
Extractions: Click here for a printable FORM you may use to Analyze Your Topic (pdf file). PDF files Adobe® Acrobat® Reader software, which is available free from Adobe if you need it. Does your topic... have distinctive words or phrases? methernitha , unique meaning "affirmative action" , specific, accepted meaning in word cluster have NO distinctive words or phrases you can think of? You have only common or general terms that get the "wrong" pages. "order out of chaos" , used in too many contexts to be useful sundiata , retrieves a myth, a rock group, a person, etc. seek an overview of a broad topic?
Extractions: San Jose, Ca, USA With the explosive growth of the World-Wide Web, it is becoming increasingly difficult for users to collect and analyze Web pages that are relevant to a particular topic. To address this problem we are developing WTMS, a system for Web Topic Management. In this paper we explain how the WTMS crawler efficiently collects Web pages for a topic. We also introduce the user interface of the system that integrates several techniques for analyzing the collection. Moreover, we present the various views of the interface that allow navigation through the information space. We highlight several examples to show how the system enables the user to gain useful insights about the collection. The World-Wide Web is undoubtedly the best source for getting information on any topic. Therefore, more and more people use the Web for topic management ], the task of gathering, evaluating and organizing information resources on the Web. Users may investigate topics both for professional or personal interests.
ItrainOnline: Resources For Trainers - Topic-Specific topicspecific Resources for Trainers. A good resource for Excel trainers with specificquestions and techniques to improve your Internet searching, (iii) Review http://www.itrainonline.org/itrainonline/english/trainers_topics.shtml
Extractions: Cost: Free or open source These extensions at the end of a filename refer to the type of file it is. This information is used by your operating system to launch an appropriate program when you click on the filename. Example: file.txt is a text file and can be opened by a text editor program. http://www.computeruser.com/resources/dictionary/n Cost: Free or open source How effective would you be if your email, word processing documents and contact database were wiped out? How many hours would it take to rebuild that information from scratch? Backing up your data regularly is vital insurance against a "data catastrophe." This article by CompuMentor explains how to protect your data and improve the performance of your computer. http://www.compumentor.org/events/csday/prepare.ht
Searching For Information On A Specific Topic searching for Information on a specific topic. AllIn-One Search Page;Clearinghouse for Subject-Oriented Resource Guides; CUI W3 Catalog; http://alexia.lis.uiuc.edu/~janicke/Search.html
Extractions: It's been said that the Internet is like a huge public library with no card catalog. These collections and search tools represent the efforts of many individuals and organizations to improve access to information on the Internet. Each one is organized or searches differently, so the choice is yours to decide which one works the best for your style of inquiry. Some provide references across many applications (like the WWW, Gopher, and FTP) and others concentrate on cataloging the growth of the World Wide Web only. Think of each link below as a jumping off point, as they all provide hundreds (some thousands) of choices of where to go next. How to Search the Net Subject Directories
Welcome To BrightPlanet Crawling A New Approach to. topicspecific Web Resource Discovery1 of web documents on specific topics, using modest desktop and/or refine specific topic nodes in the taxonomy, http://www.completeplanet.com/Tutorials/Search/index.asp
Extractions: Guide to Effective Searching of the Internet Section 1: Searching with Internet Provided Resources Your ability to find the information you seek on the Internet is a function of how precise your queries are and how effectively you use search services. Poor queries return poor results; good queries return great results. Contrary to the hype surrounding "intelligent agents" and "artificial intelligence," the fact remains that search results are only as good as the query you pose and how you search. There is no silver bullet. There are very effective ways to "structure" a query and use special operators to target the results you seek. Absent these techniques, you will spend endless hours looking at useless documents that do not contain the information you want. Or you will give up in frustration after search-click-download-reviewing long lists of documents before you find what you want.
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Extractions: The big list A-Z clip art on one large page. When clicking a link on this list you may reach a page of links where you will need to browse the link annotations to find the specific clip art image you want. Example: clicking on Hot Air Balloons will take you to the Air Vehicle Clip Art index. Browse the link annotations to find sites with hot air balloons. Clip Art of Everything New
CNET's Ultimate Guide To Search - Software Reviews - CNET.com topicspecific Search Sites Even the best metasearcher or search every corner of theworld and on any topic. reviews and more From Search IQ searching tips and http://www.cnet.com/software/0-352106-7-1922939.html
Extractions: Even the best metasearcher or search engine in the universe can't find everything. Sometimes you need a search site that focuses on the subject matter you're looking for. Vertical portals, or vortals , such as Women.com and WebMD, cover certain topics so that you don't waste time culling through larger search sites. To help you find vortals for your needs, we've come up with a partial list of what's out there: Site Focus Bible Gateway The Bible (an online concordance) Biolinks Scientific articles, journals, Web sites CitySearch Regional information such as traffic, restaurants, movies, and weather Cooking.com Recipes, cookware Deja news Postings on Usenet newsgroups Dr. Koop Health information eHow Tips and how-to information on many topics EMusic Downloadable MP3s Expedia Travel Food.com Recipes, restaurant guides Infospace.com
CNET's Ultimate Guide To Search - CNET.com topicspecific Search Sites Specialized sites help you track down specific information,from long engine reviews and more From Search IQ searching tips and http://www.cnet.com/internet/0-3817-7-1922932.html
Extractions: If your Web searches turn up nothing but nonsense, read on. 1. Pokemon 2. Britney Spears 3. Dragonball 4. The WWF 5. Eminem 6. Tattoos 7. Napster 8. Pam Anderson 9. Mother's Day 10. Victoria's Secret According to Lycos's top 50 queries, the ten most popular searches are all about entertainment, games, and sex (from the Lycos 50 Daily Report , May 20, 2000). More than 119 million U.S. households have Internet access. And, after email, research (which includes general Web searches) is the next most popular reason people use the Internet, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers' 1999 Consumer Technology Survey . But for many of us, it's harder to find information on the Web than it is to find meaning in a Pauly Shore movie. Whenever we search online, we get either hundreds of irrelevant and out-of-date links or no results at all. Fortunately, with the right search site at your side and a few pointers to help you narrow down your searches, you can find any tidbit of information on the Web. We'll show you where to find the best search sites, explain how the different sites work, and teach you how to make them perform for you.
Citations Focused Crawling A New Approach To Topic-specific Web A new approach to topicspecific web resource discovery. In Proceedings of the EighthInternational World Wide Web Conference, 1999. searching the Web - Arasu http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/context/838289/293642
Focused Crawling A New Approach To Topic-specific Web Resource Dom , title = Focused crawling a new approach to topicspecific {Web} resource sourcesin a hyperlinked environment - Kleinberg - 1998 98 searching the world http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/chakrabarti99focused.html
Cybergrrl Tech Tips: Searching The Web: 5 Easy Tips You will, for instance, eliminate all xxx sites so often found in search enginesas soon as the word woman is used, searching in this topicspecific directory. http://www.cybergrrl.com/tech/ttips/art3341/index2.shtml
Extractions: Forums Chat Register Login If you are searching to learn more about a topic in a specific topic area, you can often be very successful very quickly by using a directory about that topic from the start. Femina is an example of a directory of sites for, by and about women. You will, for instance, eliminate all xxx sites so often found in search engines as soon as the word woman is used, searching in this topic-specific directory. You can also search in Yahoo! for the topic and the word Indices (cars + indices) to find lists of sites that are directories for a specific topic. If you are searching for a specific phrase, you may want to go right to a search engine and use Boolean logic to search for the phrase. If you are looking for information regarding a specific business or school, you can often guess the URL and head directly to the home site. For instance, most universities are the name of the university.edu and many businesses are the name of the business.com while many organizations are the name of the organization.org. "And last but not least, share, share and share your searches with friends and colleagues."
Fagan Finder > Searching > Topic Clustering however when you get very specific the folders WiseNut WiseNut's topic clusters, calledWiseGuide Categories link which is equivalant to searching the whole web http://www.faganfinder.com/search/clustering.shtml
Extractions: Directories are edited and organized by humans, and all websites are listed in a hierarchy, grouped according to their topic, and sub topics are listed within topics. Search engines' databases have no such structure, which would help to focus in on a topic. Many words and phrases have multiple meanings, and this is not a problem for directories, but it is for search engines. Homer was a Greek writer and is also a character on The Simpsons . To solve this problem, many search engines are enhanced by also using a directory. For example, a search for Homer on Google will have two categories listed, Homer the Greek and Homer Simpson (I have shortened the directory folder names). However, when you browse these categories, you are just using a directory and have lost the benefits of a search engine. The solution to all this, is topic clustering. What is Clustering?
Fagan Finder > Searching > Meta Search Tools tools for different topics, which include topicspecific sources including The MetaSearching Trend With more and more are meta searches on most topic pages on http://www.faganfinder.com/search/meta.shtml
Extractions: True meta search tools do not have their own database. They send your query to several search engines or directories at once, and consolidate all the results onto the same page. The point is to save time by using several search engines at the same time, helping you find obscure items. The term "meta search engine" is often misused. Some tools which do not consolidate results, but just stitch together results pages from various search tools are not meta search engines. Even websites similar to Fagan Finder have been called meta search engines, however they are not. How do Meta Search Engines Work? Meta search engines will perform your search on each of the sources they include. They will go to the results pages, and parse (extract) the results from them. They record all this, and then manipulate this data however they want, such as removing duplicates. After they have processed the results, they create an HTML page with them listed, which is what you see. What Makes a Good Meta Search Engine?
The University Of Queensland Library Internet Search Tools Search engines If you need one specific piece of information on a topic you can areall different, so you need to become proficient in searching the one you http://www.library.uq.edu.au/internet/start.html
Internet Searching Subjectspecific directories Browse subject sites on one topic, Australian-only Business/companyinformation searching and directories, People finders Email http://www.library.uq.edu.au/internet/schhints.html
Things To Know Before You Begin Searching be on any topic, can be trivial, commercial, taskspecific, or a rich treasure devotedto your topic. databases; and sometimes by keyword searching in general http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/TeachingLib/Guides/Internet/ThingsToKnow.html
Extractions: What other tools exist to find information through the Internet? Finding the Web documents (a.k.a. Web "pages" or " sites ") you want can be easy or seem impossibly difficult. This is in part due to the sheer size of the WWW, currently estimated to contain 3 billion documents. It is also because the WWW is not indexed in any standard vocabulary. Unlike a library's catalogs, in which can use standardized Library of Congress subject headings to find books in most large, general libraries in the U.S., in Web searching you are always guessing what words will be in the pages you want to find or guessing what subject terms were chosen by someone to organize a web page or site covering some topic. When you do what is called "searching the Web," you are NOT searching it directly. It is not possible to search the WWW directly. The Web is the totality of the many web pages which reside on computers (called "
The Spire Project: Searching The Web Not all search engines are global, and the regional or topicspecific searchtools are valuable in searching a more tightly focused collection. http://spireproject.com/webpage.htm
Extractions: W ebpages are often of unknown age, of only guessed at quality and potentially the easiest information to retrieve. There are many points of entry to web resources but search tools differ. Try to match your search tool to your question. To start, you will need to learn something of the different tools - introduced below - and four basic search techniques: Boolean Proximity Field Searches Truncation I nternet Global Search Engines When searching for a topic with precise descriptive terms, use a large international search engine. Always place the Boolean symbol before each search word (like this: ) to insist all words appear in the results. Quotes keep words together ( ). These two simple steps dramatically improve results. Keep adding words and search limits until the number of matches is reasonable. Altavista , among other tools, has a very large fast search engine. Allows for