
Global Mapping International
Internet Search Engines
Today hundreds of search engines exist on the
web (see the section on Lists of
Directories/Engines below). We've tried below to point you to some
of the best in each category. Chances are good you'll find what you're
looking for with one of these tools.
General Searching
Here are some of the very best general purpose
search engines and directories. They are powerful, easy-to-use, extensive
and frequently updated. Search engines produce the result of exhaustive
automated computer searches, while good directories require painstaking
human review and cataloging.
- HotBot Probably the single most
powerful search engine, HotBot is a no-frills site, great for detailed
queries, and with excellent current news searching. You can easily search
by date or by geographic region (e.g. only Southeast Asian sites) or by
top-level domain (e.g., search only for ".org" web sites).
http://hotbot.lycos.com/
- AltaVista This is the grand-daddy
of search engines, always innovating. It is powerful, extremely flexible,
fast, and comprehensive. You can quickly do a simple search, or invest
some time in learning advanced search syntax. You can tell it to search
only for sites in Korean or any of 25 other languages. Also, you might
find their Translation
feature handy at http://babelfish.altavista.com/translate.dyn
-- it gives a quick and dirty translation of web site content to or from
English, Spanish, Portuguese, French, German and Italian. http://altavista.com/
- Yahoo! Currently
the best directory on the Internet, Yahoo! is serious about tying to be
everything you need. It must hire some of the best reviewers and catalogers
in the business; its links are consistently high-quality. It is great source
to search for current news items, and its just-for-kids Yahooligians! is
lots of fun. http://www.yahoo.com/
- Northern Light A relative
new-comer, Northern Light became an instant success, and with good reason.
It is well organized -- your returns are grouped by subject, type, source
and language. It does a great job of sifting down from the 1000s of hits
to the ones you want. You can also search in special collections (including
some 3000 periodicals) not generally available on the Web. http://www.northernlight.com/
- Infoseek
This is a good all-around site with a simple interface. It has lots of
extras including foreign-language searching and searching by geographic
region. http://www.go.com/
- Lycos
Lycos is an excellent general search site, with good options and a comprehensive
directory. http://www.lycos.com/
- Excite
Excite gives good results from simple queries and provides lots of other
nice touches and features, making it a good choice for less experience
users. http://www.excite.com/
- c|net Search http://search.cnet.com/
- LookSmart Designed for families,
LookSmart is a directory of frequently updated, staff-reviewed sites. It
is a reliable site for high-quality material. http://www.looksmart.com
- Mining Co. Volunteer experts
continually search, review, annotate and categorize sites on many topics.
http://home.miningco.com/
- Direct Hit compiles its listings
by tracking the way search engines are used. The company maintains a database
that records the links users click on when sifting through results for
a specific search term. Links drawing more clicks rank the highest on search
results pages generated by Direct Hit. http://www.directhit.com
Metasearch (Multiple Search)
For simple convenience, you might find metasearching
to be the ultimate tool for you. Rather than performing their own original
searches, metasearch engines simply compile the results of many other leading
search engines all in one place. Thus, with one query you can get a quick
overview (though usually not thorough listing) of the matches from several
search engines. The better metasearch engines will accept your query and
translate it into the required syntax of each of the engines it accesses.
- ProFusion This site has it all:
intelligence, design, speed, power and flexibility, producing the best
metasearch results on the web. Try the personalized search service: enter
your query once and ProFusion with rerun it for you weekly or monthly and
e-mail you the results. http://profusion.com
- MetaCrawler An
excellent metasearch engine, the standard by which others have historically
been measured. It is powerful and flexible, and does a great job of removing
duplicates. http://www.metacrawler.com
- Dogpile Dogpile is easy to use
and fast, searching a wide range of search engines until it obtains at
least ten hits for your query. http://www.dogpile.com
- SavvySearch
This site has great flexibility and can be highly customized to fit the
needs of the individual user. It handle very complex queries, translating
them well for the search engines it accesses. http://dns.uncor.edu/links/sitehelp/localgui/savvybet.htm
- Ask Jeeves One of the newest
sites, Ask Jeeves is also one of the most creative. To use it, you type
in a natural language question (e.g. "How do I tie a tie?")
and Ask Jeeves tries (usually with surprising successes) to interpret your
question point you to links it suspects will be helpful -- from AltaVista,
Excite, Infosek, Lycos and Webcrawler. http://www.askjeeves.com
Finding People
Need to find someone's address, telephone number or e-mail address?
Unless they work pretty hard to hide, you'll probably find them with one
of these search engines.
Finding Businesses
- BigBook For many people, this
will be the best site for finding a business. It is comprehensive and accurate,
with good user helps. It does a nice job of proximity searching -- finding
the businesses closest to a specified address. Having found an address,
you can then link to a map of the area. http://www.bigbook.com
- Switchboard
This is an excellent site for finding businesses, with many of the same
features as BigBook. http://www.switchboard.com/bin/cgidir.dll?MG=
- Zip2 Zip2 is probably the most enjoyable
to use -- it has a nice feel, and gives good results (except it is weak
in proximity searching). http://www.zip2.com
- Worldpages Worldpages has helpful
maps and lots of useful categories to search. A good site, but not as comprehensive
as BigBook or Switchboard. http://www.worldpages.com
- InfoSpace
This another good site with features similar to the ones above, but less
user-friendly and with less-helpful categories. http://pic2.infospace.com/_1_185412589__info/index_ylw.htm
Usenet Newsgroups
Search engines for Usenet newsgroups, not only current conversations,
but extensive archives of newsgroup content.
- Deja News At Deja News you can
search for and read messages from more than 50,000 discussion forums, including
Usenet newsgroups. You can search messages dating back more than two years,
searching by author, date, newsgroup or subject. http://www.dejanews.com/
- Reference.com An excellent site,
almost as comprehensive and flexible as Deja News, plus it searches
mailing lists. You can ask Reference.com to rerun your search daily and
send you updates by e-mail; you can also send it search queries by e-mail.
http://www.reference.com
- HotBot Less comprehensive than
either of the above, HotBot indexes about 20,000 newsgroups and searches
messages up to three weeks old. http://www.hotbot.com/
Christian Search Engines & Directories
The following directories and search engines are
focues exclusively on Christian content, so when you do a search you are
assured of finding hits on Christian (or religious) web pages only.
Special Interest Sites
While not directories or search engines, per se,
we've found these sites to be valuable reference resources.
Lists
of Engines/Directories
Want immediate access to lots more search engines?
The pages below are links to hundreds of additional search engines and
directories.
More about Internet Searching
Want to learn more? There's lots of help on the
Web, from simple tutorials to indepth analysis of how individual search
engines work. Check out the sites below.
Listing your Site
The flip-side of finding information is making
sure your own web site gets found by those you want to find it. The sites
noted below will help you get your web pages listed with major search engines
and help you understand how search engines build their indices.
Meta Words
Meta words give you more control over narrowing your search to only
those web pages you really want. They require that specified text must
appear within specified features of the web site in order to be a hit.
To use meta words in your search, enter the meta word followed by a colon
followed by the key word desired. For example, entering "title:evangelical"
would find all web pages with the word "evangelical" in the title
of the web page. We've listed below the more popular meta words and
their syntax, along with links to Alta Vista examples using each meta word.