Hello people, I know most of us get really frustrated when work with search engines; you know google, yahoo, bing, Ask... Lookin for something but you're never too sure which link is right for you. I came across this list of ways of narrowing down your search. Enjoy:
- Exact Phrase in Quotes: every single search engine (Google, Yahoo, MSN Search, and Ask Jeeves) will look for every word in a search string when you include it in quotes. For example:
"cheese doodles"
tells the search engine to match both of these words, "cheese" and "doodles, " and to make sure that they are searched for as a phrase. - Exclude Terms: put a minus (-) sign in front of the word you'd like excluded. For example:
sponge bob
(notice that there's a space after the first word and before the minus sign). - Include Terms: place a plus (+) sign in front of the word you want included. For example:
Toy Story +2
. - Wildcard search: A wildcard could be thought of a stand-in word or words that you'd like the search engine to come back with. For instance: how now * cow, or Santa lives in the * pole or you can even ask a question:
search engines index * of the web
(it's a fraction or portion). Works well in all but AskJeeves. - Site search: use site:site address to search within a site for something. For example:
site:websearch.about.com "invisible web"
will return all results from the web address websearch.about.com for the Invisible Web. - Link search: see what other sites are linking to a specific web address. It makes a difference if you include the "www" or not in the number of links returned. For example:
Yahoo:link:http://www.lifehacker.com OR link:http://lifehacker.
AskJeeves:not supported
Google:link:http://www.lifehacker.com OR link:http://lifehacker.
MSN Search:link:http://lifehacker.com OR link:http://www.lifehacker.
All Engines: Another (somewhat more accurate) way to see who is linking to what is this command:www.lifehacker.com -site:www.lifehacker.com
. This shows you all the pages actually linking to Lifehacker, minus the pages within its own domain. - Cache: See what the site used to look like (good for sites that change often). Different ways to do this in each search engine:
Yahoo: doesn't support cache:domain.com command; instead, search for a domain name (www.google.com) and look for the cached text link underneath your search results.
AskJeeves: same deal as Yahoo
MSN Search: same as Yahoo
Google:cache:google
.
OR: you could just go to Internet Archive. - Filetype: search for a specific type of file, for example, if you are looking for zoology information and would like to limit your search to only PowerPoint results:
Google:zoology filetype:ppt
MSN:zoology filetype:ppt
Yahoo: zoology originurlextension:ppt
AskJeeves: filetype search unavailable.
- Title Search: restrict your search to words found in web page titles. For example:
Yahoo:title:Nike
Google:allintitle:nike
MSN:intitle:nike
AskJeeves:intitle:nike
- URL Search: searches for pages that have whatever word you specify anywhere in the host name, path name, or filename. For example:
Yahoo:inurl:chewbacca
Google:allinurl: chewbacca
ORinurl: chewbacca
MSN:inurl: chewbacca
AskJeeves:inurl: chewbacca
- Limit search to a specific domain: this will limit your search to only those domains that you specify you want results from. For example:
site:.edu herbivorous plants
(must take out the period before the "edu" in MSN)
site:.org celebrity charity auction
site:.gov "civil war" archives
As a side note, you can also limit Google to just the .mil and .gov domains by navigating to Google UncleSam. - Search within a specific date range: You can narrow you search to only a very specific window of time, i.e., you're looking for Macromedia Dreamweaver information only between August and October 2005.
AskJeeves:macromedia dreamweaver betweendate:200508,200510
MSN: somewhat confusing to do; MSN has provided a Search Builder pull-down below the main search query box that allows you to stack your results from "updated very recently" to "static" (page hasn't been updated in a while).
Yahoo: on the Yahoo Advanced page there is a drop-down menu titled "Updated." You have four choices: search for content "anytime", "within the past three months", "within the past six months", "within a year."
Google:
macromedia dreamweaver daterange:200508-200510
- Word definition. Find what something means fast.
Google:define:cornucopia
Yahoo:define cornucopia
AskJeeves:define: cornucopia
MSN Search:definition: cornucopia
- Get a stock quote: type in
quote nkesa
(insert your own stock symbol) to any of the four and you'll get an instant stock quote. - Limit search by country: You can search within a particular country's top domain codes. For example:
site:.br "Rio de Janeiro"
This will only search .br domains (Brazil) for the search query "rio de Janeiro". (Note: you'll need to take out the period before the domain name code in order for this to work at MSN). Here's the complete list of country codes. - Convert stuff: For instance, you want to see what 45 degrees Celsius looks like in Fahrenheit:
Yahoo:convert 45 Celsius to Fahrenheit
Google:45 Celsius in Fahrenheit
Ask Jeeves:convert 45 Celsius to Fahrenheit
MSN Search:45 Celsius in Fahrenheit
- Solve a math problem. Next time you can't find the calculator, check online instead. For instance:
4*(12-6/3)
Google, Yahoo, and MSN Search support just typing in a simplistic math problem. Not supported in AskJeeves. - Check your flight status. Check your flight status online by typing in the name of the airlines and the flight number for example:
United 45
orAlaska Airlines 63
. Not supported at MSN Search. - Check gas prices in your area. Get an instant list of gas stations in your area by typing in:
gas 97110
(insert your own zip code)
Not supported in AskJeeves. - Check the weather: Instantly get weather results by typing in
weather 97110
(insert your own zip code). Works in all four search engines.
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