searching aid web guide
Searching Aid .com
a guide to web search
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    Articles on Search
    By Tom Norian:
    Search Drivabilty
    Profit Motive Bias ,
    Search as an enabling force for a moral society ,
    Search engines that obey, Good Servants
    Does filtered search bring liability to the search engine companies?
    about libel laws and their tendency to silence information? ,
    More, on Libel, Search, and Defamation,
    Bias in Google news
    on the importance and influences in editorial choice in search and how it effects what we find .
    Web search, site, access, and governance issues at Roads Routes and Rules
    About This Place
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  • Contact:
  • Tom Norian,
    web site builder
    (and Marin Real Estate Broker)
  • Choose *where* to look based on *what* you're looking for. Yellowpages or the Encyclopedia?
  • Understand how profits change what you get pointed to. Eat at Joes signs don't improve Joe's food
  • Try different wording or spelling.
  • "stakes" won't help much with "steaks"
  • Search first to get better words or categories for your second and third searches.
  • Steak might bring nutrition sites while "steak house", restraunts.
  • Look for the best tool and use it.
  • Use a city newspaper's site for local steak houses, search engines if intested about the industry?
  • Find specific topic sites with searchengines or directories and then let the topic sites give you expert information.
  • A Cooking site may be a better approach than "googling" "how to cook salmon on my bar-b-que".
  • Use th new or expanded features searching aids give you and understand that different places might give you more good choices.
  • Click on "News" tab for steak news or "local" option it they give you the choice.
    Search Engines
    Examples: Google, Ask Jeeves, Clusty and others. Yahoo and Microsoft also run their own search engines and and sites like mamma.com/metasearch and search.com will access mutiple search engines at once and combine the information.

    At "search-engines" you usually type in some words then they give you back a list of sites their *computers* say might help.

    Not all searchengines rank places the same way. Be sure look far and wide rather just deep down the list on only one site.

    Take advantage of different features different searchengines provide you with. Use the buttons at the top to focus on news or pictures or shopping instead of the whole web. Read some articles on the factors that skew results and plan ways to avoid the skewing.

    Key thought: search engines try hard to give good answers to questions, but sales orientated web-site owners are always trying even harder to trick the search engines computers. This "work" of others makes your and the search engine's job harder.
    Topic sites, guides, and portals.
    Aol, Yahoo, MSN and About.com, are large "portals" . Thousands of smaller topic sites focus on more specific categories from knitting to running.

    Portals often provide services like email, web-access, exchanging tips on a hobby, and even some retailers try to serve as topic portals.

    A trusted and knowledgable topic site is a great way to find things on the web; they frequently search and exchange tips with people who share their interest. With a personal passion for a topic or activity they're usually proud to support and reccomend other web-sites providing useful information for the topic.

    A Runner's web-site can be a fine place to look for shoe reviews or links about nursing a twisted ankle.

    Asking a search engine about shoes will bury you with oportunist sites hoping to earn a commision for refering you elsewhere. Topic sites might also have ways to make money by your visit, but when they have a long term record of putting a topic first they realize that bad infomation would lose readers

    Key thought: Informational sites with true love or academic intrest in a subject won't always expend the energies and cost that can assure high search ranking. While some high ranking sites have earned their way in by true admiration of knowledgable people, others have not. Take pains to find the real experts, not the flashy salesemen.
    Directories:
    Directories are sites that attempt to list other sites by content or type. The largest directory is the DMOZ a non profit group. Some directories are stricter than others in their listing, but most will provide at least some oversight trying to decide that sites they list are truly legitimate in the category listed.

    Using directories by themselves can be tricky. The directory lists are usually not made in order of quality. Some directories are little more than junk mail created to promote fast talking sales sites.

    Good directories like the DMOZ will often list a site in only one place even if the site is superior to other sites listed in specific sub categories. A sporting goods site with great sections on a lot of different sports won't be listed in specific topics like x-country skiing, even though that site might be far better than the cross country skiing sites listed. Read more soon.

    Key thought: use directories to find good portals on general topics, then look through the links on portal's to gain more knowledge.


    Now that I've covered the basics, let me add another important concept.

    Be aware!: The web keeps changing and changing fast. The lines between searching tools quickly blur and what works great in one area will be less great in other areas.

    It will be a challenge to keep adding to this site to make it a broad resource and to continually edit the content as situations change.

    As new sites and search tools are developed or the "numbskulls" who are bent on promoting sales on a shoddy site find a way to clutter up certain tools I'll need to keep adding. But I'm a curious guy and along with associates I'll likely develop some areas where I can continually give pointers on specific topics.

    Thank you for visiting, I hope what is here has been helpful and that you'll visit again in the future.

    Tom Norian





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