4anything.com is a network of web guides that help users easily find high
quality, relevant information online for thousands of topics of interest and
cities. Each guide helps users focus their searching via a well-organized,
highly manageable list of recommended sites for a given topic along with
valuable commentary on each site.
About.com In February of 1997, Scott Kurnit and a dedicated team launched
The Mining Company, the first information network to integrate the Internet's
most productive agent - people. The company quickly grew in size and
scale and in 1999 the company was renamed About, to reflect its breadth of
content, services and ease of use. Today, About is visited by one in five
online users each month, making it one of the most popular destinations on the
Net.
AOL Search allows its members to search across the web and AOL's own
content from one place. The "external" version, listed above, does
not list AOL content. The main listings for categories and web sites come from
the Open Directory (see below). Inktomi (see below) also provides
crawler-based results, as backup to the directory information. Before the
launch of AOL Search in October 1999, the AOL search service was
Excite-powered AOL NetFind.
AltaVista is consistently one of the largest search engines on the web, in
terms of pages indexed. Its comprehensive coverage and wide range of power
searching commands makes it a particular favorite among researchers. It also
offers a number of features designed to appeal to basic users, such as
"Ask AltaVista" results, which come from Ask Jeeves (see below), and
directory listings from the Open Directory and LookSmart. AltaVista opened in
December 1995. It was owned by Digital, then run by Compaq (which purchased
Digital in 1998), then spun off into a separate company which is now
controlled by CMGI. AltaVista also operates the Raging Search service, below.
Formerly called All The Web, FAST Search aims to index the entire web. It
was the first search engine to break the 200 million web page index milestone
and consistently has one of the largest indexes of the web. The Norwegian
company behind FAST Search also powers some of the results that appear at
Lycos (see below). FAST Search launched in May 1999.
Ask Jeeves is a human-powered search service that aims to direct you to the
exact page that answers your question. If it fails to find a match within its
own database, then it will provide matching web pages from various search
engines. The service went into beta in mid-April 1997 and opened fully on June
1, 1997. Some results from Ask Jeeves also appear within AltaVista.
CNET Download.com compiles the Internet's top free-to-download software titles
in the CNET Software Library, which comprises more than 250,000 shareware,
freeware, and demo titles. CNET Download.com gives users an easy-to-use site
that makes finding and downloading software quick and painless for the next
generation of Web user. Visitors to CNET Download.com find today's most
popular titles right at their fingertips, including must-have utilities, the
hottest games, and the latest browsers and browser plug-ins that enable audio
and video on the Internet. The site also features product highlights and
descriptions to help users understand the use and benefit of each title. Users
wishing to locate specific titles can choose from a "Quick,"
"Simple," or "Power" search.
Direct Hit measures what people click on in the search results presented at
its own site and at its partner sites, such as HotBot. Sites that get clicked
on more than others rise higher in Direct Hit's rankings. Thus, the service
dubs itself a "popularity engine." Aside from running its own web
site, Direct Hit provides the main results which appear at HotBot (see below)
and is available as an option to searchers at MSN Search. Direct Hit is owned
by Ask Jeeves (above).
Excite is one of the more popular search services on the web. It offers a
fairly large index and integrates non-web material such as company information
and sports scores into its results, when appropriate. Excite was launched in
late 1995. It grew quickly in prominence and consumed two of its competitors,
Magellan in July 1996, and WebCrawler in November 1996. These continue to run
as separate services.
FindWhat.com uses a proprietary Pay For Position™ technology. With this
technology, search results are ranked based upon an open bidding system, where
each advertiser can bid a higher click-through fee in order for their message
to be closer to the top of the search results. Advertisers are only charged
for actual clicks, or traffic, which come to their site.
Go is a portal site produced by Infoseek and Disney. It offers portal
features such as personalization and free e-mail, plus the search capabilities
of the former Infoseek search service, which has now been folded into Go.
Searchers will find that Go consistently provides quality results in response
to many general and broad searches, thanks to its ESP search algorithm. It
also has an impressive human-compiled directory of web sites. Go officially
launched in January 1999. It is not related to GoTo, below. The former
Infoseek service launched in early 1995.
Unlike the other major search engines, GoTo sells its main listings.
Companies can pay money to be placed higher in the search results, which GoTo
feels improves relevancy. Non-paid results come from Inktomi. GoTo launched in
1997 and incorporated the former University of Colorado-based World Wide Web
Worm. In February 1998, it shifted to its current pay-for-placement model and
soon after replaced the WWW Worm with Inktomi for its non-paid listings. GoTo
is not related to Go (Infoseek).
Google is a search engine that makes heavy use of link popularity as a
primary way to rank web sites. This can be especially helpful in finding good
sites in response to general searches such as "cars" and
"travel," because users across the web have in essence voted for
good sites by linking to them. The system works so well that Google has gained
wide-spread praise for its high relevancy. Google also has a huge index of the
web and provides some results to Yahoo and Netscape Search.
HotBot is a favorite among researchers due to its many power searching
features. In most cases, HotBot's first page of results comes from the Direct
Hit service (see above), and then secondary results come from the Inktomi
search engine, which is also used by other services. It gets its directory
information from the Open Directory project (see below). HotBot launched in
May 1996 as Wired Digital's entry into the search engine market. Lycos
purchased Wired Digital in October 1998 and continues to run HotBot as a
separate search service.
Backed by US television network CBS, iWon has a directory of web sites
generated automatically by Inktomi, which also provides its more traditional
crawler-based results. iWon gives away daily, weekly and monthly prizes in a
marketing model unique among the major services. It launched in Fall 1999.
Info Space founded in April 1996 with the vision of delivering real world
information anytime, anywhere and on any device. Naveen Jain, chairman and
chief strategist, Jain took InfoSpace public in December 1998. InfoSpace is
now working with more than 20 wireless carriers worldwide, including Verizon
Wireless, AT&T Wireless, SBC Wireless and ALLTEL and device and equipment
manufacturers such as Nokia and Ericsson.
Originally, there was an Inktomi
search engine at UC Berkeley. The creators then formed their own company with
the same name and created a new Inktomi index, which was first used to power
HotBot. Now the Inktomi index also powers several other services. All of them
tap into the same index, though results may be slightly different. This is
because Inktomi provides ways for its partners to use a common index yet
distinguish themselves. There is no way to query the Inktomi index directly,
as
it is only made available through Inktomi's partners with whatever filters and
ranking tweaks they may apply.
LookSmart is a human-compiled directory of web sites. In addition to being
a stand-alone service, LookSmart provides directory results to MSN Search,
Excite and many other partners. Inktomi provides LookSmart with search results
when a search fails to find a match from among LookSmart's reviews. LookSmart
launched independently in October 1996, was backed by Reader's Digest for
about a year, and then company executives bought back control of the service.
Lycos started out as a search engine, depending on listings that came from
spidering the web. In April 1999, it shifted to a directory model similar to
Yahoo. Its main listings come from the Open Directory project, and then
secondary results come from the FAST Search engine. Some Direct Hit results
are also used. In October 1998, Lycos acquired the competing HotBot search
service, which continues to be run separately.
Microsoft's MSN Search service is a LookSmart-powered directory of web
sites, with secondary results that come from Inktomi. RealNames and Direct Hit
data is also made available. MSN Search also offers a unique way for Internet
Explorer 5 users to save past searches.
Netscape Search's results come primarily from the Open Directory and
Netscape's own "Smart Browsing" database, which does an excellent
job of listing "official" web sites. Secondary results come from
Google. At the Netscape Netcenter portal
site, other search engines are also featured.
Northern Light is another favorite search engine among researchers. It
features a large index of the web, along with the ability to cluster documents
by topic. Northern Light also has a set of "special collection"
documents that are not readily accessible to search engine spiders. There are
documents from thousands of sources, including newswires, magazines and
databases. Searching these documents is free, but there is a charge of up to
$4 to view them. There is no charge to view documents on the public web --
only for those within the special collection. Northern Light opened to general
use in August 1997.
The Open Directory uses volunteer editors to catalog the web. Formerly
known as NewHoo, it was launched in June 1998. It was acquired by Netscape in
November 1998, and the company pledged that anyone would be able to use
information from the directory through an open license arrangement. Netscape
itself was the first licensee. Lycos and AOL Search also make heavy use of
Open Directory data, while AltaVista and HotBot prominently feature Open
Directory categories within their results pages.
Operated by AltaVista, Raging Search uses the same core index as AltaVista
and virtually the same ranking algorithms. Why use it? AltaVista offers it for
those who want fast search results, with no portal features getting in the
way.
The RealNames system is meant to be an easier-to-use alternative to the
current web site addressing system. Those with RealNames-enabled browsers can
enter a word like "Nike" to reach the Nike web site. To date,
RealNames has had its biggest success through search engine partnerships.
Snap is a human-compiled directory of web sites, supplemented by search
results from Inktomi. Like LookSmart, it aims to challenge Yahoo as the
champion of categorizing the web. Snap launched in late 1997 and is backed by
Cnet and NBC.
WebCrawler has the smallest index of any major search engine on the web --
think of it as Excite Lite. The small index means WebCrawler is not the place
to go when seeking obscure or unusual material. However, some people may feel
that by having indexed fewer pages, WebCrawler provides less overwhelming
results in response to general searches. WebCrawler opened to the public on
April 20, 1994. It was started as a research project at the University of
Washington. America Online purchased it in March 1995 and was the online
service's preferred search engine until Nov. 1996. That was when Excite, a
WebCrawler competitor, acquired the service. Excite continues to run
WebCrawler as an independent search engine.
Yahoo is the web's most popular search service and has a well-deserved
reputation for helping people find information easily. The secret to Yahoo's
success is human beings. It is the largest human-compiled guide to the web,
employing about 150 editors in an effort to categorize the web. Yahoo has over
1 million sites listed. Yahoo also supplements its results with those from
Google (beginning in July 2000, when Google takes over from Inktomi). If a
search fails to find a match within Yahoo's own listings, then matches from
Google are displayed. Google matches also appear after all Yahoo matches have
first been shown. Yahoo is the oldest major web site directory, having
launched in late 1994.
WebTop is a crawler-based search engine that claims an extremely large
index. In addition to listing web pages, WebTop also provides information from
news sources, company information and WAP-related content in its search
results. The company also offers the WebCheck tool (formerly called k-check),
which is an Alexa-like search and discovery tool. WebTop is backed by Bright
Station, the company that acquired some search technology and other resources
from the former Dialog Corporation. The Dialog search service itself is now
owned by a different company, the Thomson Corporation.
This page was created and
updated by Webmaster Jason Stevens. This page was last updated on
Monday June 23, 2008
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