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Searching the Deep Web Video







Searching the Deep Web Video

Searching the Deep Web Video 02/17/2004 08:01 AM

Searching the Deep Web Video
http://www.osti.gov /media/DeepWebVideo.html

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) provides access to a wealth of energy, science, and technology research and development (R&D) information. To support the needs of Web patrons, OSTI has developed state-of-the-art technologies and services including a Deep Web search capability. The Deep Web includes content in searchable databases available to Web users but not accessible by popular search engines. This video provides an introduction to the Deep Web search engine and how it can be used to access R&D information contained in previously hard-to-find databases. [Deep Web Research Subject Tracer Information Blog]




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Searching the Deep Web Video

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How Deep Web Searching Could Change How
We Use The Internet


How Deep Web Searching Could Change How
We Use The Internet
03/09/2004 12:18 AM
Lots of people have been talking about building search engines that better search the "deep" or "dark" web - parts of the internet that aren't currently readily accessible to most search engines. When Yahoo made their search-related announcements recently, everyone focused on the paid-inclusion part, missing the fact that much of what they were talking about was setting up better deep web searching. This Salon piece takes a much more thorough look at how deep web searching could change quite a bit. Right now, for instance, if you want to search on flight information, you probably won't go to Google, but to Expedia or Travelocity or some such site. However, if Google (or a competitor) could also search those sites, then it becomes an end-run around their interface. Suddenly, their own interface and their own search engines become less important - they just become the data aggregator. At the same time, it would probably necessitate a change to how the typical search engine interface worked. If you did a search on "flights to NY" are you looking to book a flight, track a flight, or general information on the history of flights to NY? Search engines are, thus, going to need to become better at categorizing searches, and presenting information in a different way (something that Vivisimo has been working on a lot lately). All of this, though, could represent quite a shift for the way companies present info online, and (more importantly) how they make money off of information online. As the article points out, online publishers may face a situation similar to the recording industry if they continually try to resist this shift. It certainly will keep things interesting for a while.

Google to offer personal video searching


Google to offer personal video searching 04/05/2005 11:50 AM
Google on Monday announced it is set to begin archiving video clips in order to trial a video search service. The company plans to put out a call for personal video clips as a way to experiment with ways to expand the reach of its search service. "In the next few days, we're actually going to start taking video submissions from people, and we're not quite sure what we're going to get, but we decided we'd try this experiment," Google co-founder Larry Page said at a conference in San Francisco. Page told ZDNet that there are "tons of issues, but we have found in experimenting not to try to have too many barriers. It's hard to predict what will happen, but we have done this ten times and we figure out ways to make it work."

Searching for IBM


Searching for IBM 12/30/2004 07:54 PM
Search Engine Guide Dec 30 2004 10:31PM GMT

More about searching wikis


More about searching wikis 02/01/2005 10:02 PM
Ross Mayfield: Meanwhile, Jimmy Wales and others are working on Wikia, a wiki search engine, and Wikipedia produces a nice diff feed.  Adapting to MediaWiki covers 1/4 of public wikis.  There are well over 100 open source wikis, a wonderful diversity to respect, and search engines would do well to adapt to them over time just as they have with less standard blog implementations.

Searching For Sound


Searching For Sound 05/27/2004 11:04 AM
Many people have pointed out that search engines (yes, mainly Google) are now the "front end to the internet." However, how does that work when the internet is increasingly not just about text? Especially as broadband catches on around the world, more and more content is audio and visual content. Both new and old search engines are now working on better ways to sort through that content - using metadata and speech recognition to understand what's being said. The article uses NPR as the main example, describing how they use voice recognition technology to create immediate transcripts of their audio, which are completely searchable. They admit that these transcripts are later replaced by "more accurate" human written transcripts, but that the automated ones work well enough. The article also focuses on StreamSage, which seems to be one of the more advanced tools. It uses voice recognition to transcribe audio - but also tries to add in some contextual analysis to create an automated "table of contents" for the file, so searching through it is much easier.

Searching with PHP and MySQL


Searching with PHP and MySQL 08/16/2004 02:04 PM
cal's got a very useful writeup for those of us that work on these platforms

Searching Using eMail


Searching Using eMail 08/18/2004 05:22 AM
Searching Using eMail

I can easily remember a number of years ago when using eMail to retun your searches was one way around the slow modem speed. With the advent of DSL and cable we do not hear to much abut searches being returned via eMail. The other day I was reading ResearchBuzz< /a> and noticed a posting by Tara on a search engine offering the results via eMail and I decided to check on other search engines that I had bookmarked in the years past. Here are the search engines that you can use that will return results via eMail and some will even allow you to email your search query and then respond with the search answer via eMail:

GoogleMail
http://www.capesc ience.com/google/index.shtml

IceRocket Search
http://www.icerocket.com/

ILIAD - An Offline Search Engine
http://prime.jsc.nas a.gov/iliad/index.html

Interesting how technology seems to return ...... If anyone knows of other email based search engines please email me and I will add to this posting.


Searching questions


Searching questions 04/27/2004 12:21 AM
Boston Globe Apr 27 2004 4:18AM GMT

Searching for Research


Searching for Research 06/08/2004 08:21 PM
Source: iMedia Connection - Search engine user and use studies are everywhere. ...Of course, the perusal of and ultimately useful takeaway from said research requires a delicate, sometimes skeptical eye. One study says paid search is the golden goose, another...

Searching For Trouble?


Searching For Trouble? 01/22/2004 07:26 PM
Keyword Ads Are Big Earners For Google, Yahoo!, And AOL, So Trademark Lawsuits Currently In The Courts Could Spell Major Hassles. ...

Searching without a sound


Searching without a sound 05/27/2004 08:00 AM
ZDNet May 27 2004 12:46PM GMT

Searching the Internet


Searching the Internet 07/16/2004 07:07 AM


Searching the Internet
http://www.SearchingTheIn ternet.info/

Resources and Sources to Search the Internet by Internet Expert and Guru Marcus P. Zillman, M.S., A.M.H.A. including comprehensive website, white paper, audio and video.


Searching for Just Google Ads


Searching for Just Google Ads 03/13/2003 10:26 AM

Searching Newsgroups


Searching Newsgroups 08/07/2004 05:32 AM
Searching Newsgroups by Jonathan Dube
http://www.poy nter.org/column.asp?id=32&aid=3128

One of the handiest online tools for reporters is one of the least-used: Usenet newsgroups. They are basically a massive collection of topic-specific bulletin boards that people post millions of messages to every day. For years DejaNews.com made it easy for Web surfers to search and post to newsgroups, but that site went bankrupt last year. Fortunately, the popular search engine Google bought up DejaNews' archives and recently unveiled a new site that every reporter should know how to use. Google Groups is a searchable database of the past 20 years of Usenet archives -- that's more than 700 million messages dating back to 1981, divided into 35,000 topical categories! This will be added to the search engines section of Internet MiniGuides 2004-05.

Searching for Bloggers Near You


Searching for Bloggers Near You 06/05/2005 11:58 PM

Searching faster


Searching faster 12/08/2003 07:09 PM
Google's new Deskbar function liberates web searching from browsers by embedding a bit of the popular search engine on the Windows desktop. ...

Tags and searching


Tags and searching 03/31/2005 09:37 AM
Having now looked at the way people are using tags on wists, it seems like the most useful way to...

Searching for answers


Searching for answers 06/24/2005 07:35 PM
Directing queries through Internet search engines has become one of the most popular online activities. Statistics released from a new survey conducted by Harris Interactive show that users accessed search engines more often than they used the Net for entertainment, e-commerce or IM/chat. Over half of the respondents (53%) said they used search engines most or every time they went online, and only 4% said they had never used a search engine. Only two activities were more popular than search: sending or receiving e-mail (87%) and general Web surfing (55%). How the respondents used search engines was also interesting. The top reasons were for researching specific topics (88%), getting directions or maps (75%), looking for news (64%) and shopping (51%). Internet search engines also seem to be replacing the telephone for some tasks, with a total of 54% reporting having used a search engine instead of using a phone. Different search engines seem to be better for searching for different topics. For example, MSN and Ask Jeeves users were more apt to search for medical and health information. Ask Jeeves users were also more likely to look for maps and directions. Google users tended to search more for news, perhaps a result of the Google News search page. According to data from Nielsen//NetRatings, Google is by far the most popular search engine in the US, with a 48% market share. Yahoo! is next with 21%, followed by MSN with 12%, AOL with 5% and Ask Jeeves with 2%. Google users are also the most loyal. Thirteen percent of US adults who use Google use it exclusively, compared to 11% for AOL, 10% for MSN, 7% for Yahoo!/Overture and 2.4% for Ask Jeeves.

Searching for the next Salesforce


Searching for the next Salesforce 06/24/2005 03:22 PM
ZDNet Jun 24 2005 11:33AM GMT

Searching for a candidate


Searching for a candidate 12/21/2003 07:10 PM
Anderson determines which issues are included in the quiz, along with the candidates' positions, by looking at various polls, news reports and Google news ...

Fortune searching


Fortune searching 02/11/2004 06:13 AM
CNET Asia Feb 11 2004 9:53AM GMT

Searching for 40,000% Returns


Searching for 40,000% Returns 04/06/2005 10:02 AM
John Reeves didn't invest in high-growth companies 20 years ago. He won't make that mistake again.

Microsoft's Still Searching


Microsoft's Still Searching 07/01/2004 01:50 PM
MSN starts search upgrades, but it's still a little short.

Searching in the Third Dimension


Searching in the Third Dimension 04/16/2004 04:51 AM
New search engines go beyond text to find things in catalogs of images, using drawings and 3-D renderings to find what you're after. What's the secret behind this breakthrough? The voxel.

Searching for Profits


Searching for Profits 07/27/2004 11:12 AM
FindWhat.com has a successful quarter as rival Google plans to popularize the paid-search niche.

SETI still searching for ET


SETI still searching for ET 09/02/2004 01:58 PM
News earlier this week that The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence group, SETI, had found a signal from ET appears to have been over blown. Described by SETI's chief Scientist, Dr Wertheimer, as "hype and noise", he went on to say that it was "nothing that is unusual. It's all out of proportion."

SETI takes data from it's Arecibo Aerial Telescope and distributes it to its thousands of users world wide for analysis. The chunk that set off last Thursday's media frenzy is called SHGb02+14a and was found by computers running the SETI program in Germany and the US. In its 6 years of operation, SETI have found 150 chunks that are potentially signals from ET; these 150 are found by statistical techniques performed on the data, which ascertains the likelihood of it being legitimate. Of the 150, so far 0 have been real.

SETI commented that "With Seti@home having analysed some 50 trillion frequency bands, it is not surprising that a signal like this occurs purely due to chance." Looks like we'll see a 40th edition of ET before ET really does phone home.

View: SETI Homepage | Previous story

Read full story...

Searching for the Perfect OS


Searching for the Perfect OS 07/02/2004 05:09 AM
Putting digital files into folders on your hard drive is old hat, Apple CEO Steve Jobs declares this week. The future is search, not sort. By Leander Kahney.

Searching 4,285,199,774 Web Pages


Searching 4,285,199,774 Web Pages 02/17/2004 08:10 AM
Google grows index by about 25%.

Searching for the next Google


Searching for the next Google 08/23/2004 12:35 PM
CNN Aug 23 2004 5:12PM GMT

Who’s Searching


Who’s Searching 02/01/2005 09:43 PM
I see that Forrester’s excellent Charlene Li is expecting MSN search to gain on Google. Her argument sounds plausible, so I went and checked my logfiles. Since Sunday, I’ve had 1,222 people arrive at ongoing via Google, 166 via search.yahoo.com, and 49 via MSN. If it gets a little closer, I’ll start having to run a regular Search Market Share graph along with my Browser Market Share offering.

Searching Vs. Finding


Searching Vs. Finding 06/19/2004 05:50 AM
Searching Vs. Finding by William A. Woods, Sun Microsystems Laboratories
http://snipurl.com/73r2

Finding information and organizing it so that it can be found are two key aspects of any company's knowledge management strategy. Nearly everyone is familiar with the experience of searching with a Web search engine and using a search interface to search a particular Web site once you get there. (You may have even noticed that the latter often doesn't work as well as the former.) After you have a list of hits, you typically spend a significant amount of time following links, waiting for pages to download, reading through a page to see if it has what you want, deciding that it doesn't, backing up to try another link, deciding to try another way to phrase your request, et cetera. Eventually you may find what you want, or you may ultimately give up and decide that you can't find it. Why is this so difficult?

Searching For CC on the Desktop


Searching For CC on the Desktop 06/17/2005 05:02 PM

As anyone who's looked at Mac OS X lately knows, one of the major new features in 10.4 is Spotlight, which allows you to search files on your computer based on specific bits of metadata. The great thing about Spotlight is that it goes beyond the traditional filename, changed date search and allows you to search for things like Creator, Contents, Type, etc. It also provides a way for 3rd party developers to create code which adds file types and attributes to the system.

So you're saying to yourself, "gee, I have tons of music on my computer, but what songs are CC licensed? I wish I knew." We can help you with that. The CC Spotlight Importer is an importer which adds CC license URLs to the list of indexable metadata. While this is an early release, it includes a simple Smart Folder which does just that.

Future versions will include the ability to search on specific license attributes, and support for more file types. Got an idea for improving it? Just drop me a line (nathan@creativecommons.org). Enjoy!


MCI Goes Deep With Wi-Fi


MCI Goes Deep With Wi-Fi 03/28/2005 12:44 PM
Company to increase hot-spot coverage; eye on voice support in future apps.

DBM-Deep-0.91


DBM-Deep-0.91 02/12/2004 06:05 AM

The Deep Web


The Deep Web 06/25/2004 05:44 AM
THE DEEP WEB
http://snipurl.com/78rr

Because search engines skim only the top layers of Web pages, they miss most of what's available on what is called the "deep Web," and there may be as many as 500 billion Web pages hidden from the view of most search engines. Paul Duguid, co-author of "The Social Life of Information," says: "Google searches an index at the first layers of any Web site it goes to, and as you delve beneath the surface, it starts to miss stuff. When you go deeper, the number of pages just becomes absolutely mind-boggling." Librarians are now working with Google and other search engines to solve that problem. Daniel Greenstein of the University of California's California Digital Library, the digital branch of the University of California notes: "If you could use Google to just look across digital libraries, into any digital library collection, now that would be cool. It would help libraries achieve something that we haven't yet been able to achieve by ourselves, which is to place all of our publicly accessible digital library collections in a common pool." (New York Times 21 Jun 2004)[NewsScan Daily, 21 June 2004] This has been added to Deep Web Research Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.


DBM-Deep-0.10


DBM-Deep-0.10 02/12/2004 06:05 AM

It Came From the Deep!


It Came From the Deep! 06/03/2004 02:06 AM
New York's Water Ain't Kosher! - You may be aware that shellfish are not kosher. It turns out that little, itty-bitty, microscopic shellfish called copepods are in New York's water. Brita to the rescue?

DBM-Deep-0.94


DBM-Deep-0.94 04/13/2004 11:37 PM

DBM-Deep-0.9


DBM-Deep-0.9 02/10/2004 10:30 AM

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Searching the Deep Web Video

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