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Author Topic:  The Best Search Engine?
Bobby Lee


From:
Cloverdale, California, USA
Post  Posted 15 May 2000 4:11 pm    
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For years I've used Alta-vista, but I just discovered Google. It's fast and it seems to give better results.

What's your favorite search site, and why?

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Bobby Lee quasar@b0b.com gigs CDs
Sierra Session S-12 (E9), Speedy West D-10 (E9, D6),
Sierra S-8 Laptop (D13), Fender Stringmaster D-8 (D13, A6)
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Graham


From:
Marmora, Ontario, Canada
Post  Posted 15 May 2000 4:14 pm    
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Used to use "Yahoo", but then I found the "Forum"!!

No further need for a search engine!!!!!

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Rebelâ„¢
ICQ 614585
http://users.interlinks.net/rebel/steel/steel.html


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Rick Morris

 

From:
Toledo,Ohio
Post  Posted 15 May 2000 6:20 pm    
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B0b,

I've always used metacrawler. You can type in a phrase then choose whether to search for any word, all words, or as a phrase (my favorite). Metacrawler searches the other search engines and bring back results from all of them, sometimes showing that only one or two return any information. The one drawback is, sometimes you get the same links over and over again, one from each of the other engines, but i'd rather have too many than none at all.

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Dave Boothroyd


From:
Staffordshire Moorlands
Post  Posted 15 May 2000 11:43 pm    
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I like Webferret.
It sits on the desktop and does a really good job for me.

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Cheers!
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Jack Stoner


From:
Kansas City, MO
Post  Posted 16 May 2000 2:26 am    
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I don't have one favorite or best search engine. Seems they all pluses and minuses. However, Ask Jeeves seems to return more hits than some of the others I've used.

Generally, on I.E.5, just typing find and what you want on the Address line seems to do just as good.
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Bobby Lee


From:
Cloverdale, California, USA
Post  Posted 16 May 2000 7:22 am    
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Wow! I didn't know you could do that. Neat trick, Jack. Thanks!
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David Mullis

 

From:
Rock Hill, SC
Post  Posted 16 May 2000 11:57 am    
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I usually use www.mamma.com The Mother Of All Search Engines

WOW, just tried google, much faster and better results!

[This message was edited by David Mullis on 16 May 2000 at 01:02 PM.]

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Jeremy Steele


From:
Princeton, NJ USA
Post  Posted 16 May 2000 12:21 pm    
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I've been into Google for a while, it's the best one I've found.
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Marco Schouten


From:
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Post  Posted 16 May 2000 2:41 pm    
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I can recommend using Copernic. Its a program which searches many engines the same time. You can download a free copy from www.copernic.com. You really should try it.

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Steelin' Greetings
Marco Schouten
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Jack Stoner


From:
Kansas City, MO
Post  Posted 16 May 2000 2:54 pm    
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b0b, I found that on the Gatesland site while looking for a fix for an I.E.5 search problem I had (funny thing I even found the fix for the problem I had!)
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Zimera1

 

From:
PA, USA
Post  Posted 19 May 2000 1:07 pm    
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Hi All,
You have to try out DogPile, it checks out all of the search engines at the same time.
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Mel Culbreath

 

From:
Waynesville, NC, USA
Post  Posted 19 May 2000 1:35 pm    
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I try Alta Vista first because of its speed. It usually fills the bill, but if the first page of hits doesn't look promising I go to Google or HotBot.

Mel
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Ron Whitworth


From:
Yuma,Ariz.USA Yeah they say it's a DRY heat !!
Post  Posted 19 May 2000 8:00 pm    
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Hi b0b;
I will have to go along with Marco..I have used Copernic for about 2 years now..When you type in a word it sends out 8-15 search engines at the same time.You can watch the progress on your screen-it takes less then 2 minutes most of the time..It will list them in order by # of hits to that particuliar site.You can sift thru the list to get down to what ever you want..For a multi-engine search; I have not found anything to come close to it.Today I typed in "Country Midi Files" & it found so many sites I am still looking at them!!! Later....Ron
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Marco Schouten


From:
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Post  Posted 19 May 2000 11:18 pm    
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One nice feature of Copernic is the verify option. It scans all the links it found and removes the dead links.

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Steelin' Greetings
Marco Schouten
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erik

 

Post  Posted 20 May 2000 12:51 am    
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I've been using AskJeeves for about 2 yrs now. It's not as good as it used to be when it included Yahoo. But i can usually find what i need in one or two searches. Also, it only returns a handfull of sites instead of 1,000s. No booleen language required. I find few bad links. I'm gonna try Copernic.
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Bill Llewellyn


From:
San Jose, CA
Post  Posted 21 May 2000 8:22 am    
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I've used www.webcrawler.com for a long time. Fast and simple. Not sure if there are others which are better, but it works pretty well.

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Bill * MSA Classic U12 * email * homepage
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Jerry Gleason


From:
Eugene, Oregon, USA
Post  Posted 21 May 2000 9:16 am    
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Macintosh users need only to activate Sherlock, which is built in to 0S9. It's a great search engine, you can check off catagories and subcatagories of places you want to search on the web, and being a part of the system, also searches all network servers, mounted hard drives, CD roms, etc.

Of the web based search engines, Google has replaced Alta Vista as my first choice.
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Rich Paton

 

From:
Santa Maria, CA.,
Post  Posted 22 May 2000 5:19 pm    
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Webferret v.3.000for serious, deep searches by parallel-linking together 10 major engines, with up to 50,000 hits (5000 per engine).

I like Google a lot, for excellent results in a hurry.
The ferret can dig up more non-commercial pages, but most engines are oriented to commercial websites. The fabled "Information SuperHighway" is more like the "Information Super Big Kmart" in reality.
The WebFerret is a stand-alone app that links to NutScape & InternetExploder, and is highly user-configurable with built-in selectable smut and foul-language filters, which I feel at least double its actual search power by eliminating such superfluous "hits". It's a free download and frequently upgraded.

Here's a plethora of "searchbots"...
http://tucows.tierranet.com/searchbot95.html

[This message was edited by Rich Paton on 22 May 2000 at 06:27 PM.]

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