The Meta Search Engines: A Web Searcher's Best Friends
I know what you're thinking: Google gives you such accurate
results that you don't need any other search tool. Well, let's
see about that. You might - or might not - know that no major
search engine indexes ALL the existing Web pages. OpenFind
states that it indexes 3.5 billion Web pages, Google claims 2.4
billion, AlltheWeb - 2.1 billion, Inktomi - a little more than 2
billion, WiseNut - 1.5 billion and AltaVista - 1 billion Web
pages. The truth is, nobody knows how wide the Web is. Some say
5 billion pages, some 8 billion, some even more. Anyway, what's
definite is that the major search engines (SEs) index only a
fraction of the "publicly indexable Web". Moreover, every SE
indexes different Web pages, which means if you use only one SE
you will miss relevant results that can be found in other search
engines. One way to more effectively search the Web is to use a
meta search engine.
What Is A Meta Search Engine? A meta search engine (also know as
multi-threaded engine) is a search tool that sends your query
simultaneously to several search engines (SEs), Web directories
(WDs) and sometimes to the so-called Invisible (Deep) Web, a
collection of online information not indexed by traditional
search engines. After collecting the results, the meta search
engine (MSE) will remove the duplicate links and, according to
its algorithm, combine/rank the results into a single merged
list. An important note: Unlike the individual search engines
and directories, the meta search engines 1. Do not have their
own databases and 2. Do not accept URL submissions. Pros and
Cons of Meta Search Engines Pros: MSEs save searchers a
considerable amount of time by sparing them the trouble of
running a query in each search engine. The results - most of the
time - are extremely relevant. MSEs can be used by Webmasters to
find their site's presence, rankings and link popularity in the
major SEs. Cons: Because some SEs or WDs do not support advanced
searching techniques such as quotation marks to enclose phrases
or Boolean operators, no (or irrelevant) results from those SEs
will appear in the MSEs results list when those techniques are
used. MSEs Come In Four Flavors: 1. Real MSEs- which
aggregate/rank the results in one page 2. Pseudo MSEs type I-
which exclusively group the results by search engine 3. Pseudo
MSEs type II- which open a separate browser window for each
search engine used and 4. Search Utilities, software search
tools.
The following provides detailed information on each of the four
MSE types, along with my ranking: 1. Real MSEs These real MSEs
simultaneously search the major search engines, aggregate the
results, eliminate the duplicates and return the most relevant
matches, according to the engine's algorithm. Following is a
list of a few meta search engines that you might find useful.
It's by no means complete, but it might help you find what you
need. (The criteria I used to determine the best MSEs were: the
amount and the relevance of the results, the capability to
handle advanced searches, the ability to enable users to
customize searches, the speed of their searches and others.)
ez2www [ ez2www.com ] Searches the best SEs - AlltheWeb, Google,
AltaVista, Teoma, Wisenut - and directories - Yahoo! and Open
Directory. Through its "Advanced Search" function it also
searches a small part of the Invisible (Deep) Web. It also
searches news, newsgroups, MP3, images and many, many more.
Provides excellent results in a very neat interface. Created in
September 2000 by the French search engine developer Holomedia.
THE best! Viv