Date: Fri 09-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 09-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
iinfo-brand-google
Full Text:
INTERNET INFO FOR REAL PEOPLE: Google!
By Bob Brand
Finding relevant information on the Web remains a major challenge facing both
new and experienced Web-surfers. This topic has been the subject of several
articles about search engines in previous columns. Sadly, the primary focus of
many search sites has changed.
In an effort to exploit their popularity (and pay for the high cost of
maintaining the database), many sites sport a clearly commercial look. They
have become cluttered with banner ads and hotlinks to everything from chat
areas to weather reports. The technical jargon for this phenomenon is called:
portal development.
Unfortunately, in most cases, the reconstruction has been taken to an extreme.
It has become a non-trivial chore just to find the subject box where the
search word or phrase needs to be entered in order to start the search
process. The idea, of course, is for the site to direct the surfer to places
where the advertisers have links to their sites. They hope something will be
found of interest and purchased. In fact, the ranking of the information
returned from searches is often subtly influenced by the ad money spent by
search engine benefactors. In addition, a surfer often is exposed to a banner
ad that is germane to the topic being investigated. While there are times when
this is helpful, most often, it is not.
Have the search engines "sold out" to commercial interests? Most certainly!
Since advertising pays the freight, it makes sense that their ads should have
choice positions at the trough of commerce.
A New Player
In an already overcrowded "web-roadmap," a new player has emerged. From the
hallowed sun drenched walls of Silicon Valley's Stanford University, two
graduate students (Sergy Brin and Larry Page) have developed a new
cyber-mousetrap. Its name is Google. It is a classical search engine.
Officially, however, it is still in the cocoon (pre-production) stage.
Nevertheless, it works very well.
When visitors arrive at the site, they are greeted with a clean, uncluttered
look. This site is ready for business right from the gitgo. As Google enters
the commercial jungle of the Web, this is likely to change.
PageRank -- A New Cyber-Twist
Google employs a unique function named PageRank (probably coined by Larry
Page). The ranking of the matches (the URLs returned) to the search
word/phrase is influenced by the number of other websites that point to the
page. This turns out to be a kind of a cyber peer review. Essentially, if
other people like the site (expressed by a hotlink), it must be good. Clever.
To give a sample of the power of PageRank, I entered: "Internet Info for Real
People" (without the quotes) into the major search engines: Excite, Lycos,
Yahoo! Altavista, Hotbot, Ask Jeeves, and Google. Only Google returned (as
3): Internet Info For Real People -- Main Page
(http://www.thebee.com/bweb/brand.htm). Altavista returned good matches of
other IIFRP articles, but not the main page. The other engines returned
matches that were frankly, laughable. It should be noted that I link all my
articles to the main page. Naturally, the main page should stand like a beacon
on a clear summer's night for any search engine spider that roams the TCP/IP
network of the World Wide Web. Only Google was able to grasp the obvious.
People who have taken the time to develop a personal website often receive a
pleasant surprise when they enter their name in the Google engine. They are
usually rewarded with a match to their site.
The Kids From Stanford
How is it that these two kids from Stanford could develop a superior software
technique (technical term: algorithm) in the crowded area of search engine
development? Stanford University has a rich history of producing technological
innovation, especially in the search engine field. Both Yahoo! and Excite are
products of Stanford's silicon software foundry.
From a webmaster's point of view, a search engine that consistently generates
top 10 matches comes as a godsend. In my case, Google produces "first page"
(read: top 10) matches to my articles when the following search topics are
entered: Ken Layne, Hacking Furby, Matt Drudge, Antiques Roadshow, Juno
e-mail, Uuencoding, Hank the Angry Drunken Dwarf, Homicide: LOTS, Cyber-booze,
Higher Speed, Second Phone Line, Dummies Books, Stephen Glass, 1999
Predictions and others. Try Google. Highly recommended.
URLs (Uniform Resource Locators) of interest:
http://www.techsightings.com/cgi-bin/ts_review.pl?240
http://www.techweb.com/wire/finance/story/netgain/INV19990127S0005
http://web.slashdot.org/articles/99/01/28/2057232.shtml
http://www.roedu.net/~cmatei/search/google/google.html
(This is the 149th of a series of elementary articles designed for surfing the
Internet. Next, ISPs -- large and Small is the subject on tap. Stay tuned.
Until next week, happy travels through cyberspace. Previous issues of Internet
Info for Real People can be found: http://www.thebee.com. Please e-mail
comments and suggestions to: rbrand@JUNO.com or editor@thebee.com.)