Best Sources To Search The Internet: by Francisco Alejandre
Best Sources To Search The Internet: by Francisco Alejandre
the Internet
By Francisco
Search Engines
Yahoo
Google
Msn
AOL Search
Best Search Engine
Google Search
Advertisement free.
Basic layout but advanced when
searching.
Offers an easy to use layout.
Easy to use links: Maps, Videos, News and
others.
Subject Directories
Ask.com
Google Directory
Yahoo Directory
Infomine
Librarians Internet Index
Best Subject Directories
ACADEMIC:
INFOMINE
OVER 125 THOUSAND SITES
RELIABLE SITES
COMPILED BY ACADEMIC LIBRARIANS
GENERAL:
GOOGLE DIRECTORY
OVER 5 MILLION SITES
BEST ON BROAD TOPICS
HIGH RATINGS
COMPILED BY THE “OPEN DIRECTORY
PROJECT.”
Internet browsers
Google Chrome
Internet Explorer
Firefox
Best Internet Browser
Firefox (When compared to others):
Faster Platform
Many Add-Ons that can be
downloaded for many different
purposes.
Advertisement free
Less viruses
Getting the most out of your internet
search: Google Search Engine
Using Google Search Engine:
Be very specific with your terms
Google Advanced Search – To search by date,
combination of terms, phrases and to search
within specific parts of a web page.
Use help tool – In-depth walk through of search
engine.
No need to use wildcards – Google automatically
finds the different variations of a word.
Use Boolean Operators – and, or and not.
Getting the most out of your internet
search: Infomine and Google Directory
Infomine:
Use Boolean Operators – And, or and Not.
Advanced Search – to search by date, description,
Author, Record Origin, Resource type, Subject and
others.
Use Wildcards – *
Suggested Resources – simple to follow layout.
Google Directory -
Keyword Search – Use Boolean Operators exclude
wildcards.
Suggested Resources – simple to follow layout, easy to
find a majority of topics.
Evaluating Web Pages
Is it a personal web page? – Investigate the authors credentials.
What type of domain does it come from? – Make sure it is in between
the domain you are needing.
.Gov : Government site
.Edu: Educational site
.org: Non-profit organization.
.uk, .us, etc.: Country Codes
Who published the page, have you heard of this entity before? – Make
sure you investigate the entity of the publisher.
Has the page been up-dated? – make sure the information is up to date
and not out dated.
Is the information accurate? – Investigate it by searching elsewhere.
Does it have sponsors and links to other important sites? – this gives
you a feeling that the site is official and accurate.