Unit 8
Internet Public Library (IPL2)
“The Internet Public Library, (IPL), is a merged collection
of sites from the Internet Public Library and the Librarian's Index to the
Internet. The combination of the two is better that both.”[1]
There is a subject directory, newspapers and magazine, for
kids, and for teens directories and special collections created by ipl2.
Unfortunately I was able to open only for kids and for teens, the rest leads to
blank pages. May be they are still working on the directories.
Search Options the IPL provide:
Wildcard Characters (?,*): ? used to represent one
alphanumeric character within a term. *
is used to represent zero or more alphanumeric characters.
Boolean Operators must be
capitalized. Used additionally + (Must be)and - (NO)sings
Range Searches [1977 TO 2022] –
include data; {} – exclude data
Advances Features: Boosting (add importance
to a specific term or group of term)^.
Bear^2Tiger^3
Proximity Searches: (to see if two
terms are within a specified distance of each other in an article. ~
“Bear
Zoo”~6
Fuzzy Searching: modifies how
closely a given search term must be matched within the returned results. The
default Fuzzy value is 0.5. It is complicated. I don’t like it.
Bear~0.99
is likely only to return such items as Bear and Bears
I would use this search tool for
academic research as the sources supposed to be trusted, as they claim and advanced
features give more chances to find something worthful. Especially it would be useful for kids, teens, students, and teachers.
Ixquick
Metasearch
“Ixquick is a comprehensive
metasearcher that queries 14 search tools. Results are ranked by relevancy with
information about which search tool the site came from. Ixquick allows keyword
searches, natural language searches, and advanced Boolean searches. Pages found
in multiple engines are only listed once and ranked by relevancy. Ixquick also
has a language feature to for searching non-English sites. Specialized
searching includes images, news, and MP3.”[2]
Search options:
Boolean operators are the same as
everywhere but must be capitalized. AND OR NO.
Additionally you can use “+” (must
be) and “-“ NO
Phrases in quotes, and parentheses
can be used.
Fields: you can specify where
certain information must appear with fields: +title; +domain; host; site; url;
link.
There are many fields to narrow or
expand your search: with all the words; with the exact phrase; with at least
one of the words, etc.
Duck
Duck Go
“Duck Duck Go is a search tool that
compiles searches from other sources but maintains the privacy of a searcher by
not logging user information. Results are populated by sites that have less
advertising and better content.”[3]
They use AND or OR operators but
not NO. Instead of NO “-“ sign works to exclude the term.
“” marks around the phrases are
used for exact matches on that phrase.
They use \ to go directly to the
first search result
They do safe search by default. If you
want to turn off safe search for this search, add !safeoff
There is a good collection of “Goodies”
For example:!bang syntax:
!youtube green day can lead you directly to
youtube website
You can do any calculation and
conversions directly in Goodies; find the date of any event or what happened on
the date; the links to any well-known fact; even to count the calories or learn
about nutrition in a product; geography facts and language tips.
I bookmarked this site and will use
it in future. It is good for every day needs.
Hi, Svitlana:
ReplyDeleteThank you for your report. It sounds like you did a good job exploring these new tools and seeing how they act.
Cheers,
Andrea