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Hack 36 Better Internet Searching from Your Desktop


Internet Explorer's default
search features are anemic at best. Do better Internet searching by
installing a Google Toolbar and other specialized search toolbars and
powering up the default search.

Was there ever a Web before
Google? Yes, but it
was a heck of a lot harder to find anything in it.
Internet
Explorer's default search feature leaves a lot to be
desired, not the least of which is its use of MSN Search instead of
Google. But there's a lot you can do to do better
Internet searching from your desktop. You can get search toolbars
that integrate into your browser, and you can customize the Internet
Explorer search feature as well.


4.5.1 Google Toolbar




The best

way to empower Internet searches is by
installing special toolbars from two popular search engines, Google
and Ask Jeeves. The Google Toolbar is the better of the two, and not
only because it's a better search engine. It also
has several extra features.

The great thing about the Google Toolbar is, well, that
it's Google. It gives you all of
Google's functionality without even having to visit
the site. To get the Google Toolbar for IE, go to http://toolbar.google.com and follow the
installation instructions. It works only with Internet Explorer. Once
you install it, you'll be able to search Google
without having to visit the search site; just type your search term
in the toolbar. In fact, you even get an extra on the toolbar that
you don't get on Google itselfthe
PageRank feature that tells you how
popular the current site you're visiting is.


The
Mozdev.org site (http://www.mozdev.org) has written a
third-party Google Toolbar called the Googlebar (http://googlebar.mozdev.org) for use with
Netscape 7/Mozilla browsers. It emulates most of the features of the
Google Toolbar except PageRank.

The best of the Google Toolbar's best features is
that it lets you do a Google search through the site
you're currently on, a particularly useful tool if
the site doesn't have a search box, or if the search
on the site is a poor one. In fact, I rarely use
sites' search boxes and prefer to use the Google
Toolbar instead. Among other features, the Google Toolbar also lets
you find sites related to the one you're currently
visiting, and it will translate foreign-language sites into English.
The Google Toolbar will also highlight your search terms on the page
results if you tell it to.


If you're at the Google web site, you can do a targeted
search of only one specific site instead of the entire Web. In the
Google search box, type site:www.nameofsite.com
searchterm. For example, if you want to search the
www.newscientist.com site for the
word "cloning," type
site:www.newscientist.com cloning.
You'll get results showing all the web pages on the
site containing the word "cloning".
For more Google tips and tricks, see Google
Hacks or the Google Pocket Guide
(O'Reilly).

Using the Google Toolbar is simplicity itself: type a
search term into it and press Enter. If you want to search the
current site instead of the entire Web, click instead on a small
button on the toolbar that pictures two pairs of googly eyes on a
magnifying glass.


If you'd prefer to search

Google directly from your desktop
rather than from within your browser, there's a
workaround for you. Download the free program
GAPIS from http://www.searchenginelab.com/common/products/gapis.
To use it, you'll need to get a Google
developer's key. You don't actually
need to be a developer to get a key, though, and
it's free. To get the key, go to http://www.google.com/apis/. The page
recommends that you download the Google developer's
kit, but you don't need to do that to get your free
key. Instead, click on "create a Google
account" and follow the instructions. Once you have
the account, you have to type the key into GAPIS the first time you
use the program. After that, you'll be able to do
Google searches by running GAPIS rather than using the Google Toolbar
or visiting the Google site.

If you're concerned about your
privacy, you should disable the
PageRank option. When you enable this option, the Google Toolbar
tracks the page you're on. With it disabled, it
doesn't.



Ask Jeeves has a similar
toolbar, at http://sp.ask.com/docs/toolbar. In addition
to letting you search Ask Jeeves regardless of where you are on the
Web, it includes links for weather forecasts, news, and more.


4.5.2 Mastering the Search Companion



If you decide to forgo the Google and
Ask Jeeves search toolbars, there are still things you can do to
power up Internet Explorer's Search Companion, which
you get to by pressing Control-E or clicking on the Search button.
You'll of course first want to get rid of the
cloyingly cute animated dog that normally appears, by choosing Change
Preferences when the Search Companion appears and then choosing
"Without an animated screen
character."

But the Search Companion has bigger problems than stray dogs. It
forces you through a step-by-step search, and, worse still, it
clutters up the search area with "sponsored
links" from advertisers. Type in the name
Preston, for example, and you'll
get sponsored links such as "Hotels near
Preston," "Buy Fine Wines and Beer
at Libation.com" and "Preston,
Idaho Travel Information." No thank you. I prefer my
search results straight up.

A better bet is to use what Microsoft calls the
Classic Internet Search Companion,
which previous versions of Internet Explorer used. From the Search
Companion choose Change Preferences
"Change Internet search behavior"
"with Classic Internet
search". You'll have to close
Internet Explorer and restart it for the changes to take effect. As
you can see in Figure 4-8, it's
simpler and allows you to perform more focused searches, specifically
for web pages, addresses, business names, maps, and to perform a
previous search. Click the More button to search for pictures and
definitions of words.


Figure 4-8. The Classic Internet Search Assistant


By default, the Internet Explorer uses MSN as its
search engine,
but after you perform a search, if you don't find
what you want, you can send the same query to other search engines by
clicking "Send search to more search
engines" and then picking the engine you want to
use. You can also change the default search engine by opening the
Search Companion, choosing Change Internet Search Behavior, scrolling
down the page that appears, and choosing a new default search engine
from the list of 13.





4.5.3 See Also


WebFerret by Ferretsoft (http://www.ferretsoft.com) is free

metasearch software that will send
your search to multiple search engines simultaneously and display all
the results in a single window, collating the results.

Copernic Agent Basic, a metasearch tool from Copernic (http://www.copernic.com) lets you perform
more targeted searches, by sending your search to specialized search
engines in a variety of categories when you choose a targeted search.



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