
Search engines, where would we be without them? Within the past 10-15
years the internet has become a huge part of every day American life. Many
people nowadays cannot remember the time prior to having this wonderful
information highway we call the internet. The internet has really
revolutionized the way people live their lives; for example, you can bank
online, buy just about anything you want online, meet new people online, and
even find local movie times. However, one of the biggest benefits of the
internet is the use of search engines. At any moment in time you may have a
question, or an urge to get more information about a certain topic and that
information can be easily attained through a search engine. In this article
I am going to give you a brief history on the evolution of the search
engine, and show you how they truly have revolutionized our lifestyles.
The history of search engines is the story of university students' projects
evolving into commercial enterprises and revolutionizing the field as they
went. The first attempt at creating a search engine was called Archie, and
it was created in 1990 by Alan Emtage, a student at McGill University. This
very primitive search engine did not use any robot technology. All Archie
really did was just become a database of archived filenames, which it would
try to match with users' queries.
The next evolutionary step of the search engine was the introduction of
"robots." The first use of robot technology was in the search engine World
Wide Web Wanderer. Simply what robots would do is scan the internet for
URL's, starting at one site and using the links in the previous site to find
more sites. The problems with these first robots were that if they were not
written properly they would cause too many hits on a server decaying the
systems performance.
To combat these initial problems Martjin Koster came out with the first web
directory called "Aliweb" in October 1993. Web directories are different
than search engines because the sites listed in them are not from automated
robots, but rather from human editors reviewing sites and placing them in
the directory.
However, shortly after, in December 1993, a new robot was born. This was
called the "spider." Spiders added a much further degree of accuracy by
indexing the entire text of a webpage. The older robots only indexed the URL
and titles of a page, which meant that some pertinent keywords might not be
indexed. This greatly improved the relevancy rankings of their results, and
thus was the first major step in forming the major search engines that we
have all become so used to using today.
Not long after the spider, we saw the emergence of some of the big guns. In
1994, out of Stanford University came the extremely famous Yahoo. The two
guys who started Yahoo were students, David Filo and JerryYang. Basically,
at first Yahoo was just a list of these guys' favorite websites. But soon,
due to its easy user-friendly interface, became the most popular web
directory. Due to the fact that its websites were all human reviewed, Yahoo
was only able to index about 1% of the web. At this time, Altavista became
the fastest growing search engines using the spider technology and was
indexing up to 10 million pages a day.
By this time there are two different types of search engines, "author
controlled" such as Altavista and Excite, in which results were ranked by
keyword relevancy, and "editor controlled" such as Yahoo, in which humans
manually placed websites into their index.
Then in late 1997 out of Stanford University was born the most popular and
well-known search engine to date: GOOGLE Google has a different way of
ranking its websites. It used a Pagerank system. Simply what they did was
list websites higher in their results based on how many links were pointing
to a particular site. Of course, the content on the page had to be relevant
to the keyword typed into the search box. But basically, Google invented
what you could call a system of voting. So a site with numerous backlinks or
votes would rank higher. A backlink is just when someone else puts a link on
their site that points to another outside site. Jump forward to today and
Google has more than 80% of the websites on the internet in their index,
which is pretty impressive.
Search engines have had a huge impact on the American lifestyle. They
basically will grant you just about any information you want, all you have
to do is type into the search box the topic you want to find more
information about. Human beings are natural born information junkies, we
always want to know more and find out more and search engines have made this
urge of ours extremely easy to cure. Just think about it, maybe you need to
fix a simple problem you have with your car. By using a search engine to do
some research you may very easily figure the problem out, saving you a very
costly trip to the car repair shop. They are just great educational tools,
before search engines emerged if you really wanted to learn something you
would go to your library and check out a book. Now before making that trip
you may find out what you wanted by just sitting at your desktop and surfing
through Google. The list goes on about the many benefits of this great new
technology we call the search engine. I'm sure you can recall a time when
you found some very good information by using one. If you're anything like
me and find yourself addicted to this easily accessible information highway
then your making uses of them daily.
Search engines by nature were made very easy to use. However, with a little
extra knowledge about how they work you can really take advantage of them
and find great information very quickly. With the right knowledge of search
engines and the use of specialized tools you can literally find anything you
want. And when I mean anything, I mean ANYTHING. For me personally I am
excited to see what search engines will evolve into in the future. The sky
is the limit. Who knows what type of search spiders the future will spawn,
but one thing is for sure there will be newer and newer search technology
it's just our human nature to keep trying to top ourselves.
Author Bio
Search engine specialist Steve Bis, is the author of the free search secrets
newsletter and owns a unique
web search tool
that will help you find anything on the internet in 60 seconds, eliminating
your search frustrations.
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