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Are search engines dead?

June 26, 2000

One of the Web's best-known search engine gurus says, in a discussion group post: "I'm beginning to believe that search engines are a dead-end technology." Reams of irrelevant results and endless backlogs presage the imminent demise of the search engine. Or maybe not so imminent. Actually, the post quoted is from 1997. Three Web centuries later, the search engines still have exactly the same problems, people are still predicting their downfall, and the darn things are still ticking.

Search engines and directories survive, and indeed flourish, because they're all we've got. If you want to use the wealth of information that is the Web, you've got to be able to find what you want, and search engines and directories are the only way to do that. However, most Web users and Web publishers will agree that there are serious problems. Getting good search results is a matter of chance. Depending on what you're searching for, you may get a meaty list of good resources, or you may get page after page of irrelevant drivel. By laboriously refining your search, and using several different search engines and directories (and especially by using appropriate specialty directories), you can usually find what you need in the end. But there sure is a lot of room for improvement.

Contents:

So What's the Problem?
Similar Yet Un-related
Including Metadata in a Web Page

So What's the Problem?


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