LESSON 27: WWW, PART 2: THE URL AND SEARCH ENGINES"The Web is like the game of Othello. Remember? 'a moment to learn, a lifetime to master.'"-- Lou Rosenfeld, University of Michigan, SLIS
Increasingly, individuals are designing their own home pages and serving them on the Web. In fact, the personal home page has become such an electronic status symbol, that many commercial Internet providers now also offer to serve the personal home pages of their subscribers as an additional service (usually for an additional fee, of course!) Folks with a direct Internet connection, and the know-how to run a WWW server package, can serve their own home page directly from their own computer.
Additionally, anyone creating WWW pages needs to have a basic knowledge of HTML (Hypertext Markup Language). This markup language, which is really just a set of command tags that indicate how to format a page (first level heading, hot link to here, insert graphic, begin a bulleted list, etc.) is to the Web what Pagemaker is to desktop publishing. In "Understanding and Exploring the Internet," _Popular Mechanics_, April 1995, Senior Correspondent Abe Dane describes how pages composed in HMTL work:
A Web Browser runs on your computer and acts as a graphical interface between you and the Web. When you click on a link, it issues the necessary commands to request data from other computers, then interprets whatever comes back. Documents written in the standard Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) contain codes that tell Web browsers what typeface to use and how to format it. Most browsers can also display digitized pictures, so that a well-written HTML document appears as an illustrated page.HTML supports the creation of many features, including headings, highlighting, links to other pages, etc. The HTML behind Web pages allows them to support such features as in-line graphics (pictures embedded in the text as they might be in a desktop publishing article), in-line fill-out forms (for database searching, surveys, user-feedback, ordering information, etc.), "hot" maps (where you can click on highlighted portions of a map or graphic to go to that spot -- as you might do in a computer game), links to other documents, and other headings in the current document, etc.
URLs are directions to information accessible via the Web. At first, the format of URLs will look different to you from the access addresses we've covered so far for telnet, ftp, and gopher connections; for instance, they can be a *lot* longer. But, if you look at them closely, you'll see familiar Internet "connection goings-on" at work. One thing to keep in mind at all times is that URLs are case-sensitive to the extreme, and like other Internet addresses, every character counts (miss one capital letter, or a dot or a slash) and you won't connect.
Each URL describes a particular path to a specific Internet resource. For example, here's a typical URL:
http://www.sc.edu/beaufort/library/index.html
Let's take a look at the basic parts of this Web address:
Since other protocols are also supported, you will also see URLs that begin with "gopher", "telnet", "ftp", etc. which provide links to resources on these types of servers.
And, don't forget to save those directions. Most Web browsers, as noted in our last lesson, let you create a list of hotlinks or bookmarks to make your return trips to sites a "no-brainer".
However, what about the times when you don't have a URL in hand and you don't have any idea how to get to where you want to go on the Web. What do you do then?
search tips: link related words into phrase by enclosing in quotes, e.g., "higher education"; search in lower-case to match capitalized words as well; search in capital letters to force an exact match; precede required search terms with a +, prohibited ones with a -, e.g., +noir +film -"pinot noir"; use * as a wildcard to catch variety of word endings, e.g., librar* for library, librarian, libraries, etc.; place important subject words first in string when performing simple searches.
search tips: allows menu driven boolean searches (select "all the words" or "any of the words," etc.); a "modify" panel is also featured to let you restrict your searches by date, location, and media type (documents containing audio files or images, for example). A full-blown advanced search interface is also included, and you can save your modified settings to create a personalized hotbot tool.
search tips: to give extra weight to certain words, repeat them, e.g., "President Clinton's policy on Bosnia Bosnia Bosnia"; if unsure of proper spelling, enter multiple versions, e.g., Khaddafi Quadafy Kaddafi Quadaffi; to fine-tune your searches, use + in front of a search word to require it, e.g., hockey +NHL; use - to exclude words, e.g., Jaguar -car -automobiles.
search tips: capitalize proper names, e.g., Babe Ruth; to search for separate names, use commas to separate them, e.g., Babe Ruth, Boston Red Sox; use double quote marks around words that must appear next to each other, e.g., "stupid pet tricks"; use hyphens between words that must appear within one word of each other, e.g., cable-networks; use brackets to find words that appear within 100 words of each other, or that you'd expect to see in the same sentence or paragraph, e.g., {elevator safety}; use + in front of words that must appear in document, - in front of words that must not, e.g., city guide +San Francisco; python -monty.
search tips: customize search options and display options to fit your search specifications; change search default option from <or> to <and> to accommodate critical word strings, e.g., "peanut butter", rather than "peanut" or "butter". Lycos does not support Boolean searches, numbers at the beginning of words, or use of the + symbol. Lycos does support use of the - to exclude words, use of the . at the end of keywords to exclude various word endings, and use of the $ as a wildcard to catch various word endings.
search tips: customize display of search results by selecting either title or summary display; go to "Links" to find out who's linking to your home page; go to "WebFacts" for latest statistics on Web use; perform advanced searching with these operators: AND, OR, NOT, NEAR, ADJ, quotations and parentheses.
search tips: select any one of the four search capabilities; specify search by giving a list of keywords separated by spaces; use keywords with at least three characters; specify operators AND or OR to customize search.
Lastly, here are two search interfaces you'll want to bookmark:
news:newsgroupname (most browsers)
news://newsgroupname (some browsers)
news://usenetserverhostname/newsgroupname (some browsers)
Finally, for a basic discussion of different types of Internet
connections possible via the Web, open David Baker's Guide to URLs:
http://www.netspace.org/users/dwb/url-guide.html
Lemay, Laura. _Teach Yourself Web Publishing with HTML in a
Week_. SAMS Publishing, 1995.
Also, check out:
Taylor, Dave. _Creating Cool Web Pages With HTML_. IDG Books, 1995.
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