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« It’s SOA, but not as we know it! | Main | Good Guys and Bad Guys »
Searching, Browsing, Indexing, Tagging, or looking for the answer?
It’s getting really confusing out there with all the claims from all the different technology vendors that only they know how to tell me exactly what I need in order to find the right information at the right time. Funny thing is we can all recognise when we have got the right answer, even if we might struggle to define what we are looking for before hand. So how do you make use of all the goodies available?
Well to start with you can actually now find places to play the search engines off against each other! To see the five most popular Search Engines in one place, (Google, Lycos, AltaVista, HotBot, AskJeeves), a visit to Freeality is an interesting way to spend some time.
However I guess if success is measured by columns of coverage then the battle has already been won by Google. It would probably still be won by Google if the number of online searches made is counted, so why am I not totally sure that Google is only answer? Well, for a start it doesn’t measure successful searches; in fact the number of searches made would be lower if each search produced a ‘right first time’ result. I suspect that many people are like me, and have to keep repeating searches with changes in the key word combinations to try to get what I want. Then if you get what you want, a perfect hit, how do you find it again? All the search engines use methods that lack deterministic results and almost triumphantly announce ‘different every time’ as if it’s a virtue. Sometimes it is, for dynamically changing information it makes sure that you get the most up to date result, but many times it’s not, so why can we not tag the search to ensure that it can return to the selected sites?
I have now found you can do this, its early days but it works, try del.icio.us to get the idea, not only can you use the tags to save in a structure manner around topics, but you can allow others to save tags into your topics too, or maybe you can access their topics. It’s different, and an interesting approach, its effectively adding the intelligence of people to do the sorting out of the mass returns of a keyword based search. This may be why I am increasingly drawn to using Wikipedia, it is effectively a cleaned up, and structured assembly of information with indexing and a search engine.
It's becoming clear that as I become more aware of how I want to use information, as opposed to perhaps content, (the original role of the web being to show content in a uniform manner), there two main strands to what I want; Searching/Locating – I basically know the answer in outline, but more information relating to this answer is required; Browsing/Discovery – the overall context, or relationship, is known, but the answer is not known so help is required to find the answer that feels right. What is interesting is that neither are particularly the role of a conventional web search engine, i.e.; keyword driven, perhaps that’s why Google is spending so much time and money with so many talented people to move Google to the next generation.
What are all those people doing?? They are looking for the answer!!
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Comments
# on May 24, 2006 10:09 PM, Jesper Rønn-Jensen (justaddwater.dk) said:
Hi Andy.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts. I think that you miss an important point here. Searching/browsing/tagging/etc. is where technology meets usability. What really drive users/customers/authors to prefer one solution to another, is NOT technology. It's ease of use — or at least it should be in an ideal world.
For more on the usability side of the issue, see my blog post Tags or folders (http://justaddwater.dk/2006/04/06/tags-or-folders/).
# on May 30, 2006 11:38 AM, Henrik L. Lindstad said:
Hi,
Interesting blog.
How about making this blog (rss feed) work with bloglines.com?
Regards
Henrik
# on June 1, 2006 5:17 PM, François Nonnenmacher said:
Hi Henrik, thanks for your comment. I was able to subscribe to this blog RSS feed with Bloglines. What problem did you have?
# on June 2, 2006 11:28 AM, Henrik Lindstad said:
Hi there,
the first time i did various searches for this blog on bloglines, it gave no response, but today i tried once more, and finally I was able to subscribe via Blogliens.
# on June 3, 2006 5:53 AM, Dennis Howlett said:
Hi Andy - it's years since we last spoke - great to see you into this medium.
I use del.icio.us but is it counter-intuitive or what? Needs lipstick - big time.
# on June 5, 2006 11:38 AM, andy mulholland said:
hi
thanks for some good comments, i did write a much longer article some time ago on tags and folders and cited the link to del.icio.us as part of the new order of things. i am become increasingly fascinated by the way its the users who control views and use. take a look at the JENA as another example
regards andy
PS dennis - good to hear from you!
# on December 25, 2007 5:04 AM, anil dixit said:
dear sir
i am anil dixit
i want to job in ur company, for linux
system administrator but how to apply for job, so plz give me mail ID or how forword my resume
plz
Regards
anil dixit
anil.dixit29@rediffmail.com
# on June 29, 2008 3:52 PM, kavitha said:
Am MCA student(2008 passout).I have a good academic back ground.I want to go for further studies ,Can i go for my further studies from your company because from my MCA onwards KANBAY is my dream company since it is offering higher education to their employees.Ofcourse now CAPGEMINI is also my favourite company.