a sk

Xavier University Home Search Xavier University Contact Information Xavier University Home Xavier University Library Home

xu.tutor: Evaluating Websites

3. Finding information on the Web

Methods

There are three common ways of finding information on the Internet:

  • Typing a known Internet address in your browser (example)
  • Using a subject directory (example)
  • Using a search engine (example)

Typing a known address is the fastest and most direct way of finding information on the Internet. However, you must enter the Internet address exactly.

Subject directories were the first finding aids on the Internet. Subject directories collect links to different webpages, organize them by subject, and allow users to tunnel through them to find the information they want. They are generally organized by human reviewers. If you simply want to "surf" the Internet, a subject directory is a good place to start. Many subject directories are now adding reviews or comments to the webpages they include. Examples of subject directories are:

Subject Directory Name Internet Address
About.com http://about.com
Librarians index to the internet http://www.lii.org
Yahoo http://www.yahoo.com

Search engines are constructed quite differently from subject directories. They rely on computer "robots" or programs that find webpages on the Internet and index them automatically. Search engines store the web pages they have discovered, so that they will always be there. Although search engines cover the Internet more comprehensively than subject directories, they often generate irrelevant hits. There are a wide variety of search engines. Some of the better known shearch engines are:

Search Engine Name Internet Address
Ask Jeeves http://www.ask.com
Google http://www.google.com
Hotbot http://www.hotbot.com

Comparison

One of the most notable differences between subject directories and search engines is their size. In April 2001, Open Directory (one of the largest subject directories on the web) had 2.6 million links indexed while Hotbot (a mid-sized search engine) had 500 million webpages indexed. The reason for the size disparity is simple. Directories generally rely on human editors to compile their database. The search engines rely on computerized robots that can work 24 hours a day 7 days a week.

Summary

Criteria Subject directories Search engines
Construction database created by human editors database created by computerized "robots"
Coverage selective comprehensive
Currency not as up-to-date very up-to-date
Content searched subject categories a portion of the Internet
Similar to subject heading search keyword search
Size smaller number of indexed websites large number of indexed websites
Use for broad, well-established topics new, unusual topics

 

<<back next>>

Xavier University Library
3800 Victory Parkway
Cincinnati, OH 45207-5211
Circulation: 513 745-3881
Reference: 745-4808
Comments: xulib@xu.edu