Managing Technology
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Entries in Search (7)
Is It Too Late to Reverse the Fragmentation of the Web?
One year ago I published Balkanization of the Web - or Just Better Focus? There I expressed concern that the proliferation of specialized search engines — and the indexing to support them — would lead to a more fragmented web. I thought that gaining the benefits of specialization could ultimately reduce the benefits we experience from the nearly universal access to web based contents that we’ve been taking for granted.
Learning to Use Google Analytics, Part 5
Google announced on June 12 some additions to the new Google Analytics service. Chief among these is the availability of hourly updates, which allows for more realtime tracking, which occasionally comes in handy.
Squarespace Finally Adds a Site Search Feature
My web publishing service vendor Squarespace has finally added a site search feature as a standard "widget" that can be added via an extremely easy point-and-click install procedure.
Weird Search Engines
As long as we’re on the subject of specialized search engines, check this out: Richard MacManus’s post titled Friday Fun: Weird Search Engines. My favorite of the ones listed is Big.com, “The most readable results on the web.”
Balkanization of the Web - or Just Better Focus?
Last week I posted Google’s Custom Search Engine Applied to Film Reviews and the Social Media Collective where I discussed creation of specialized search engines that can limit their targets to a specified list of URL’s. While there are disadvantages to this approach (e.g., failure to retrieve valuable content from beyond your initially defined search scope), I believe the advantages can be substantial.
Limiting one’s search to a given set of web sites or pages is good example of a lesson I learned early in statistical work — “shoot where the ducks are.” Basically, when you define the scope in advance of your search by specifying a known or defined target area, both your search precision and search performance can be improved.
This week Mike Stopforth posted Why I Want Localised, Specialised Search where he describes why he wants the ability to have tools like Technorati and search available to be focused specifically on African and South African web sites. Mike’s post was a follow-up to an earlier post of his where he had commented positively on the experimental South African Gargoyle search engine.
Mike’s arguments for a specialized South African search service make eminently good sense and bears reading. Still, I pointed out two potential disadvantages:
Thanks Mike, this is a terrific explanation. We should be able to “slice and dice” the web anyway we see fit — even if it’s just to be able to search a specialized collection of movie reviews or a specialized set of blogs related to social media and social networking. Geographic orientation is an obvious segmentation variable and certainly one of the most important criteria relevant to personal and professional networking.
Two possible caveats arise if we add metadata-based or infrastructure-based identifiers that simplify geographic aggregation of sites:
First, do we risk some “balkanization” of the web if different regions adopt different geographic tagging or aggregation techniques?
Second, do we make it easier for internet-unfriendly governments to track and restrict the free flow of information?
In the ideal world, it should be very easy to “scope” an Internet search just about any way you want — by topic, by groups of sites, by geography, by whatever. There are just too many times when “give me everything” is inappropriate — especially when the placement of the returned items can be gamed.
Assuming that specialized search engines are sustainable, how serious is my concern? My blogging service vendor Squarespace already automatically “pings” a whole host of search engines when I make a change to Dennis McDonald’s Blog. If more specialized search engines become available, whose responsibility will it be to ensure that all relevant specialized search engines are “pinged” so my materials are indexed?
I say that as someone who realizes how important, volume wise, search engine hits are to the traffic that reaches my blog. At least 46% of the hits on my blog during 2006 were Google related. Perhaps inclusion in more specialized search engines might drive that higher — as long as I’m included.
On the other hand, hits on my blog that are referrals, not search based, tend to be, I believe, much more targeted to topics I care most about. These referrals tend to come from sites and sources that are more closely aligned with my interests related to social media, social networking, knowledge management, expertise location, and digital asset management. Such hits tend to be more “social” in origin; that is, they come from blogs, aggregator, search engines, or other sources that are more closely aligned with my own interests.
All things being equal, a hit related to an RSS or Atom feed, due to the “opt in” element, may tend to be more closely aligned with my interests than someone’s random search for nude vampire pictures.
Google's Custom Search Engine Applied to Film Reviews and the Social Media Collective
A couple of days ago I received an email from Michael Cohn telling me he had used Google's Co-Op service to develop a custom Google search engine of independent film reviews. (A section of my blog is devoted to my occasional movie and DVD reviews.) Here is the link he supplied, which will take you to a page he calls "The Independent Film Reviewer Search Engine":
Market Research and Doses of Web Based Reality
It's amazing what you can find by searching the web -- if you know how to look. I've been heads-down for the past few weeks on a client project, a strategic market analysis for an international outsourcing firm. I've been researching available public sources of sales and technology trends in a variety of markets. I've been aggressively pursuing a variety of web based research options as well as purchasing research documents in a few key areas.
