MULTIDISCIPLINRY NATURE OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES.pptx
Notes for
1. Notes for “Search Engine” Project
Common Popular Search Engines. www.google.com, www.bing.com, www.yahoo.com,
www.ask.com
Other Search engines Wolfram Alpha, Dog Pile, Swag Bucks
Crawler-Based Search Engines
Crawler-based search engines, such as Google, create their listings automatically.
They "crawl" or "spider" the web, then people search through what they have found.
If you change your web pages, crawler-based search engines eventually find these
changes, and that can affect how you are listed. Page titles, body copy and other
elements all play a role.
Human-Powered Directories
A human-powered directory, such as the Open Directory, depends on humans for its
listings. You submit a short description to the directory for your entire site, or editors
write one for sites they review. A search looks for matches only in the descriptions
submitted.
Changing your web pages has no effect on your listing. Things that are useful for
improving a listing with a search engine have nothing to do with improving a listing
in a directory. The only exception is that a good site, with good content, might be
more likely to get reviewed for free than a poor site.
The Parts Of A Crawler-Based Search Engine
Crawler-based search engines have three major elements. First is the spider, also
called the crawler. The spider visits a web page, reads it, and then follows links to
other pages within the site. This is what it means when someone refers to a site
being "spidered" or "crawled." The spider returns to the site on a regular basis, such
as every month or two, to look for changes.
2. Everything the spider finds goes into the second part of the search engine, the index.
The index, sometimes called the catalog, is like a giant book containing a copy of
every web page that the spider finds. If a web page changes, then this book is
updated with new information.
Sometimes it can take a while for new pages or changes that the spider finds to be
added to the index. Thus, a web page may have been "spidered" but not yet
"indexed." Until it is indexed -- added to the index -- it is not available to those
searching with the search engine.
Search engine software is the third part of a search engine. This is the program that
sifts through the millions of pages recorded in the index to find matches to a search
and rank them in order of what it believes is most relevant. You can learn more
about how search engine software ranks web pages on the aptly-named How Search
Engines Rank Web Pages page.
All crawler-based search engines have the basic parts described above, but there are
differences in how these parts are tuned. That is why the same search on different
search engines often produces different results.1
Without search engines it would be very difficult to search the internet to find
information. Imagine having to do a research paper on the Great Depression and not
being able to get information quickly. You would have to spend literally hours finding
different information on the internet to efficiently write the paper. But with search
engines it becomes very easy to find information on your topic.
1
http://searchenginewatch.com/2168031
3. What is a Search Engine?
By definition, an Internet search engine is an information retrieval system, which helps us find
information on the World Wide Web. World Wide Web is the universe of information where this
information is accessible on the network. It facilitates global sharing of information. But WWW is
seen as an unstructured database. It is exponentially growing to become enormous store of
information. Searching for information on the web is hence a difficult task. There is a need to
have a tool to manage, filter and retrieve this oceanic information. A search engine serves this
purpose.
How does a Search Engine Work?
• Internet search engines are web search engines that search and retrieve information on
the web. Most of them use crawler indexer architecture. They depend on their crawler
modules. Crawlers also referred to as spiders are small programs that browse the web.
• Crawlers are given an initial set of URLs whose pages they retrieve. They extract the
URLs that appear on the crawled pages and give this information to the crawler control
module. The crawler module decides which pages to visit next and gives their URLs back
to the crawlers.
• The topics covered by different search engines vary according to the algorithms they use.
Some search engines are programmed to search sites on a particular topic while the
crawlers in others may be visiting as many sites as possible.
• The crawl control module may use the link graph of a previous crawl or may use usage
patterns to help in its crawling strategy.
• The indexer module extracts the words form each page it visits and records its URLs. It
results into a large lookup table that gives a list of URLs pointing to pages where each
word occurs. The table lists those pages, which were covered in the crawling process.
• A collection analysis module is another important part of the search engine architecture.
It creates a utility index. A utility index may provide access to pages of a given length or
pages containing a certain number of pictures on them.
• During the process of crawling and indexing, a search engine stores the pages it
retrieves. They are temporarily stored in a page repository. Search engines maintain a
cache of pages they visit so that retrieval of already visited pages expedites.
• The query module of a search engine receives search requests form users in the form of
keywords. The ranking module sorts the results.
• The crawler indexer architecture has many variants. It is modified in the distributed
architecture of a search engine. These search engine architectures consist of gatherers
and brokers. Gatherers collect indexing information from web servers while the brokers
give the indexing mechanism and the query interface. Brokers update indices on the
basis of information received from gatherers and other brokers. They can filter
information. Many search engines of today use this type of architecture. 2
2
http://www.buzzle.com/articles/how-does-a-search-engine-work.html