For many years, the process of finding information on the web has annoyed me a bit, which is why I’ve spent some time looking for alternatives to Google and the other traditional search engines. Until this date I’ve found these appealing alternatives:
- Metacrawler is a meta search engine, i.e. it searches the other engines, and presents the results in a traditional list form. I’ve been using it for the past decade or so.
- KartOO is also a meta search engine, but the results are presented on a map where connections are visualized. A bonus for those who speak several languages is the possibility of changing language with just one click on a different flag so that you don’t have to start all over again with a navigation to another “subpage” (of for instance Google). You can also save your result map.
- Quintura is a new type of search engine that helps you refine your query instead of start all over again. In addition to the traditional list of links, there’s a cloud of refining terms with your original term centered at the center of it. You then choose a term to combine with the first one and then make a new query, only to narrow the list of links down. Finally, you can save and share your result.
- Walk2web is a starting point for “walking the web”, meandering along connections between sites, which means you start by entering a url and then walk2web shows you the incoming and outgoing connections to/from that particular site. The idea is not to go looking for answers to specific questions, but to browse rather aimlessly within a bigger category. This is a brilliant idea and I wonder why nobody has done this years ago.
I have also looked for specific search engines, i.e. engines that search within only one field, for instance medicine. So far I’ve found these pages:
- Medworm is a medical RSS filter engine.
- Intute, a service provided by several of the universities in UK, can help you on the way if you want subject-specific access to trustworthy web resources. (Trustworthy says who? Well, that’s what they claim on their homepage…) Especially their Virtual Training Suite is worth giving a shot, since it can direct you to search engines covering only your particular field.
- For instance the medicine-specific VTU directed me to MedHunt, an engine provided by Swiss HON, Health On the Net Foundation.