I decided to ask both search engines a series of questions to compare their performance. I'm going to summarize my results here rather than provide screen shots. I know most of you will think these questions are easy; please consider that the ease or difficulty of answering a question may be a matter of perspective. After all, until recently, how many people outside of the field had even heard of SEO?
• “What is search engine optimization?” Both Google and Answers.com provided the right answer to this question in the first sentence of their results. In Google's case, the sentence came from a snippet from the first hyperlinked web site.
• “Where is the Blarney Stone?” Again, both Google and Answers.com quickly return satisfactory results. It's worth noting that Google's snippet, this time, came from Wikipedia. For some reason, Google provided only the metric measure of the distance from Cork, while Answers.com gave the distance in miles.
• “When is the next Fringe Festival in Scotland?” This question required the search engines to recognize several things at once: dates, the name of a festival, and location. Again, both performed similarly -- with a list of links that might or might not be relevant. Google's links seemed a little more recent. Answers.com provided related links that at least seemed intriguing; as I had observed earlier, it's a good engine for browsing.
• “Who first said ‘Time flies like an arrow fruit flies like a banana?'” This question required the search engines to recognize a quotation. Google gets points for bolding the quotation in all of the results it returns, but Answers.com wins conclusively by identifying Groucho Marx as the originator of the quote before one even clicks through to any results (though to find the actual quote itself, I had to scroll down a ways).
• “How are Venetian masks made?” Google's first result for this query was from Wisegeek.com, and it answered the question “What are Venetian masks?” Though that's a different question than the one I asked, when I clicked through to the site I found that the fourth paragraph gave a quick description of the process. Answers.com didn't do as well; I got results from WikiAnswers, which told me what Venetian masks are made of (plaster of Paris or china), but that doesn't really tell me HOW they are made. If I was trying to make a Venetian mask myself, clicking through the results returned by Google gave me more useful information than clicking through Answers.com's results.
I would be very interested to see what kinds of results other users get, but I must admit I was a little disappointed in Answers.com. I won't rule it out for use when I'm in a mood to browse topics related to my specific query, but except in one case, it did not outperform Google when it came to answering my questions. If Answers.com's goal is to beat Google, I see a long road ahead. I believe it makes more sense for the company to serve as an information portal, but even with that more modest goal, Answers.com will need to do some work; drawing answers from a wider range of trusted sources would not be out of line. I wish them luck
Advertising On Search Engines
Internet services like Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft's Live Search, Alta Vista, Lycos, Open Directory, and others, are all considered to be search engines. Along with these services there are also Internet information portals, online services, Internet guides and Web Directories. Each one has a slightly different set of features and services. All of it is designed to help you find websites.
Most of the time when we talk about ?search engines,? ?web directories,? and ?informational portals? we're talking about services like Google, Yahoo!, and the like. If you want to get specific, though, there are differences between them. Strictly speaking, they are different things.
For example, Open Directory (a.k.a. dmoz.org) is a web directory, not a search engine. The key difference, here, is that search engines use ?spider? programs to ?crawl? across the web. The spider programs are what actually retrieves the information about a given website and brings it back to the search engine to install that site in the search engines databases. Directories, on the other hand, are built by humans. They're hand-assembled databases. In a web directory, humans determine what to list, and how to list it, not a spider program. Google, Yahoo!, Alta Vista, Live Search, Excite, HotBot, Infoseek, Lycos and good old WebCrawler are actual search engines. Many of the others are actually directories.
Both search engines and directories offer the same basic Internet search features. How they are implemented, and what additional services they have available, allow individual search engines to differentiate themselves. This is how they differentiate themselves, appeal to a specific audience and competing with the rest. They create different ?value-added? services.
All of these services are made available for free to the end user. Most often, search engines make their money by selling advertising space within their sites for other websites ? just like yours.
When you visit Yahoo.com, for example, you'll see a free internet search service near the top of the page. For Yahoo!, it doesn't end there. The also have categories you can browse, features sites and stories you can peruse, online photo collections, ads for other websites, and even free online email services. They even have a list of the top searches of the day.
There's so much stuff here, it's easy to get distracted. Sometimes, services like Yahoo! are referred to as Internet Portals. They serve as entry points to start your explorations on the web.
When you do a search, a search engines matches up what you typed into the search box (what you typed is called a ?keyword.?) with the content of all the websites they have listed in their insanely huge databases. The spider programs have already looked through the site and created an ?index? of the things they found on the site. The search engine compares your search words with the search engine's index, and returns links to websites it things are related to whatever you typed in. Directories do this too. The difference is that the index was created by human beings, not spider programs.
Both Amrisa Brown & John Newman are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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