Google search features

This is a detailed article, for an overview, see: Google Search.

The Google search features include more than 40 options or keywords to modify the type of search. Google Web Search is a web search engine owned by Google, Inc., and is the most-used search engine on the Web. Google receives several hundred million queries each day through its various services.[1] (Google Search was created by Larry Page and Sergey Brin in 1997.)[2]

Beyond the original word-search capability,[3] Google Search provides more than 22 special features, such as: similar synonym words; weather forecasts; time zones; stock quotes; maps; earthquake data; movie showtimes; airports; home listings; sports scores, etc. (see below: Special features). There are special features for numbers: prices; money/unit conversions ("10.5 cm in inches"); temperatures ("50 Fahrenheit in Celsius"); general calculations ( 3*4+sqrt(6)-pi/2 ); package tracking; patents; area codes;[3] plus rudimentary language translation of displayed pages.

A Google search-results page is ordered by a priority rank called "PageRank" which is kept secret to avoid spammers from forcing their pages to the top. Google Search provides more than 15 options for customizing a search (see below: Search options), such as: exclusion ("-xx"), inclusion ("+xx"), alternatives ("xx OR yy"), and wildcard matching ("*").

Contents

The focus of this page is provide details about each feature, but not teach usage. For how-to guides, see the webpages under References, below.

General features

The Google search engine has many features, intended as intuitively obvious to users, to make it more functional. Google is one of the top ten most-visited websites today.[4] Some of its features include a definition link for most searches, including dictionary words, a list of how many results matched the search, links to other searches (e.g. if words were misspelled, it gives a link to the search results for the correct spellings), and many more.

Search syntax

Google's search engine normally accepts queries as a simple text, and breaks up the user's text into a sequence of search terms, which will usually be words that are to occur in the results, but may also be phrases, delimited by quotations marks ("), qualified terms, with a prefix such as "+", "-", or one of several advanced operators, such as "site:". The webpages of "Google Search Basics" describe each of these additional queries and options (see below: Search options).

Google's Advanced Search web form gives several additional fields which may be used to qualify searches by such criteria as date of first retrieval. All advanced queries transform to regular queries, usually with additional qualified terms.

Query expansion

Google applies query expansion to the submitted search query, transforming it into the query that will actually be used to retrieve results. As with page ranking, the exact details of the algorithm Google uses are deliberately obscure, but certainly the following transformations are among those that occur:

"I'm Feeling Lucky"

Google's homepage includes a button labeled "I'm Feeling Lucky". When a user clicks on the button the user will be taken directly to the first search result, bypassing the search engine results page. The thought is that, if a user is "feeling lucky", the search engine will return the perfect match the first time without having to page through the search results.

According to a study by Tom Chavez of "Rapt", this feature costs Google $110 million a year as 1% of all searches use this feature and bypass all advertising.[5]

Rich Snippets

On 12 May 2009, Google announced that they would be parsing the hCard, hReview and hProduct microformats, and using them to populate search result pages with what they called "Rich Snippets".[6]

Special features

Besides the main search-engine feature of searching for text, Google Search has more than 22 "special features" (activated by entering any of dozens of trigger words) when searching: [3][7]

There might be other special features, beyond those listed here (see source references:[3][7]).

Search options

The webpages maintained by the Google Help Center have text describing more than 15 various search options.[8] The Google operators:

Some of the query options are as follows:

The page-display options (or query types) are:

Note that Google searches the HTML coding inside a webpage, not the screen appearance: the words displayed on a screen might not be listed in the same order in the HTML coding.

Error messages

Some searches will give a 403 Forbidden error with the text:

"We're sorry...

    ... but your query looks similar to automated requests from a computer virus or spyware application. To protect our users, we can't process your request right now.
    We'll restore your access as quickly as possible, so try again soon. In the meantime, if you suspect that your computer or network has been infected, you might want to run a virus checker or spyware remover to make sure that your systems are free of viruses and other spurious software.
    We apologize for the inconvenience, and hope we'll see you again on Google."

sometimes followed by a CAPTCHA prompt.[10] The screen was first reported in 2005, and was a response to the heavy use of Google by search engine optimization companies to check on ranks of sites they were optimizing. The message may also be triggered by high volumes of different searches from a single IP address. Google apparently uses the Google cookie as part of its determination of refusing service.[10] The error usually occurs after the 11th page in your google search. The block is generally removed after a day.

See also

References

  1. ^ Almost 12 Billion U.S. Searches Conducted in July, SearchEngineWatch on 2008-09-02.
  2. ^ "WHOIS - google.com". http://reports.internic.net/cgi/whois?whois_nic=google.com&type=domain. Retrieved 2009-01-27. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u "Search Features", Google.com, May 2009, webpage: GFeat.
  4. ^ "Top 500". Alexa. http://www.alexa.com/site/ds/top_sites?ts_mode=global&lang=none. Retrieved 2008-04-15. 
  5. ^ """I'm feeling lucky" button costs Google $110 million per year"". Valleywag. 2007. http://valleywag.com/tech/google/im-feeling-lucky-button-costs-google-110-million-per-year-324927.php. Retrieved 2008-01-19. 
  6. ^ Goel, Kavi; Ramanathan V. Guha, Othar Hansson (2009-05-12). "Introducing Rich Snippets". Google Webmaster Central Blog. Google. http://googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com/2009/05/introducing-rich-snippets.html. Retrieved 2009-05-25. 
  7. ^ a b c d "Google and Search Engines", Emory University Law School, 2006, web: EmUniv-Gfind.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h "Google Help Center - Alternate query types", 2009, webpage: G-help.
  9. ^ [1], Google changes the operators.
  10. ^ a b "Google error page". http://www.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=15661. Retrieved 2008-12-31. 

Further reading

External links