VisualWikipedia

VisualWikipedia puts knowledge in context. It contains the same information as Wikipedia, but presents the information differently, more visually. This way it is easier to navigate the huge amounts of information.

My favorite feature is that each article is followed by a tag cloud and often a mind map detailing how the subject of the article relates to other concepts. The “tentacles” of the map are clickable.

concept chart

Another cool feature is that in the right margin of the articles, you can browse related YouTube videos. This wont be equally useful for every concept described in Wikipedia, but it adds value to a lot of articles. The videos can be watched in the article or, if the thumbnail format isn’t for you, you can click it to go to the YouTube page.

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Posted on Thursday 8 January 2009
Filed under: All (summaries) and Online search tools and services | Permalink

3 easy ways to make a customized search engine

Returning visitors are an important part of a successful web site. And if you give them something special, some boon that your competitors don’t offer, chances are your visitors will come back. Building your blog or web site and researching your topic you have most likely gained knowledge that your users could benefit from. Why not offer them a customized search engine that draws on that knowledge?

Here are introductions to three great tools for making a customized search engine. They are all easy to use and embed. Find the one that meets your needs and get cracking.

Rollyo

RollyoIf what you need is simply search engine that will search a specific set of web sites, Rollyo is a simple and fun way to do it. It’s this easy:

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Posted on Tuesday 6 January 2009
Filed under: All (summaries) and Online search tools and services and Pandia top 5 | Permalink

Search Engine Wrap-up January 1st 2009

FireworksPandia Wishes You a Happy New Year!

(…and gives you a few of the recent search engine headlines from around the web):

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Posted on Thursday 1 January 2009
Filed under: All (summaries) | Permalink

Search Engine Land gets a facelift

Those of you who follow the search engine scene regularly know that you need to keep up with what search engine guru Danny Sullivan and his friends are doing over at Search Engine Land.

Now Search Engine Land has a new look. The logo and and the color scheme are the same, but the lay-out is different.

First of all: There is more room set aside for the main news stories. Stories that the editors find less ground breaking are presented in a separate text box called Search News in Brief.

Other text boxes present recent feature articles, how to articles and comments.

Secondly: Search Engine Land introduces a premium membership giving you access to additional content. When Danny Sullivan edited Search Engine Watch, that site also had a subscription service — at least for a while.

Members of Search Engine Land get access to two years worth of stories categorized into topics such as Google: SEO, Google: AdWords, Search Marketing and Search Statistics.

Finally: Search Engine Land now allows readers to make comments directly under the posts. They do not have to submit their comments to Sphinn as before.

Our conclusion: An excellent site has become even better!

Danny Sullivan on Search Engine Land’s new look.

Posted on Tuesday 23 December 2008
Filed under: All (summaries) and Search oriented sites and forums | Permalink

Learn more about search and SEM from Google videos

It is a well known fact that Google owns YouTube. Few people know, however, that Google is using YouTube to teach users about their services.

Maybe they are not marketing those services in the right way, or maybe people don’t consider the possibility.

We are here to rectify that. Over at the Google YouTube channel there are quite a few videos that should interest searchers and search engine marketers.

Google search

First: There are actually not that many videos telling you how to search the web using Google. It could be Google believes this is so easy that you do not need a video to tell you what to do. Or, it could be that the web search people are not as interested in videos as — let’s say — the Google Maps people.

The best search tips video we have found so far isn’t actually made by Google at all, but by DL.TV. It does feature Google’s Matt Cutts, though, so we will include it here anyway:

(By the way: WebmasterRadio.FM has a very interesting audio interview with Cutts on the future of search.)

In May Google published a looooong video on what Google does in the search arena. It is hosted by Marissa Mayer of Google:

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Posted on Tuesday 23 December 2008
Filed under: All (summaries) and Online search tools and services and Search oriented sites and forums | Permalink

Pandia Weekend Wrap-up December 21

This week’s search engine scene, as mapped by Pandia:

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Posted on Sunday 21 December 2008
Filed under: All (summaries) | Permalink

The strange story about how Pandia was born 10 years ago

pandia 10 year aniversaryPandia celebrates its 10 year anniversary. Here is the strange story about how Pandia was born out of an act of the Norwegian parliament.

By Per Koch, co-editor of Pandia

In Web time Pandia is ancient.

It was born in December 1998, a couple of months after Google was incorporated. At that time AltaVista was the best search engine around, and a large number of search engine companies competed for the number 1 spot.

Remember Infoseek, Hotbot, and Excite? They were all listed on the Pandia home page of early 1999.

Although a lot of our visitors believed Pandia was yet another American corporation trying to conquer its part of the growing search engine market, it was in fact a hobby site run by two Norwegians: My wife Susanne and myself.

All-in-one link collection

Pandia started out as an all-in-one link and search form collection, gathering a large number of relevant search tools in one place. It was this home page that later was turned into
Pandia Powersearch, your one stop shop for Internet search fixes.

In 1999 we added the Goalgetter web search tutorial, which ended up on the curricula of several American universities.

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Posted on Sunday 21 December 2008
Filed under: All (summaries) and Search oriented sites and forums | Permalink

Weekend Wrap-up, search engine news of the week (Dec 14)

Yahoo! continues to be in trouble and sacks some of it’s employees. The Google Chrome browser is out of beta. The Indian government believes terrorists made use of Google Earth satellite imagery. Google Book Search includes scanned magazines. These are just a few of this week’s selected search engine news articles from around the web-

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Posted on Sunday 14 December 2008
Filed under: All (summaries) | Permalink