Hack 12. Find Directories of Information
Use Google to find directories, link lists, and
other collections of information.
Sometimes you're more interested in large
information collections than scouring for specific bits and bobs.
Using Google, there are a couple of different ways of finding
directories,
link lists, and other information collections. The first way makes
use of Google's full-word wildcards
["Full-Word Wildards" earlier in
this chapter] and the intitle: ["Special
Syntax" earlier in this chapter]. The second is
judicious use of particular keywords.
1.24.1. Title Tags and Wildcards
Pick something you'd like to find collections of
information about. We'll use
"trees" as our example. The first
thing we'll look for is any page with the words
"directory" and
"trees" in its title. In fact,
we'll build in a little buffering for words that
might appear between the two using a couple of full-word wildcards
(* characters). The resultant query looks
something like this:
intitle:"directory * * trees"
This query will find "directories of evergreen
trees," "South African
trees," and of course "directories
containing simply trees."
What if you wanted to take things up a notch, taxonomically speaking,
and find directories of botanical information? You'd
use a combination of intitle: and keywords, like
so:
botany intitle:"directory of"
And you'd get almost 1,000 results. Changing the
tenor of the information might be a matter of restricting results to
those coming from academic institutions. Appending an
edu site specification brings you to:
botany intitle:"directory of" site:edu
This gets you around 150 results, a mixture of resource directories,
and, unsurprisingly, directories of university professors.
Mixing these syntaxes works rather well when you're
searching for something that might also be an offline print resource.
For example:
cars intitle:"encyclopedia of"
This query pulls in results from Amazon.com and other sites selling
car encyclopedias. Filter out some of the more obvious book finds by
tweaking the query slightly:
cars intitle:"encyclopedia of" -site:amazon.com
-inurl:book -inurl:products
The query specifies that search results should not come from
Amazon.com and should not have the word
"products" or
"book" in the URL, which eliminates
a fair amount of online stores. Play with this query by changing the
word "cars" to whatever
you'd like for some interesting finds.
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Of course there are lots of sites selling books online, but when it
comes to injecting "noise" into
results when you're trying to find online resources
and research-oriented information, Amazon.com is the biggest
offender. If you're actually looking for books, try
+site:amazon.com instead.
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If mixing syntaxes doesn't do the trick for the
resources you want, there are some clever keyword combinations that
might just do the trick.
1.24.2. Finding Searchable Subject Indexes with Google
There are a few major searchable subject indexes and myriad minor ones
that deal with a particular topic or idea. You can find the smaller
subject indexes by customizing a few generic searches.
"what's new"
"what's cool"
directory, while gleaning a few false results, is
a great way of finding searchable subject indexes.
directory "gossamer
tHReads" new is an interesting
one. Gossamer Threads is the creator of a popular link directory
program. This is a good way to find searchable subject indexes
without too many false hits. directory
"what's new"
categories cool
doesn't work particularly well, because the word
"directory" is not a very reliable
search term, but you will pull in some things with this query that
you might otherwise have missed.
Let's put a few of these into practice:
"what's new" "what's cool" directory phylum
"what's new" "what's cool" directory carburetor
"what's new" "what's cool" directory "investigative journalism"
"what's new" directory categories gardening
directory "gossamer threads" new sailboats
directory "what's new" categories cool "basset hounds"
The real trick is to use a more general word, but make it unique
enough that it applies mostly to your topic and not to many other
topics.
Take acupuncture, for instance. Start narrowing it down by topic:
what kind of acupuncture? For people or animals? If for people, what
kind of conditions are being treated? If for animals, what kind of
animals? Maybe you should be searching for "cat
acupuncture", or maybe you should be searching for
acupuncture arthritis. If this
first round doesn't narrow down search results
enough for you, keep going. Are you looking for education or
treatment? You can skew results one way or the other by using the
site: syntax. So maybe you want
"cat acupuncture"
site:com or arthritis
acupuncture site:edu. Just by
taking a few steps to narrow things down, you can get a reasonable
number of search results focused around your topic.
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