The Power of Search meets the Librarians

November 11th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in News | 1 Comment »


Reference Extract is envisioned as a web search engine, like Google, Yahoo and MSN. However, unlike other search engines, Reference Extracts will be built for maximum credibility by relying on the expertise and credibility judgments of librarians from around the globe. Users will enter a search term and get results weighted towards sites most often referred to by librarians at institutions such as the Library of Congress, the University of Washington, the State of Maryland, and over 1,400 libraries worldwide. This grant will support planning for Reference Extract and building the foundation necessary to implement it as a large-scale, general user service.

To be continued…

When We Say BigBookSearch, We Mean It

November 11th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
Posted in News, Unique Interfaces, Verticals | No Comments »

BigBookSearch programming and design by John Forsythe.

WorldCat – 1.2 Billion items in 10,000 libraries!

November 11th, 2008 by Charles S. Knight
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WorldCat – Search for items in libraries:

What is WorldCat?
WorldCat is the world’s largest network of library content and services. WorldCat libraries are dedicated to providing access to their resources on the Web, where most people start their search for information.

What am I searching?
WorldCat.org lets you search the collections of libraries in your community and thousands more around the world. WorldCat grows every day thanks to the efforts of librarians and other information professionals.

WorldCat.org lets you:
* Search many libraries at once for an item and then locate it in a library nearby
* Find books, music, and videos to check out
* Find research articles and digital items (like audiobooks) that can be directly viewed or downloaded
* Link to “Ask a Librarian” and other services at your library
* Post your review of an item, or contribute factual information about it

You may need to have an active offline membership with a WorldCat library to view/download content or check out materials through its Web site.

What will I find?
Illustration: Some of the media icons you’ll see in WorldCat resultsYou can search for popular books, music CDs and videos—all of the physical items you’re used to getting from libraries. You can also discover many new kinds of digital content, such as downloadable audiobooks.

You may also find article citations with links to their full text; authoritative research materials, such as documents and photos of local or historic significance; and digital versions of rare items that aren’t available to the public. Because WorldCat libraries serve diverse communities in dozens of countries, resources are available in many languages.

Can I check something out?
It depends on whether you have an active membership with a library that owns the item, and whether that library’s Web site permits remote checkout of an item. WorldCat.org lets you find an item of interest and then locate a library near you that owns it. Usually you will link directly to the item record on the library’s Web site. The actions available to you on that page will vary from one library to another. You may be able to join a waiting list, reserve the item, check it out or even have it shipped or delivered.

Can I get into electronic databases?
Some WorldCat libraries make their specialized reference databases available on their Web sites, but only to library members. Your search on WorldCat.org may produce direct links to articles and other resources in these databases. To access these resources, though, you may first be required to log in with a valid library membership.

Can I ask for help from a librarian?
Yes! WorldCat results often include a link to the “Ask a Librarian” help feature of a library’s Web site.

Can I add information to WorldCat?
Yes! On the WorldCat page for a particular item, you can enter a rating and review under the “Reviews” tab, and contribute factual notes or a book’s table of contents under the “Details” tab. Note that only you can modify or delete your own review, but other users can edit information that has been contributed under Details (similar to Wikipedia).

Can I search WorldCat at my local library?
Your library may let you search WorldCat from the online catalog on its Web site. (Again, you may have to log in with a valid library membership.) When you are physically at the library, you can search WorldCat using the FirstSearch reference service. Although the basic identifying information you’ll find on this Web site can fulfill most needs, WorldCat at your library includes extra features such as:
* Advanced search
* “Find similar items”
* Links to published reviews and excerpts

Source: WorldCat

Why is the search “HowTo” space so popular?

November 11th, 2008 by Guest Author
Posted in CEO Views, Guest Authors, Verticals | No Comments »

Stephen Chao is co-founder and CEO of WonderHowTo.com

People love to query HowTo. In fact, it is the number one query out there. Bill Tancer, general manager of the internet research firm, Hitwise, in his 2008 book Click summarizes: “‘How to’ queries represented nearly 3% of all search queries in the United States, making it the most commonly searched question, and for that matter phrase, entered into search engines.”

Why are there so many players? First of all, there is the natural duplication of text and video. Text is an older and more established medium of the internet. Ehow, About, and Wikihow have been pounding at this area of specialized search for quite some time. More recently, video publishers like Videojug and Howcast, as the arrivistes, have burst onto the scene – with all the attendant baggage. More expensive to produce, a remarkably different medium than text in that Marshall McCluhan way, funky meta data, and frustratingly different SEO rules all conspire to perpetuate this segregation. If you add up all the page views of video HowTo and compare that to all the page views of text HowTo, you will notice an enormous disparity. How this disparity plays out in the coming months and years is a matter of speculation and intelligent arbitrage.

My particular view is that video will rival (and possibly overshadow) text some day, not because I have any rational stats to back up my hunch, but mostly because I feel like ‘watching’ the answer to many HowTo queries rather than reading them. That is as much science as I care to impose on the debate. But remember, we are in the first inning of the internet-video game: the next eight innings will define the outcome.

Does the HowTo space warrant a dedicated search engine? Or will Google per se organize the great results of HowTo space? Great as this company is, Google cannot aspire to be all things to all people.  AltSearchEngines observes this truth every day. Niche search engines are permanent additions to the internet landscape. In the how-to space there are many Balkan Republics, which makes the task of organizing this ’space’ inherently challenging, and a great opportunity for a company like ours.

WonderHowTo.com is the only niche search engine of the HowTo space: every day we link to more than 1900 specialty sites and 225,000 video tutorials. We happen to draw from the totality of the web, and firmly embrace the notion that the collective imagination is better than any single development staff. Beyond WonderHowTo, most everyone else in the HowTo space falls into the category of publisher or portal. We
index and curate: we do not produce, host, or stream.

So long as the internet audience remains intellectually curious, and continues to type in ‘HowTo’ with such frequency, we think we will continue to have jobs.