Why do you have to even launch your browser to search Google? This tool lets you search Google and over 100 other search engines from your Windows status bar.
Why should you have to launch a browser to get access to Googleâs over 2 billion pagesâ worth of information? You donât. If you want to go about as far beyond the browser as you can go without actually leaving the computer, check out Daveâs Quick Search Deskbar (http://notesbydave.com/toolbar/doc.htm), shown in Figure 1-18.
This is a quick little download, all of 322K. Youâll need to have Windows 95 or better and IE 5.5 or later to use it. Once youâve downloaded and installed it, right-click your mouse on the Windows taskbar at the bottom of your screen and choose Toolbars â Add Quick Search.
The Quick Search tool is a veritable Swiss Army knife of functions, but weâll start with the basics; enter a query in the box and hit the enter key on your keyboard. Your default browser will pop up the Google result page.
The complicated stuff isnât that much more complicated. To go directly to the first hit of a result (using Googleâs Iâm Feeling Lucky feature) add an exclamation point to your search:
"washington post"!
Make sure the exclamation point is on the outside of a phrase (i.e., isnât contained within the quotes) or it wonât work. You can, of course, add the exclamation point to the end of a multiple word query:
yahoo what's new!
The Quick Search Deskbar is powered by a few triggers and lots of switches. The triggers specify which facet of Google is to be searched, and the switches specify either which facet should be searched or the kind of results that should be returned. And they can be mixed and matched.
Triggers are characters placed before your query, altering the domains they search and the sorts of queries they construct.
-
>
Constructs a Google Advanced Search Section 1.6 based on your entered query information. Remember, though, that Googleâs advanced search page canât handle overly complex queries. If you try to send a complicated query the likes of
> fiscal responsibility -site:com -site:org
, it wonât be accurately represented in the resulting advanced search page.> cholesterol drugs +site:edu
-
??
Searches the Google Directory [Hack #29].
?? "George Bush"
-
,
Searches Google Groups [Hack #30]. You can use the Groups-specific special syntaxes with this trigger.
, group:sci.med* dermatology</pre
Switches are characters added on to the end of your query, altering the query in various ways.
-
/ifl
Invokes the equivalent of Googleâs Iâm Feeling Lucky button, taking you directly to the highest ranked Google result for your query. A shortcut is to simply postfix your query with a
!
(exclamation point).yahoo what's new /ifl yahoo what's new!
-
/advanced
Works like the Advanced Search trigger above.
-
/groups
Works like the Google Groups trigger above.
-
/directory
Works like the Google Directory trigger above.
-
<code>/images
Searches Google Images. You can add the Google Images special syntaxes for this search.
intitle:cat /images
-
/news
Restrict searches to Google News. You can use the Google News special syntaxes with this search.
intitle:"Tony Blair" /news
-
/since:
days
Searches for pages indexed
days
ago. For example, for web sites about Jimmy Carter indexed in the last year, youâd use"Jimmy Carter" /since:365
. There are some quick shortcuts for this as well:/since:t
finds things indexed today,/since:y
means yesterday,/since:w
is the last seven days, and/since:m
(âmâ as in month) is the last 30 days.-
/cache
Returns the cached version of the URL specified or an error, if the page is not in Googleâs cache.
http://www.oreilly.com /cache
-
/related
Finds pages Google thinks are most related to the specified URL. If nothingâs related, however unlikely, youâll get an error message.
http://www.researchbuzz.com /related
-
/link
Finds pages that link to the specified URL.
http://www.google.com /link
- Location switches
Allow you to specify that the results you get are from local (or not local, if you prefer) versions of Google.
-
/canada
(Canada),/deutschland
(Germany),/france
(France),/italia
(Italy),/uk
(United Kingdom),/language:
xx
Allow you to change the Google web interface to whatever language you prefer, specified as a language code in place of
xx
. For a complete list of available languages, visit the Google Language Tools (http://www.google.com/language_tools) page. For example, to query Google in Malay, youâd add/language:ms
to your query.python /language:ms
With all these switches, you might imagine that you could do a lot of experimenting with Google searches. And youâd be right!
The Search tool has a built-in way to go over all the different searches youâve done by clicking in the search box and repeatedly hitting the down arrow on your keyboard.
Iâve spent this hack discussing Daveâs Quick Search Taskbar Toolbar Deskbar in the context of Google, because thatâs what this book is all about. But the tool does a lot more than Google. Click on the >> next to the text box. Youâll get a list of search tools in several categories, from Computers to Reference to Shopping. Once youâre finished seeing how cool this tool is when used with Google, check it out with over a hundred other different search interfaces.
Huevos (http://ranchero.com/software/huevos/), a standalone search widget for Mac OS X
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