Some people can find anything they are looking for with Google. What is the trick to having successful Google queries?
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This document will highlight the more advanced features of Google Web Search. Have in mind though that even very advanced searchers, such as the members of the search group at Google, use these features less than 5% of the time. Basic simple search is often enough. As always, we use square brackets [ ] to denote queries, so [ to be or not to be ] is an example of a query; [ to be ] or [ not to be ] are two examples of queries.
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Knowing what you're really looking for. Don't just put the first words that come into your head in. Think about it for a moment. Make use of advanced operators ( If you find something you looked for for ages and couldn't find, write a blog, or tweet about it. Won't help YOU find it, but if everybody did it, it would serve to further mesh the net together, making interesting things easier to find. |
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Practice, as much as anything else. I don't mean, just go Google a bunch of stuff: 4 sets of 12 reps, one query each! What I mean is, you learn over time how to refine your query for better results, and how to leave out words from your query that you suspect will only clutter the result. If I want to find a recipe for angel food cake, I would leave out query words like 'baking' or 'fluffy'. Those words are likely to only cause hits that aren't related to what I'm looking for. Another technique that's simple enough is to use the '-' operator to explicitly reject certain results. Here's a contrived example: I want to find information about "Venetian rooms" for an interior design project. But my search results are cluttered with online travel agent results for the Venetian hotel in Las Vegas. I'd update my query to "Venetian rooms -hotel" or -vegas or something. |
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Being able to specify exactly what you are looking for is extremely useful. Check out the Google Cheat Sheet for help on limiting your queries. |
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google guide is your friend... http://www.googleguide.com/advanced%5Foperators%5Freference.html |
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I just gave an interview that partly answers this question, so perhaps it will be of interest to you! |
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One big trick is to not think of your question, rather think of words that are likely to appear in your answer and search on those. |
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