• Refuzake
  • Friday, November 6, 2009

    20 Great Google Secrets


    Here are a few more clever ways to tweak your Google searches.

    Search Within a Timeframe

    Daterange: (start date–end date). You can restrict your searches to pages that were indexed within a certain time period. Daterange: searches by when Google indexed a page, not when the page itself was created. This operator can help you ensure that results will have fresh content (by using recent dates), or you can use it to avoid a topic's current-news blizzard and concentrate only on older results. Daterange: is actually more useful if you go elsewhere to take advantage of it, because daterange: requires Julian dates, not standard Gregorian dates. You can find converters on the Web (such as

    CODE
    http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/JulianDate.html

    excl.gif No Active Links, Read the Rules - Edit by Ninja excl.gif


    ), but an easier way is to do a Google daterange: search by filling in a form at

    www.researchbuzz.com/toolbox/goofresh.shtml or www.faganfinder.com/engines/google.shtml

    . If one special syntax element is good, two must be better, right? Sometimes. Though some operators can't be mixed (you can't use the link: operator with anything else) many can be, quickly narrowing your results to a less overwhelming number.





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