Google Search Tips

February 20, 2008

I was recently doing some searching on Google, and was having some problems finding what I was looking for. In the following I will highlight some of the more useful search operators that can be used when searching on Google to help find what you need faster.

One way to narrow your search is using the advanced search feature on Google. You can get there by clicking on “advanced search” right next to the search text box. This gives you many ways to perform you search without memorizing search operators.

The following are some of the search operators that I use most when searching on Google. I find this to be quicker than using the “advanced search”. Click on the links below to see the differences in the searches.

” “
Using quotes forces Google to search for the exact phrase inside them. For example, water in the boat, and “water in the boat” return very different results. In a normal search Google removes common words like “in”, “I”, and “the”. Using quotes is one way to force Google to include those words in your search.

+
This is another way to force words to be included in your search. Your search could be something like water +in +the boat which returns a different result than above.

-
Use this to remove a word from your search. -water +in +the boat

*
This one I use a lot, this is a “wild card”, which will try any word in place of the *. “water in the *”

~
Add this to your search to include synonyms to. Searching for ~large boat will return results that include big in place of large.

site:
If you want to limit your search to a particular website, you can enter your search term followed by site:(URL). For example boat site:mnsu.edu

This is a short list of the search operators I use most. Check out the following links for more:
Google Cheat Sheet
Google Web Search Features


High Def Format War is Over

February 19, 2008

It’s official, after about two years Toshiba is throwing in the towel and will no longer develop, manufacture, or market HD DVD players and recorders. This leaves the Sony technology, Blu-ray as the winner of the battle.

This news is a little bitter-sweet for me. As a person that has personally seen and used both formats, I was slightly partial to HD DVD. While the actual video files on the two types of disks are virtually identical, the HD DVD user interface and menu system had a few features that I liked over Blu-ray. However, the Blu-ray disks have a larger capacity, so they are able to hold a larger amount of data than HD DVD. The bottom line is that the quality of video output was equally impressive on both formats, so either way the consumers will get the High Def movies they want.

To me it wasn’t so much about which format won. I just wanted the battle to be over to eliminate confusion, and the need for two different players. It will be much nicer for everyone to be able to purchase any movie titles they want in one format. Now people can focus all of their confusion on the HDTV’s that they will watch their Blu-ray movies on.


Welcome to What You See is What You Get Tech

February 15, 2008

This blog is being created as an assignment for my technical communications course. I hope to create content that is useful and interesting.