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Do not use AND or OR to combine words, simply type a few words or
phrases.
To find a bed-time story: "fairy tale" +frog -dragon
Subject-Oriented Internet Resource Guides
Top Index
ArchiePlex
Form FTP-Search
B. E. S. T. recently moved to Education World (tm).
A comprehensive source for education links on the Internet.
Top Index
BizWiz
(strictly business-to-business)
WWW sites that are registered with Access Business Online. BizWiz will find any and all matches of words, phrases, contact names or other data.
A phone book of virtually every business in the USA.
CUI
World Wide Web Catalog
A useful search utility!
DejaNews
Search the UseNet
Delivers highly relevant results.
This form will take key words and try to find the domain (and possibly
hosts) pertaining to that domain.
Example: washington missouri louis
Search
for: Top Index
Eric
Search the Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC)
Excite
Examples: Travel +France
Jaguar -car -automobiles
swimming AND (man OR woman)
FOLDOC is a searchable dictionary of acronyms, jargon, programming languages,
tools, architecture, operating systems, networking, theory, conventions,
standards, mathematics, telecomms, electronics, institutions, companies,
projects, products, history, in fact anything to do with computing.
This dictionary is Copyright Denis Howe 1993, 1996.
Internet's largest white page directory with over 5 Million listings. They claim to be "The best way to search for someone's e-mail address or Web page".
Search the Hytelnet documents, each of which acts as a telnet or tn3270 session gateway.
Infohiway delivers web addresses with a difference: Relational Links.
Try a name or keyword.
Search for User by e-mail address:
E-mail
address:
Top Index
Links to some of the most popular and powerful search engines available.
Searches for mailing lists.
To find parts of words, use an asterisk (*) to represent missing parts
of the word. For example, if you enter "world*" it will match
"worldwide", "worlds", etc. Similarly, "*world"
would find "underworld", etc.
Examples: baseball writ or litera or book
baseball or football india not indiana
b*ball or f*ball "bad art"
"art" not (rock or game or tattoo)
Example: wooden boat
Finds records that contain either "wooden" or "boat"
or both.
Example: the wooden boat
Finds records that contain either "wooden" or "boat"
or both; it ignores the word "the."
Example: wooden - boat
Finds records that contain "wooden" but not "boat."
Uses multiple search engines to find web pages.
You should give it a try!
Enter a word or phrase.
More than 5.4 million adresses.
An annotated index of over 1,800 books whose full text is available on-line.
Enter either a title or an author and press the appropriate Submit button.
Only for Netscape 2.0 or higher!
Search for articles, web sites and kid-safe web sites.
Only for Netscape 2.0 or higher! (uses Java
Script)
Enter your query only once, select the search engine and hit the Search
button.
A very fast file finder!
Snoopie checks for and returns all the files it finds that begin with your query. Basically, if you ask for 'win', you're asking Snoopie to return all entries that begin with 'win'. Snoopie will first return all the entries that match 'win' exactly, then will return other entries that begin with 'win'. Snoopie is not case sensitive, so a query of 'win' could return 'win', 'Win', or 'WIN'.
Did not work on September 19, 1996!
Only for Netscape 2.0 or higher!
Queries up to 6 search engines at the same time.
Search for people and businesses.
An archive of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) and other periodic,
informative articles, posted in the Usenet newsgroup news.answers.
You can use the booleans and, or, and not.
Searching for 'foo bar' will yield a list of documents that match 'foo' or 'bar' and will then rank the resulting matches. All searches are case insensitive.
The premier search directory for women online.
The search takes the word [WWWomen recommends no more than 3 words for
faster searches] you have entered as a keyword and it searches the database
within the Title of the site, the URL, or the summary statement.
Note: the keyword MUST exist somewhere in the Title, URL, or summary statement.
The Web Guide for Kids! Designed for Web surfers ages 8 to 14.