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         Searching Most Familiar:     more detail

1. Before You Start Job Searching Online
SHOUTING and there is never a reason for this in job searching. access provider, service provider and connectivity provider are the most familiar terms.
http://www.missouri.edu/~cppcwww/internetbefore.shtml

2. How To Do Field Searching In Web Search Engines: A Field Trip
searching of the From, Subject, Summary, Newsgroup, and Keywords fields. most fields in AltaVista are searched using a familiar
http://www.onlinemag.net/OL1998/hock5.html
How to Do Field Searching in Web Search Engines: A Field Trip
by Ran Hock
ONLINE , May 1998
Information Today, Inc.
You never miss the water until the well runs dry. Absence makes the heart grow fonder. Y ou've all heard the folk wisdom about not taking things for granted. Field searching is something that the serious searcher has been able to take for granted when searching most databases. It lets us quickly get to a highly relevant set of records or easily find the citation for a title we know. It lets us distinguish between a sales figure of $1,000,000 and the same figure as long-term debt. With traditional online services such as Dialog, even occasional users take advantage of the ability to search specific fields. Most searchers frequently use AU=, PY=, LA=, and a few others, and literally hundreds of other fields are used for more refined searches. When precision is the goal, field searching is indispensable. However, as we explore Web search engines, we discover that there is little we can take for granted, including the ability to search within a specific field. With the typically high noise level of many straightforward Web searches, the potential value of precision tools, such as field searching, is especially obvious. Fortunately, some Web search engines do provide at least a rudimentary field search capability, but because of the immature nature of the engines, the options are neither very numerous nor particularly sophisticated.

3. The Biomedical Libraries At Dartmouth
(check all that apply) A. THOSE THAT PREFERRED OVID MEDLINE 131 One with whichI am most familiar 82 Ease of use 43 Speed 58 Precision of searching 44 Breadth
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~biomed/about.htmld/ovidsurvey.shtml
Results of the Spring 2002 Survey on Ovid and Other Search Systems
In April 2002 we asked users to complete a survey about Ovid and other search systems. The results will help us as we evaluate the Biomedical Libraries' commitment to Ovid as a platform for providing biomedical information. 215 surveys were completed. Here are the results for individual questions: 1. Which of the following best describes you?: 62 Clinician/Physician
71 Researcher/Scientist
6 Educator
5 Nurse
10 House Staff/Resident
19 Medical Student
7 Other Graduate Student
7 Undergraduate Student
1 Other Healthcare Professional
27 Other 2. What is your affiliation, based on your e-mail or CIS name and password? 40 Hitchcock.org
128 Dartmouth.edu 44 Both 3 Neither 3. Which one database do you search most often? 142 Ovid MEDLINE 43 PubMed 5 Ovid BIOSIS 8 Web of Science 1 Ovid CINAHL 3 CSA PsycInfo 8 MD Consult 2 Dartmouth Library Catalog 1 Other 4. What database do you use next most often? 31 Ovid MEDLINE 41 PubMed 5 Ovid BIOSIS 14 Web of Science 5 Ovid CINAHL 10 CSA PsycInfo 29 MD Consult 37 Dartmouth Library Catalog 14 Other 31 None 5. How important is it to you that your most frequently consulted databases have the same "look and feel" or search interface? For example, Ovid is currently used for more than one database: MEDLINE, CINAHL, BIOSIS.

4. Advanced Searching
Advanced searching Tricks of the Trade Peggy Zorn, Mary Emanoil, and Lucy Marshall ParkeDavis Pharmaceutical Research Library United Technologies Research Center ONLINE, May 1996 Copyright © Information Today, Inc. other hand, provide powerful search engines that include most of the features listed above. examples of such familiar features. Documentation for the searching features available in
http://www.onlinemag.net/MayOL/zorn5.html
Advanced Searching: Tricks of the Trade
by
Peggy Zorn, Mary Emanoil, and Lucy Marshall
Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical Research Library and Mary Panek
United Technologies Research Center
ONLINE , May 1996
S Despite the rapid proliferation and development of Web search systems over the past months, little attention has been devoted to the advanced features professional searchers and librarians have become accustomed to in other online information resources. Web novices and information professionals alike often overlook or miss detailed information such as:
  • what a particular Web search system is searching
  • how the data has been indexed
  • how the search engine retrieves data
  • what advanced techniques (proximity operators, nested queries, search set manipulation and combination, duplicate detection, etc.) are available
In simple Web systems such as Yahoo! and Aliweb, knowing advanced search features is not as necessary because the depth of indexing and the power of the search engine is not as great. However, with more sophisticated Web search systems, the need to narrow basic keyword retrieval due to large retrieval sets using types of features available in established commercial online services is becoming painfully obvious. As the Web grows, and databases searched by the major Web search engines increase in size, the power to seek, index, and retrieve information must growalong with the information professional's knowledge of how to effectively search the Web. Typical end-users may have no trouble browsing and locating information on uncomplicated topics, but constructing complex search queries using sophisticated Web search engines is another matter entirely. End-users may increasingly rely on information professionals for complex Web searching, much as they do for online commercial databases.

5. Monster.com Jobzilla Job Detail
specialist, intelligence research specialist, secretary and, perhaps the most familiar,special agent searching for more than 10,000 fugitives at any given time
http://jobprofiles.monster.com/Content/job_content/JC_Military/JSC_MilitaryGener

6. FINDING INFORMATION ON THE WEB - DIRECTORIES AND SEARCHING
familiar with several directories. By doing so you will decrease the amount of time spent searching. most directories
http://www.med.usf.edu/~kmbrown/finding_info.htm
FINDING INFORMATION ON THE WEB - DIRECTORIES AND SEARCHING
DIRECTORIES
  • collections of hyperlinks to the WWW and other resources
  • usually arranged according to subject headings (News, Health, Medicine, Science,..)
  • most useful when you know what you are looking for and what category or heading it is under
  • most directories include a search tool to look through that directory only
  • must be specifically added to directory to be included
  • most services are free
SEARCH ENGINES (or WEB INDEX)
  • programs that search the WWW sites and create a database or index of all the text, titles, hyperlinks, and URLs they find
  • a computer program with a database to find items whose text contains all or at least one of the words given to it
  • help you collect and then browse information from lots of sources
  • most services are free and are sponsored by or owned by a commercial organization
  • some have a fee which many companies, news agencies and research organizations are willing to pay for
  • relies on robots to find new pages
  • most services are free
DIRECTORIES
As indicated earlier, most directories organize their lists of hyperlinks according to subject. To get a listing of directories click on

7. Bare Bones 101: Ixquick Metasearch
Ixquick searches 14 of the most familiar search engines and with the most stars arethe most likely to quotes ( ) for phrases; Booleantype searching with AND
http://www.sc.edu/beaufort/library/lesson14.html
LibHome
BARE BONES 101:
LESSON 14: IXQUICK Metasearch : A Closer Look
DESCRIPTION Ixquick is one of the newest metasearchers, having been launched in early 2000. In its very short existence, Ixquick has also become one of the most popular metasearchers. This is because of some unique and interesting features. Ixquick searches 14 of the most familiar search engines and directories, returning "top 10" results from each engine searched. Every time the same site appears in one of the 12 search engines' "top 10" returns, it earns a star. (Sites can earn up to a maximum of six stars.) Those with the most stars are the most likely to be relevant to one's search. The format of the Ixquick interface is simple and clear; the search page appearance is clean and uncluttered. Ixquick has received praise for its efficient handling of Boolean operators and its ability to eliminate duplicates from the combined results list. SEARCHES IN:
  • Ah-Ha; pay-per-click searcher
  • All the Web (Fast)
  • AOL
  • Ask Jeeves/Direct Hit
  • FindWhat; pay-per-click searcher

8. Searching For Bible Verses And Scriptures
Search for Bible verses Advanced Methods. searching for Bible verses, scriptures and quotes with new software the Holy Bible is the most familiar and widely read Bible translation
http://www.topicsites.com/ebooks/searching-for-bible-verses.htm
Search Bible Verses
Scriptures and Quotes
Bible Verses Search Software Search for Bible verses - Advanced Methods
Searching for Bible verses, scriptures and quotes with new software technology. The eBook Software shown below makes it possible to search bible verses anytime on your personal computer. You can try the free sample version that only contains the Book of Genesis. The complete eBook software contains the Old Testament, New Testament, Apocryphal Books (for historical perspective), original translator's preface and more... Recommended
Holy Bible
King James Version
Old Testament - Apocryphal Books - New Testament
Microsoft Reader
The King James version of the Holy Bible
is the most familiar and widely read Bible translation in the world, recognized for centuries as both a religious and literary classic. The invention of the printing press made the Holy Bible universally available and changed the world. Now this greatest of books is available in digital format. Special Features:
  • Advanced hyperlink navigation and scripture search features
  • Fully compatible with Microsoft ClearType technology
  • Personalized bookmark, highlighting, and notes features

9. STUDY GUIDE
3. What are controlled vocabularies , and what is the most familiar example? UFBT RT NT. 8. In keyword searching, what strong ability of computers is used?
http://www.acts.twu.ca/lbr/studyguide.htm
To SYLLABUS STUDY GUIDE: Research Strategies: Finding your Way through the Information Fog (Lincoln, NE: Writers Club Press/iUniverse.com, 2000). The following guide is intended to help you focus on the most important factual information in Research Strategies. These questions, in the hands of a skilled and cunning professor, might also form the basis for a dandy midterm or final examination.
Chapter One - Taking Charge 1. What three things do you need to seek if you want to do research well? 2. Name four elements of "false research." Why is each an enemy of true research? 3. Define a "working knowledge" of your topic and explain why it's important to have one. 4. What is a "reference source?" 5. What are the steps to finding a good research question? 6. Formulate a definition for genuine research. Chapter Two - Databases 1. What is a "database?" Name a few examples of familiar databases? 2. You can browse a telephone book easily. Why is a computer database more difficult to browse? 3. What are "controlled vocabularies", and what is the most familiar example?

10. Searching For A Super CPA
EMarketing searching for a Super CPA January 1, 2001 by Michele a CPA firm in Fairfield,NJ He's the one who's most intimately familiar with the
http://www.smallbusinesscomputing.com/emarketing/article.php/687201
You are in the: Small Business Channel Jump to Website ECommerce Guide Small Business Computing Webopedia Verizon Easy Web Site Packages let you design/build/maintain/manage your Web site. It's everything you need to create a site that drives results without complicated software or equipment.
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IT Windows Technology ... E-mail Offers Latest Headlines EMC Releases Records Retention Storage System Sun Bolsters N1 with New Servers, Storage Eclipse Revises Tools Platform for Developers Intel, Via Settle Legal Row Searching for a Super CPA January 1, 2001 by Michele Marinnan They'll automate an accounting system, help file clients' taxes electronically, and even log into systems remotely to update general ledgers. They're tech-savvy accountants, and you'd better have one if you want to maintain and grow your business. Even if you're up on technology, it's important that your accountant is as well. Using financial software in your own office is one thing. But if your accountant can't turn your financial data into concise monthly profit-and-loss statements, general ledgers, and income projections, you're missing out on the real benefits.

11. Searching
To get the most from the Web, its worth spending some time becoming familiar with your Web browser. reduce the time you spend searching. most searches are done using a
http://www.lamart.com/neocon/proceedings/[T281].doc
ÐÏࡱá>þÿ ÊÌþÿÿÿÆÇÈÉÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿÿì¥Áq ¿•Objbjt+t+ ;€AA/Kcÿÿÿÿÿÿ]XXX <8tLÀD <ú6¶@§ 6Ý ñ ¿6Á6Á6Á6Á6Á6Á6$°8ô¤:`å6Xý š§ ý ý å6%õ@%%%ý 28X¿6lhÔhý ¿6% %=65à@X¿6 < ”Ü¿ýÛ¿ýë¿þ+$£Ìà¿üË¿ð„¿¤ùßÿ~-•ùLLÓhQˆHK먧l#?q…$åWž‡rõW#Èp‘Ì

12. SoYouWanna Learn About Opera, Pt IV
bad bets either, since they highlight a lot of the best, most familiar music talefeaturing a questing prince, his birdcatcher sidekick who's searching for the
http://www.soyouwanna.com/site/syws/opera/opera4.html

SYW improve your table manners?

SYW fake being an indie rock expert?

SYW fake being a wine expert?

Opera 101: A Complete Guide to Learning and Loving Opera
...
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Ask us a specific question and get a personalized answer from a qualified InfoRocket member! Type your question here! Pay only if you're satisfied! Research
Listen
Research This is where your local library comes in. Because operas usually take up two or three CDs, they're pretty expensive to buy, so to play it safe and listen to a few for free before deciding what to invest in. The operas we recommend for your first try all have humorous, dramatic stories, and music that you've probably heard before. If you see CDs called "The Best Of..." or "Selections from..." any of these operas, those aren't bad bets either, since they highlight a lot of the best, most familiar music. It's good to start out with something you recognize, because it makes the whole art form less intimidating. Here are our recommendations, in chronological order:
  • Mozart: The Marriage of Figaro . Two servants of the Duke Almaviva want to marry each other, but the Duke has other plans for the would-be bride. It's up to Figaro, the groom and a comic hero, to plot his way out of the tangle.

13. Making The Most Of Your Library -- Part 9
An article on computer information sources for research in fiction writing. One of the earliest and most familiar uses to which computers have been put to is the online This increases our searching power many times, putting the entire run of
http://leighkimmel.freeservers.com/writing/libraryref9.html
Free Web site hosting - Freeservers.com
Making the Most of Your Library
Part 9 Computer Information Sources
For permission to quote or reprint, contact Leigh Kimmel This article originally appeared in As most of us know, we are living in the computer age. And although libraries have a nasty reputation as being stodgy and behind the times, computer services are rapidly taking their places in the library. One of the earliest and most familiar uses to which computers have been put to is the online public access catalog that replaced the mouldering old card catalogs that were for so many years a standard fixture in libraries. But this has not been the only use for computers in libraries. Many of our familiar reference sources such as indexes and abstracting services have been computerized. This increases our searching power many times, putting the entire run of an index or abstracting service at our fingertips rather than forcing us to paw through dozens upon dozens of dusty paper copies. And that is particularly nice when dealing with such sources as Library and Information Science Abstracts

14. Harvard Gazette: Deconstructing Dimensions To Understand The Universe
He's also searching for missing pieces in our understanding of the physical lawsof but ArkaniHamed thinks one of them may be one of the most familiar in the
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2003/02.06/03-arkanihamed.html
Current Issue:
February 06, 2003
News
News, events, features Science/Research Latest scientific findings Profiles The people behind the university Community Harvard and neighbor communities Sports Scores, highlights, upcoming games On Campus Newsmakers, notes, students, police log ... Arts Museums, concerts, theater Calendar Two-week listing of upcoming events
HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Deconstructing dimensions to understand the universe:
Arkani-Hamed looks to extra dimensions for explanations of nature
By Alvin Powell
Gazette Staff
Nima Arkani-Hamed is searching exotic places for clues to questions about our universe's construction and the gravitational glue that holds it together. Arkani-Hamed, a theoretical physicist who was appointed professor of physics last July, is looking at places so exotic they stretch beyond the dimensions we live in every day and may exist only in theories. Physicists describe our everyday world as having four dimensions. The first three are the familiar width, length, and height. The fourth dimension is time, because something has to have a life span - just as it needs the three dimensions that give it shape - in order to exist. Arkani-Hamed is investigating fifth, sixth, and higher dimensions to see what they'll tell him about the universe. He's looking for clues to the mysteries of why gravity is so weak compared with other basic forces in the universe. He's also searching for missing pieces in our understanding of the physical laws of nature.

15. Boolean Searching
It assumes you are already familiar with Boolean searching the basic commands thatare all most people need Power searching For Anyone This teaches you advanced
http://searchenginewatch.com/facts/boolean.html

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16. Data Search -- FreeFind.com
most people are familiar with normal site searching a user searches yoursite to find the page that contains the keywords they are looking for.
http://www.freefind.com/datasearch.html

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Data Search Patent Pending
Database-style searching... ...without the database! FreeFind.com offers two types of site searching, normal site search and a new type of searching called "data search". Most people are familiar with normal site searching: a user searches your site to find the page that contains the keywords they are looking for. However, many sites would rather index lists of items ( i.e. records ) rather than entire pages. For that reason we've added a novel "data search" option to the industry leading site search engine. Contents Benefits
Who Should Use It

Demonstration

Policies
... Where To Go From Here For example, suppose you have a web site that contains recipes. A user comes by looking for recipes that use curry. The user enters "curry" in the search box and press "search". A normal site search would return a list of your pages that contain the word curry. A data search would return the actual recipes that contain the word curry, complete with your formatting, icons, pictures etc. While data search is more difficult to set-up than normal site search (you need to be very familiar with the HTML language ), it has unique capabilities and can be a tremendous benefit to your users.

17. 2eRésumés 101: Web Résumés
a lot more to recruiting and job searching than just posting to and searching fromrésumé The most familiar purpose of a file is to save the work you've done
http://www.eresumes.com/tut_webresume.html

ABOUT
BOOK eRESUMES 101 GALLERY ...
Résumés
Web Résumés:
Web Résumé Design Guidelines
Example Web Résumé
Best of the Web Résumés
More Examples
Keyword Résumés ... Home
Getting Started Transform your personal Web pages into an interactive portfolio With the current job market favoring the candidate, recruiters are increasingly using the Web to get sense of who’s in the marketplace. In fact, companies are using a variety of sources to identify strong candidates, and Web resumes posted on the Web is one such source. Read more.... Web-based Résumés: Just One Tool in the Online Jobseeker's Toolbox http://www.quintcareers.com/Web-based_résumé.html There is a lot more to recruiting and job searching than just posting to and searching from résumé databases. That's why your job-search toolbox should include several kinds of résumés, including a Web version. This article tells you what they are.
FreeWebspace.net
http://www.freewebspace.net/search/advanced.shtml

18. 2eRésumés 101: How To Apply For Jobs Online By Choosing Your Best Electronic R
The most familiar purpose of a file is to save The three most popular file formatsfor transferring resumes lot more to recruiting and job searching than just
http://www.eresumes.com/tut_eresume.html

ABOUT
BOOK eRESUMES 101 GALLERY ... LINKS Teach old resumes new tricks eResumes 101 ASCII Résumés HTML
Résumés
Web Résumés ... Home
eRésumé s 101:
Choosing your best electronic résumé format
The purpose of an electronic résumé is to apply for jobs online that produce interviews. There are three popular methods for applying for jobs online: 1) via electronic mail or e-mail; 2) via electronic forms or e-forms; 3) or via the World Wide Web as a Web page.
If you want to submit your résumé via e-mail, or post it directly to a résumé database via an e-form, go to the ASCII Plain Text Résumé tutorial for step-by-step instructions (as seen on CareerPath.com's "A guide to creating a good electronic resume that is easily searched by CareerPath.com's business customers" Job Hunting 101 Special Report). If you want to create your r ésumé in a word processor and send it as an e-mail attachment, go to the section on ASCII Rich Text R ésumés for more information.

19. Text Analysis Software
The easiest textsearching system is the one that is probably most familiar; mostword processing programs (WordPerfect, Microsoft Word) allow one to search
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/textual.html
Text Analysis Software Available at the Electronic Text Center
Word Processors The easiest text-searching system is the one that is probably most familiar; most word processing programs ( WordPerfect Microsoft Word ) allow one to search for text in a document, even one as large as several megabytes. OpenText OpenText, our primary text analysis software, is the searching tool for all our on-lin texts, used through its Web interfaces. OpenText handles SGML tagging well, and its great speed produces little slowing in function even on files as large as one gigabyte (1000 megabytes). For more information, see the OpenText homepage.
http://www.opentext.com Collate A Macintosh program, Collate enables a user to compare the text of up to one hundred different versions of a single work. Users are able to switch base texts, alter the process of collation by telling Collate to ignore certain idiosyncracies if necessary, and produce many different output formats, all with the point- and-click simplicity of the mouse. Collate accepts SGML mark-up in its texts, and tacitly encourages its use by requiring some form of tagging within the document.

20. I Guess Most Of You Are Familiar With The ECPA For We Have Been
For most of these books, and for their preservation large groups of users becomemore familiar with materials to create an imagebase to facilitate searching.
http://portico.bl.uk/gabriel/old/cenl/annual/ecpa.html

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