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The Invisible Web (Part 2) - WWW Virtual Library, CompletePlanet & Infoplease

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WWW Virtual Library

What better way to explain what the WWW Virtual Library is than to quote it directly:

‘The WWW Virtual Library (VL) is the oldest catalogue of the web, started by Tim Berners-Lee, the creator of HTML and of the web itself, in 1991 at CERN in Geneva.’

Description: Description:  The WWW Virtual Library

The WWW VL comes with some impressive credentials, and it’s hosted in East Anglia!


I suppose you can’t get better credentials than that. The WWWVL is maintained by a large group of volunteers who look after certain areas of content, following strict guidelines set down by the Council of the VL. While it doesn’t contain and link to every item of the invisible web, it certainly does an admirable job of pulling in hundreds of results that would never appear on Google.

Additionally, as well as beinghosted by mirrors from all over the world, the longest residing in Argentina, you can search directly via the East Anglia mirror located here: vlib.org.uk. A quick example of the type of results you would expect from the WWWVL appears when you type in ‘Stratospheric Ozone Depletion’ – something, no doubt, at the tip of your tongue. After a brief pause, you’ll be presented with a selection of results from various scientific organisations and libraries from across the globe.

CompletePlanet

Description: Description: BrightPlanet is fast becoming the gateway to the invisible web.

BrightPlanet is fast becoming the gateway to the invisible web.


Labelled as the ‘front door to the Deep Web’, CompletePlanet was originally developed by the BrightPlanetgroup to identify and tap into the wealth of information that’s usually hidden from the normal search engine.

CompletePlanet works by scanning the various fields represented in the hundreds of thousands of databases that are out there, collating the metadata and finally beaming it back to your desktop. As CompletePlanet states, it’s capable of ‘Finding databases with highly relevant documents that cannot be crawled or indexed by surface web search engines.’

By its own admission, though, it only scratches the surface of these databases, bringing up the relevant tags based on the keywords you entered. For a deeper probe into the much deeper layers of the databases, you’ll need a more specialised tool, such as the Deep Query Manager (DQM), which is also from the BrightPlanet group and nicely advertised on the CompletePlanet site. There’s nothing quite like a little self-advertising every now and then.

Anyway, back to the CompletePlanet by pointing your collective browsers to aip.completeplanet.com. As with a few of the other invisible web search engines, you’ll notice there’s number of categories available from which to search. A good one to start with is the ‘Products and Technology’ link, which will yield a rather impressive 1,000 hits from databases around the world, and different institutes.

Infoplease

Description: Description: from to www.infoplease.com

Advert crazy Infoplease, but it’s a rather good site.


Information Please, as the site is officially known, has been answering factual questions since 1938, obviously not as a website, but rather starting life as a popular radio quiz show, which lasted up to the 1950s. After that, it then became an annual almanac (which is still going, apparently), and then on to the WWW from 1998, so as you can imagine the Infoplease site has quite a lot going for it.

These days, it’s a part of the Pearson education group, as well as the Financial Times and the Penguin Group, which at least means you’re in good company when you land on its page. It’s also one of the most adver-heavy search engines we’ve come across, with continual running commercials gracing the edges of the page, and even the occasional pop-up asking if you fancy owning an iPad.

However, despite the gross sell-out to advertising, Infopleaseis actually a very good invisible web search engine. By pointing your browser to www.infoplease.com, you’ll notice it as a vast number of searchable databases to trawl through. There’s an atlas, which will produce an interactive globe packed to the rafters withgeographical, political and territorial information. There’s an encyclopaedia that delves into the vast fountain of knowledge of the academic advisors of the mighty Columbia Encyclopaedia. The list goes on – dictionaries, thesauruses, timelines – and there are even quizzes for children and adults.

Also, each month hosts a particular theme; at the time of writing, Infoplease was celebrating Black History Month, so there’s really no excuse for not doing that homework due to lack of information.
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