* * * * *
There was a time when search engines were a thing. And it seems they still
are
I was poking around in the deeper parts of my harddrive when I came across
the source code for Geofind [1], a metasearch engine I wrote back in the late
90s. A “metasearch engine” is a website that searches not the Internet, but
instead passes the search query to other search engines. Back in the 90s,
search engines weren't quite as good as they are now (although some might
contend that they aren't as good as they were a decade ago), but there were a
fair number of them, and the thought at the time was, “hey, if we query a
bunch of search engines at the same time, maybe one of them will have useful
results.”
In fact, quite a number of them. Unlike the … um … two? (Google [2] and Bing
[3]). maybe, three? (if you count DuckDuckGo [4], which I only know about
because of the circles I travel in on the Intarwebs) which exist today.
The last version of the code I have lists 10 engines, although I seem to
recall we had as many as 15 at one time. But here's the 10 engines we were
querying as of April 1999:
1. **Magellan**—once a search engine, now an apartment finder [5]. It's
probably not the same company, but I don't know for sure.
2. **Infoseek**—the domain [6] is now owned by Disney [7], which, I think,
now owns close to 50% of movies and television.
3. **Lycos**—**is still around!** It's still a search engine [8]! As stated
on their About page [9]: “Lycos, Inc. is a survivor. Established in
1995, we were originally a search engine ? before most people even knew
what a ‘search engine’ was. Times change, and Lycos, Inc. has changed
with them, evolving from a single search engine into a focused network
of community and social sites that include Gamesville.com
(Gamesville.com) [10], Tripod.com (Tripod.com) [11], Angelfire.com
(Angelfire.com) [12], and of course, Lycos.com (Lycos.com) [13].”
Incredible.
4. **FreeYellow.Com**—I think this was a site much like GeoCities [14], and
now, it still exists! [15] Although I don't see a search function, and
it's no longer free. Go figure.
5. **Webcrawler**—good Lord, it's still around [16]! And apparently, the
parent company runs its own metasearch engine [17].
6. **Yahoo**—still around [18] … somehow. And they still offer search …
somehow.
7. **Alta Vista**—is now Yahoo.
8. **Excite**—is also around [19]! It's a cluttered page that makes me
think they want to be like Yahoo, but hey, they still offer web search.
9. **HotBot**—it's still around [20]? Really? I mean, Yahoo, yeah, that's
still around. But five? In the era of Google [21]? I'm seriously
surprised by this.
10. **Goto.com**—no longer exists, and the domain now redirects to
GoToMeeting [22], an Internet based collaboration site.
I also found a section of my bookmarks labeled “GeoFind Search Engines,”
which includes a few more that weren't listed above. In this list we have:
1. **Clusty the Clustering Engine**—I used to use this one (and even
offered a search entry that pointed to it on this very site) until they
went all in on the Bible Code stuff [23]. They [24] seem to have
distanced themselves from the Bible Code stuff sometime in the past
eight years though.
2. **Gigablast**—is still around [25]. And its advanced query page [26]
certainly take me back to 1996.
3. **New Rider**—redirects to the global mobile operator at sea [27]. Okay.
4. **PointSearch**—is still around [28], in the “hyperlocal search” space.
5. **LinkStar**—gone entirely. Not even a domain squatter has the domain,
that's how dead this one is.
6. **Galaxy**—is still around [29]. Wow.
7. **Aliweb**—gone. All that's left is an article about the site [30].
8. **Tribal Voice**—gone. But unlike LinkStar, the domain is owned by a
domain squatter.
What is it with these nearly twenty year old sites still up? I mean, that's
great and all, but given that probably 80% of all sites I've linked to in my
blog have disappeared, I find it surprising that nearly 50% of the old search
engines are still around.
[1]
http://www.conman.org/people/spc/refs/search/
[2]
https://www.google.com/
[3]
http://www.bing.com/
[4]
https://duckduckgo.com/
[5]
http://www.mckinley.com/
[6]
http://infoseek.go.com/
[7]
http://www.disney.com/
[8]
http://www.lycos.com/
[9]
http://info.lycos.com/about/company-overview/
[10]
http://www.gamesville.com/
[11]
http://www.tripod.lycos.com/
[12]
http://www.angelfire.lycos.com/
[13]
http://www.lycos.com/
[14]
https://www.archiveteam.org/index.php?title=GeoCities
[15]
http://www.freeyellow.com/
[16]
http://www.webcrawler.com/
[17]
http://www.dogpile.com/
[18]
https://search.yahoo.com/
[19]
http://www.excite.com/
[20]
http://www.hotbot.com/
[21]
http://www.google.com/
[22]
https://www.gotomeeting.com/collaboration
[23]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/0Phlog:2010/05/29.2
[24]
http://yippy.com/
[25]
http://www.gigablast.com/
[26]
http://www.gigablast.com/adv.html
[27]
http://telenormaritime.com/
[28]
http://www.pointcom.com/
[29]
https://www.einet.net/
[30]
http://www.nexor.com/public/aliweb/search/doc/form.html
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