Carnegie Library
Resource Page

To find information on the internet, use a specific website called a Search Engine.   Search engines work by matching key words that you type into them. For example: if you wanted to find fly fishing opportunities in Montana, you might type in the key words Montana, fly fishing.  Every Search Engine has a place for you to type your key words.  Below are several search engines for you to use.  This page taken from the Surfing the Net Class created by Sam Spector for the Partners in Learning Community Classes.  You can take this class online by clicking on the link Surfing the Net Class.  

Multiple Search Engines
Mamma.com Dog Pile  
 

Search Engines

Pro Fusion Library Spot Google Zen Search
Infoseek Yahoo! Magellan Webcrawler
Lycos Snap Starting Point Hot Bot
eXcite! Mining Company northernlight.com search Ask Jeeves!

 

Specific Search Engines

Specific Search Engines Listed below are:

Law

Zip Code Directory and Movers Guide Lists of Lists Online Dictionary
Medical Libraries Online Libraries Maps Colleges and Universities

 

A great resource found on the internet is search engines that specialize in something.  I call these Specific Search Engines.  Listed below are some examples of Specific Search Engines and Websites useful for research. These would be great resource sites to put in your favorites or bookmark!

Law

For example LawCrawler http://www.lawcrawler.com/ and Rominger Legal http://www.romingerlegal.com/ search only through law related websites. All federal laws are online. You can look at the United States Code http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/ . New laws in the making, your senators and representative are all available through Thomas Legislative Information on the Internet http://thomas.loc.gov/home/thomas.html . This can save you a lot of time if you are doing some legal research.

Zip Code Directory and Movers Guide

ZIP+4 Code Look-Up Engine   - Look Up a Zip Code with the +4 extention so that your mail will get there faster

http://www.usps.gov/moversnet/
- Moving?  Here is a great place start your move. Maps, Moving Tips, Changing your address, Getting Settled, Mail Forwarding, Notifying others of your move.

 

Lists of Lists

Finally, these two lists have loads of resources for your research: The LLNL List of Lists http://www.llnl.gov/llnl/lists/listsl.html and Front Page’s Collection of Search Engines http://www.the frontpage.com/search/search.html

Online Dictionary

The nicest dictionary online is the Hypertext Webster http://work.ucsd.edu:5141/cgi-bin/http_webster/ . The WWW Acronym and Abbreviation server http://www.ucc.ie/info/net/acronyms/ is perfect for finding out what they really mean

Medical Libraries Online

Q: My daughter has a bad case of Iritis, an eye condition that threatens to render my daughter blind. I'm interested in finding more information on this topic on the Internet. Can you help me find information with this as an example? Sam

A : Start your search at the most factual sources and proceed to the ones more likely to be gossip. First, search the medical libraries online. There is a nice list of medical libraries at http://galaxy.einet.net/galaxy/Reference/Libraries/Medical-and-Health-Science.html. Then search the web for "Medical Resources" in any of the popular search engines like Yahoo, Excite, Alta Vista, Infoseek and so on. You can use DejaNews at http://www.dejanews.com/ to search for the most likely Usenet newsgroup to find the group that discusses iritis and past articles about the disease. And you can also post new articles and responses using DejaNews or your own newsbrowser. Finally, consider getting on a Listserv Mailing list to understand how other parents are coping with the situation. Some good lists of mailing lists are http://www.neosoft.com/internet/paml/ and http://www.lsoft.com/lists/listref.html.

 

Libraries

CARL and UnCover http://www.carl.org/. are some of my favorite places to search through libraries on the web. You can check Purdue’s Library http://thorplus.lib.perdue.edu/reference/index.html and the Library of Congress http://lcweb.loc.gov/catalog/ directly online also.

Maps

Are you traveling somewhere, doing a project for your geography class, or just curious to know where in the world Timbuktu is? Try Mapquest http://www.mapquest.com/

Colleges and Universities

Are you interested in information about Universities and Colleges in United States, Canada and New Zeland? Look it up in College Net http://www.collegenet.com/ Then, if you need some financial aid, look in FinAid http://www.finaid.org/. They have over 180,000 sources for funds for you.

 

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