WhitePages.com has launched a new people search application that will allow users to find information they need on a specific individual. The search will now include Web results from providers and an email database of verified addresses.
Searching Through The CIA
The Freedom of Information Act has enabled many people to request previously classified documents from federal agencies. Few agencies elicit as much interest from individuals as does the Central Intelligence Agency.
Searching for Trust
Blake Ross of Mozilla chides Google for giving preferential placement to their own apps as “Tips” in search results.
Searching For Music This Christmas
What is your favorite Christmas song? Are you a fan of the traditional hymns like Silent Night or do you prefer the more contemporary songs like Jingle Bell Rock? Do you know all of the 12 Days of Christmas? Are you waiting patiently for your Winter Wonderland to arrive?
Searching For Commando Pics
There’s a lesson to be learned here – if you are a fallen pop star that’s getting loads of bad press because of a tabloid fodder marriage, there may be a way to reclaim your buzz – show the paparazzi what’s underneath your skirt. Just ask Britney Spears.
Google Patent – Full-Text US Patent Searching
Off lately Google has introduced a new service, Google Patents search engine through which people can search full-text of US patents dating back to 1790 till middle of 2006.
Searching For A Google Christmas
Google’s weekly report on the top search gainers, Zeitgeist, came with its usual disheartening revelations, boxed and wrapped by Christmas fanfare.
Google Aids Visually Impaired Searching
Google enhances features of its search engine to accommodate visually impaired user queries.
What Will Searching Look Like in the Future?
Since its inception, not so very long ago, the internet has evolved to a point where it is virtually unrecognizable from its original form.
On The Sublimity of Searching AOL
A week into news about AOL’s ginormous data dump and investigators have yet to tire of mining the minds of AOL users. As mirror sites spring up to face server overload as a product of morbid curiosity, the tales, well, inferences mostly, become darker and darker.