New Google features

The main Google search results now offer a new set of advanced search tools, via a drop-down left-hand sidebar…

newgoogle

The standard search-modifiers work with these new search types.

Most useful is the ability to sort results by the date at which they were located by the Google bot. No RSS feeds for this yet, but Feed my search offers something similar.

Second most useful is the ability to easily limit your search by time, searching only material from the last day, week or year. This was previously available via the Advanced search, but was fiddly. Now it’s a one-click option, integrated with the search results.

Other useful options allow you to view a custom Google Image search, with the images pulled from your search results, while retaining the search results alongside the images.

‘Wonder Wheel’ is a simple Flash-based ‘topic prompt’, which updates in real-time as you search. I can image that this might be useful for students.

banana

The Timeline is quite impressive — but also potentially dangerous, if students take it at face value and don’t realise that it’s constructed ‘on the fly’ by a bot.

timeline

The ability to search through bona fide discussion forums might also be useful for those seeking to track the buzz about their products. This can be combined with an option to search only reviews. Reviews can now be marked up by page authors using open formats, to help search-engines.

Re-inventing the online journal article

Francke, Helena (2008).
“Telling a different story in Open Access journals?”
Nordic-Baltic Forum for Scientific Communication. Volume 4, Number 2, 2008.

This interesting article explores…

“the possibility that research will be narrated in different ways” in online journals. “The discussion is based on a study of 265 open access journals. An indication that new ways of communicating research may be emerging is identified, although they are so far fairly uncommon.”

Winder on academic search

A detailed Information World Review article by the well-known Davey Winder, evaluating various academic search options from the point-of-view of a techie/journalist rather than a librarian. It’s a year old now, and seems to ignore the needs of the arts & humanities, but is still a useful everyman overview…

“One point often overlooked by many amateur researchers is that while the searching at IngentaConnect and Google Scholar may well be free, the hits generated often involve payment of some kind to access.”