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HotBot Returns

iosphere writes "Terra Lycos put out a 'new and improved' HotBot today. The interface has been redone with search results courtesy of either FAST, Google, Inktomi, or Teoma." HotBot was one of my favorite search engines, back in the day.

3 of 217 comments (clear)

  1. Why not all 4 at once? by tbmaddux · · Score: 5, Informative
    I saw this on Google News and went to check it out, but got annoyed quickly when I couldn't search all four engines at once with collated results. It can't be that hard to do.

    Plus they dumped at least 10 cookies on me. Google only uses one. I'll keep Googling...

    --
    Can't you see that everyone is buying station wagons?
  2. Inktomi is the same as it always was by yerricde · · Score: 4, Informative

    Since it isn't using its own engine, you should be fine...

    Yes it is. What many of us think of as the "HotBot engine" is actually the Inktomi engine, which is still available on HotBot and is in fact the default. (The others are FAST, Teoma, and the yardstick by which all others are measured.)

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  3. Re:Strike one against Mozilla. by Alric · · Score: 4, Informative

    I am not an expert in this area, but I think the following information is accurate.

    MS Internet Explorer uses many proprietary html tags and attributes.

    Mozilla was designed to read all of the W3C Standards for website design.

    If a site displays well on IE but poorly on Mozilla, it is often the case that the designers of the site focused on developing for IE and gave much less thought to being a standards-compliant site.

    I don't know if this is the case with Hotbot, but this is an example of how a website could gain a "strike" because Mozilla does not display it as well as IE does.

    BTW, I use Mozilla 1.2.1 on W2k at work, and I love it. It is so far superior to IE, IMO. The only feature I miss is the Google Toolbar, but Mozilla has a more robust search tab that can be configured more than the Google bar.