Google Hacks
The book in brief Google Hacks by Tara Calishain and Rael Dornfest and published by O'Reilly will appeal to an even wider audience, I can imagine buying this for friends who haven't cottoned on to 'net searching at all and friends who complain "Google returns too many sites." People who are afraid to code shouldn't be put off by the "Hacks" in the title: O'Reilly have obviously taken a wider meaning of "hack" than just a neat piece of code. This book is a marvelous compendium of tips and tricks for Google, ranging from simple ways of getting the search results you want, through using Google's newer services such as phone books and image search, all the way to advanced ways of using scrapers and the Google API.
The book demonstrates 100 hacks, of which close to half are useful for everyone -- newbie, programmer and non-programmer alike. The first 35 hacks, in chapters one and two, will educate you about the intricacies of getting the best out of searching both Google's main web catalog and the newer 'Special Services and Collections.' This is the part of the book that should be essential reading for Google users -- in the two days I've had this book these have proved invaluable. The rest are for those who are either looking for extremely advanced search tips, increasing their web site's Google page rank, or programming an application to use the Google data -- all topics well covered in this volume.
What's Good In This Book
To start, it is well written, well laid out with a good contents section, good index, and some appropriate introductory material before getting down to the first hack. Each of the hacks are numbered and a single hack will often cross-reference other hacks that add information relevant to it. The hacks in each chapter nicely add on each other in both complexity and function.
The hacks themselves seem to cover every area of Google that you might want. They range from the downright frivolous (there is a chapter "Google Pranks and Games") to serious ways of improving your search results and excellent examples of good ways to use the Google API.
Most of the code fragments are in Perl, and among the hacks are ways of getting the job done without over extensive use of extra modules such as XML Parsers and SOAP::Lite (including a hack that uses regular expressions to parse the XML).
What's Bad In This Book
It's hard to find anything bad to say, apart from some frustration that a couple of the hacks that interested me used ASP or VB rather than a more portable language.
Oh, another minor quibble, the allied web site O'Reilly Hacks Series has been slow and has none of the code in the book or any of the URLs mentioned listed anywhere -- it seems more geared towards marketing the books than helping the readers.
(DISCLAIMER: I use Rael Dornfest's Blosxom blog software and have contributed a plugin for his software.)
You can purchase Google Hacks from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
...misuses of the Google API could lead to them not allowing open access to it anymore, which would deny access to useful tools to proper users.
make sure you're using this Google...
You mean to tell me someone wrote a book that can give better options than "+" and "-"?
Nice... see you at bn.com!
100% Insightful
As if searching for pr0n wasn't easy enough...
Business \Busi"ness\, n.;
A scam in which all people involved perceive as beneficial...
[...] excellent examples of good ways to use the Google API. [...]
I had never heard of a Google API, so I did a search on Google (hah), and found this. You can use it in your software as a nice little feature. Would it be nice to have a google search option in the help section of your next software project? I like that idea.
Note to self: get smarter troll to guard door.
Go to Google.com.
Type in the search terms, "French military victories".
Click "I'm feeling Lucky".
Enjoy.
Google for:
"Index +of" $filename
The quotation marks are relavent.
There are some sample hacks on the O'Reilly webpage for the book, which is also available as part of the O'Reilly Safari Bookshelf for those that subscribe to the service.
Some of them are quite fun to muck around with.
This story explains how that works and who's behind it.
"I only speak the truth"
Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
Let's see here: Froogle! Ooh! The 5th result lists the book for $12.50. But then when I actually click on the link it's $15.50! Damn you, Froogle!
I'm sure if I had the book it would tell me how to hack Froogle into getting a lower price for the book. But then I'd already have the book...
Escape Pod Films: Sketch Comedy and Web Series
"how to * a cat"
Wild cards in Google. Who knew?
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