Web’s Biggest Search Engine Summarizes 10 Million Websites
February 25, 2005 — The Web’s Biggest (www.websbiggest.com) search engine now features brief summaries of more than 10 million websites. The company uses information gathered by its web crawler to summarize what each website is about.
Users can then search those website summaries. The result is a superior way to find the top websites on a particular topic, rather than just pages which contain the search words.
Searchers can even change the descriptions of websites they are familiar with. Since search results are based in part on website descriptions, this lets individual searchers change everyone’s search results.
The search engine stores all past descriptions of websites in a database so other users can undo or correct descriptions.
This makes Web’s Biggest the world’s biggest “wiki.” Wiki is software that allows users to collectively author web documents.
“Letting users edit search results creates some surprising results,” says company spokesperson Paul Aunger. “And having hundreds of thousands of editors makes Web’s Biggest unique among search engines.”
Web’s Biggest has licensed the entire Whois database of more than 40 million domain names. This enables them to search almost every website in the world. Other search engines rely on hyperlinks and manual submissions to find websites.
In a recent study done by the company, other search engines missed a third to more than half their websites. The company has set up a random search page (http://www.websbiggest.com/randomsearch.html) so the public can verify their claims.
The Web’s Biggest (www.websbiggest.com) search engine lets users sort their search results so the most popular websites display first. Search results also include the Web’s Biggest “Popularity Rank.” This tells searchers how popular websites are based on the number of visitors they receive from all sources.
The popularity rank comes from monitoring the web surfing habits of millions of people. The number of visits each website receives is counted and ranked compared to all others.
Most search engines rank search results by the number of hyperlinks pointing to a website. “Website traffic tells you how popular a website really is — hyperlinks don’t always,” says Aunger.
Web’s Biggest also offers searchers the option of sorting search results by relevancy if they prefer.
Contact: Adam Radly
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