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10. What Is This All About?20. Using the Site Search Feature
30. Search Engines and Other Helpers40. Search Tips
10. What Is This All About?The forum is frequented by many site users who try their best to be helpful to others, and who bring some impressive skills at searching and solving problems. The forum is moderated by:
by KeysCapt The regulars of Difficult Searches and Questions may not come up with the answer but they (like all who have tried before them) will try their best to help. by MSeng 20. Using the Site Search Feature
![]() by KeysCapt You can search the site from the top right of almost any page, or in any forum from the search box. This search engine has its limitations: It will not search for phrases, or multiple words adjacent to each other. It also does not explicitly support Boolean searches, such as "Cable AND expensive", "router OR switch", etc. Putting your search words in quotes does not work. ------------------ The search functionality that IS provided is equivalent to a Boolean "AND" of each term you enter. Thanks to truckeean for this entry. You can now construct a link to the Topic Search (upper right corner in each forum main page to search for a topic in a forum. Here's how: /topicsearch/forum-name/topic where forum-name is the actual forum name, and topic is the topic you'd like to search. For example: To search for all topics related "NetBEUI" in Networking forum, one would do: /topicsearch/sharing/netbeui ----- Thanks to graffixx for this entry.
![]() Why no longer than 60 days? Paging through popular forums can be a big source of site timeouts. For the system to show you topics from 100-150 days ago, it must pull and sort in date order all topics in the last 6 months in that forum. That can take an excessive amount of time if the site is also busy, and during that time, nobody can post/edit/reply at all.
![]() The more detail you can enter, the better chance of success your search will have. Entering the poster's name, selecting the appropriate forum, and using keywords as unique as possible will all assist in conducting a successful and more rapid search. Do not use quotes ... they don't work. Note: If you use ONE search word, the search will only check the first 5000 instances of that word, across ALL posts made site-wide regardless of user, and if the search word is even a little bit common, a warning is displayed that you need more terms. If you use TWO or more search words, and put the more uncommon word first, (this speeds the search, although not necessary), then you will see much better results.
by KeysCapt by DSmithLady 30. Search Engines and Other HelpersDSLR/BBR Searches Wayback Machine Google Search of DSLReports Google Search of BroadbandReports Google Viewer for BroadbandReports Google Viewer for DSLReports Google Viewer Other Search Engines Google Image Search Teoma Vivisimo Wisenut iLor Trivia Search Search Engine List Librarians Index to the Internet MetaCrawler Domain Surfer Feedster NewsTrove TouchGraph
by KeysCapt Google News Search Daypop NewsNow AOL Comcast MSN Yahoo Encyclopedia Britannica Encyclopedia Smithsonian Library of Congress MSN Encarta RefDesk Wikipedia 40. Search Tips
Start your search in any forum. The important thing to note is using the search button located under the logout button didn't yield the proper screen. In the subsequent screen, enter the "Joined" date in the search box because it shows up in all posts: 2001-03-26 then hit enter. This takes you to the next screen, which may tell you there is no specific match. You can customize this screen to add additional search criterion. Plug in a name for "username", change the forum to search in from "Canadian" to "All" for instance, and change "Topics only" to "All text" then clicke "Older to...1999". If you're lucky, only one post will show up. You can do the search again using the same method, only this time, when you receive that post as a result, click on the post and then select the thread the post was attached to (listed in the top right corner of the page) and find out even more about the post. ----- Thanks to Michael for this procedure.
by DSmithLady As an experiment, I went off to find an old post I made in all-things-unix. Using two search words (rpm and chroot), and searching by user, I could find it easily. Of course, the more information you have, (i. e. user name) the easier the search. NOTE: If a thread has been LOCKED it will not come up in a search. ---------- Credit for this information goes to justin
by DSmithLady glitch has occurred. For example, let's say there is a glitch (probably memory full) that has removed the L-Z index of 2002. So you can find it by searching for ftpd, but not for ftpd+telnetd or ftpd+linux etc. If you think you have found a glitch, report it in the Site Bugs or Site Help forums and someone will check it out for you.
by DSmithLady | ||||||||||||||||
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