Time for some more questions and
answers.
Q. From the way
Google handled
our "questions"--not just the main one about the blue sky,
but also the ones about the common words it wouldn't deal
with--you'd think
that a machine was behind it all, wouldn't you?
A. Yes, which
leads to principle No. 1 about search engines:
Principle No. 1:
There's nobody out there.
Q. Meaning?
A. Meaning (you
probably knew this) that
Google runs on some very
high-capacity computers using programs known as algorithms
to process searches.
And to say that
Google
(or any search engine) "thinks," as we
did on the previous page, is to be guilty of
anthropomorphism. Look
it up in the Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary.
Q. Only a
computer could search the web so fast, right?
A. Yes and no.
When you input a search to
Google,
you are not searching the web. Which leads
to...
Principle No. 2:
You don't search the web; you search the
databases of
search engines which have already searched the web and
saved the results.
The typical search engine has a program―sometimes
called a "spider"―which "crawls"
the web and gathers pages. The pages are stored,
or "cached" on the search engine's server. When you do
a search, you don't search the web; instead, you
search the search engine's database of cached web pages.
Then when the search engine shows you the results of your
search, it gives you links to the actual pages.
Q. Wait a minute!
"Spiders" that "crawl" the web?! How does this
really work? How do these "spiders" decide which
pages to include in the search engine's database? How
can a search engine possibly store the whole web? Why
does one page containing my search terms come to the
top of the list and not another?
A. More great questions!
We'll try to answer them next.