Different targets, different
techniques
Omnis feret omnia tellus
~ Targets ~
Fravia+
(msre)
...
search
strainers
&
gates
Updated March 2009
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Different targets, different techniques... so obvious and
yet, at the same time, so incredibly underestimated! Seekers know that each
kind of quarry has specific
characteristics and parameters they should take account of... Lovely and
lively moving little quarryes, dancing
on our 'evershifting' web of quicksand sites... Nuggets of pure altruistic
knowledge hidden among the
foul-smelling and evil-blobbing commercial sargassos seas... Oh my!
How are we supposed to track
our targeted results down, to aim our seeker sharp arrows at our signal,
when everything moves so quickly?
Yet EVERYTHING is out there!
Omnis feret omnia tellus! We can learn how to find ANYTHING on the web.
Anything! Indeed the web is so huge that -with almost no exceptions-
searching in the correct way will enable you to find anything you may
be looking for. Any image, any music, any book, any document, any data,
any software (proprietary or not), any newspaper
published in the history of mankind. Whole national libreries are
going on line in this very moment in some godz-forgotten country somewhere
in Africa or Asia. Half a million people are putting in the
very 5 seconds you are reading this half a million scanned images on some god
forgotten homepage. Another 200 thousand users are
uploading, in THESE five seconds 200 thousand mp3,
somewhere on the web.
Some of these books, of these images, of these musics, have never been on the web
before. But they will now remain on Internet for the ETERNITY, and you will find
them even if their Authors have pulled them down!
Well, let's first of all improve our "searching Shahin" (this is of course
a sine qua non in order to find whatever - and I mean whatever - we are looking
for). For
this reason, as you'll notice,
some sections of this lore will remain "closed" to you until you develop
your egoistical searcher's Heijoshin into a more capable ethical
seekers' Fudoshin, hehe :-)
New ad hoc section How to search for books and texts
New ad hoc section How to search for images
A possible slightly "mp3 related" question is: once you find a music snippet
that may be patented (they call them "copyrights", but in fact they just mean "patents") shall/can you
download it?
"Latet anguis in herba", ya know, and patents have been made to last longer and longer (nobody seems
exactly to know why patents should last so long, btw:
already around 70 years long in most copyright-enslaved countries), besides
as you will see in the following there are infinite wondrous musics downloadable
in the public domain, so that you hardly will need to fetch
patented stuff.
Yet the question remains:
can you download stuff that could be patented?
This is a very difficult question to answer: there are
several philosophical schools on such matters.
Some say that if a mp3 is on the web and you can download it, then you may in bona
fide assume that it is probably in the public domain (else they would not have uploaded it at all, would they?)
But be careful, and if in doubt, don't steal. Seekers do not need to hoard on their harddisks anything.
Whatever you find will anyway always remain somewhere in the void-forest,
ready to be plucked once more should you need it again :-)
Everything that lands on the web is bound to be copycatted a zillion times and hence remain available
forever to those that know the fine lore of searching.
Just hear it on line, find it again and again
everywhere using clever searchstrings, enjoy hearing it on the fly. Carpe diem that's the secret of the seeker: the web
was made for sharing knowledge, not for selling it.
Rest assured: your mp3, your music snippet target, any music, any program, any musical score, any musical sheet,
will be out there, somewhere, and once it has been there, it will already have been copycatted for the eternity.
You'll find it,
provided you know how to search.
Streams ~
Mp3 ~
Audio quests ~
Audio search engines ~
The music blogs phenomenon
Streams
There is a section ad hoc
about de-streaming.
You'll also find some info about total recorder (an interesting tool for sound streams
capture) here
MP3
Should you simply want to dig out of the net some mp3 on the fly, behold the power of FAST (alltheweb):
In fact once upon a time you could find your favourite mp3 songs using the name of the
author (for instance dylan)
and stating that the document must include "index of/mp3"
in the title: here is a old FAST's Bob Dylan's ad hoc
[mp3 search].
Nowadays,
however, you need some better webbits:-)
Note that all kinds of "index +of" seekers'
trick is worth studying, even if obsolete, because slight variants of it still work :-)
Sound quests and "musical searching" essays
In June 2002 I published A musical riddle for the sommer, that you will be able to hear
if you wait for it to load
[here].
Our fellow seekers
went
out
of
their
way in
order to solve it. Many sound and music search tricks lurk in these threads, for the patient
readers that will adventure inside :-)
-
[909Essay.htm]: Elusive angles: dark 909 - light z404 search
~ ("I have a couple of searches myself that I've begun maybe 2 years ago. One of them I was able to complete in one hour or so when I resumed it after the 909 ordeal:)"
by ~S~ vvf and ~S~ Jeff,
part of the [Essays].
Wizard searching!
-
[irc_vvf.htm]:
An Opera/IRC/Mp3 searching essay (pulling MP3 trough Opera's IRC client)
by vvf, July 2004
Part of the irc searching essays & sounds
sections.
Audio Search engines and tools
A tool for usenet music search is Audiofind, for instance
dylan blonde
Another interesting search engine for or audio & video content (even content based on speech recognition)
is
SpeechBot, that currently indexes 14553 hours of content.
Here its powersearch mask.
The music blogs phenomenon
musicblogs.htm: Searching among Music Blogs , How to fetch da beef without wading into the blogs,
A list of mp3 bloggers and
Searchlores' own music blog
~ How to find any file stored on this planet ~
(yes: any!)
This section is closed to non seekers :-)
Yet - in the mean time - you may learn something nevertheless: either visiting
the file searching lore section or reading the Catching
web-rabbits approach. You may also trying the following approaches:
file searching lore
subsection
Autonomus Citations Index
researchindex direct
Blah blah: "ResearchIndex is a scientific literature digital library that aims to
improve the dissemination and feedback of scientific literature, and
to provide improvements in functionality, usability, availability,
cost, comprehensiveness, efficiency, and timeliness".
Of course, for seekers,
the whole point is just to fish some names and/or some more 'angles'
out of the web-void in order to improve their own chances in finding a
specific quarry they were already hunting. This said, believe me (and The+Owl): it would be hard to underestimate the usefulness of
this tool. Note also that ResearchIndex computes citation statistics and related documents
for all articles cited in the database,
not just the indexed articles.
Only retrieving 2000 citations. Only a fraction of citations to each article may be shown.
Order: citations weighted by the expected number for a given year.
May the Abstract be with you, oh intrepid seeker! :-)
More:
[http://www.comtechelectronics.net/do%20docs/standards.html]
Standards and Cross References (ADSL-XML)
Sysadmin oriented indexes and search engines, all sort of documentation and information,
Pointers and Resources, FAQs, Descriptions, Standards and Protocols
[http://www.xrefer.com/]
XREFER
xrefer's contains encyclopedias, dictionaries,
thesauri & books of quotations.
All cross-referenced, all in one place
"Scholars" (University level essays) |
An incredible wealth of mostly useless and preposterous scripts...
Google has its own scholar search
For instance: http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=%22search+engines%22&btnG=Search&hl=en&lr=&safe=off&num=100
But the problem is that this scholar engine is strangely stale and gives a lot of obsolete results.
You may want to refine your scholar searches temporally with the two arrows below, posted by Nemo (here as an example: "euro dollar reserves":
euro dollar reserves "numrange:1-31 * 2004"
euro dollar reserves "january | february | march | april | may 2004"
And here we have Polonus' additions (November 2004)
These days I jump around in the fori, and whenever
I find some jewels while doing so, I try to share these with others.
One such a complete searchsite is OJOSE, a website
to search for scientific journals, papers &
information.
The link to go there is: http://www.ojose.com. Really a Swiss "top site".
It is a bit
like the Fagan Finder but for these search actions.
By the way for looking up general information there
is an experimental service ( one time it is up, then again down, so be aware)
from Southampton at: http://paracite.eprints.org/ . Really a
clever one, and worth to recommend.
I have learnt that we
must evaluate all results in these search areas
as well, and carefully so for here misinformation can reign
in subtlety and misleading information is a political bias, to explain this
in a clear manner just search for instance "25
subjects censored", or "top 25 censored stories" and you will see what I mean, and why
Email providers "Syrupping" |
See also the ad hoc sections "free" (sic) email repositories and
where to upload stuff
I decided to call this "email providers finding" trick syrupping :-)
A useful way to find all over the world "free" email address
providers, inter alia exactly those very providers and/or
servers that do not care too much about
aliases, about being exploited and about anonymous logging,
in fact syrupping uses the very SPAMMERS' attacks in order to find the providers.
Very elegant method, I think: In fact syrupping
uses the forces of evil for nobler purposes :-)
It recalls, to a minor and humbler extent,
the great tricks described in Nemo's Search Engines Anti-Optimization
(Get your own stop words!)
essay and in WayOutThere's
Reversing to Enhance and Expand famous essay
about Copernic reversing.
Ingredients: spammers, yahoo, usenet, dubious internet sites
Results: huge lists of free emailproviders
Time required: takes coupla day to kick in, but then it will produce syrup continuously
Preparation:
1) You create a fake id, say on yahoo, that you will use only for syrupping and then you'll let sink into oblivion, sagged by spam.
2) You subscribe your fake address to religous nuts magazines, porn-a-day services, jokes-a-day, brides in orient, all the possible
crap and worst the commercial web-morasses have on offer.
3) You get a zillion nasty spammers stinging dicho fake address, like bees on the syrup
4) You now use yahoo's own facility "this is spam" to denounce spammers to yahoo and thus you get
A NICE LIST with all those spammers' addresses, from lola@arawwuzz.com to 32442@Ziloteptera.org
(alternatively you just grep them with your scripts :-)
The important part for us is of course the providers list, those after the @ in the address :-)
5) Ta-daa: you grep a very long list of email providers, and - as an added bonus -
rather dubious ones for that matter (or weak public servers taht have been Xploited by spammers, which means we can Xploit
them too when spreading lore :-)
Here, for instance, some idiot spammers fished
fresh today on a normal and protected account (hence imagine how many
you will fish once you spill syrup all over the web table :-)
marietta.romano_og@getgo.de
deloressumner_bf@keele.ac.uk
newsreel@hlyw.chtah.com
rsobyrne@hamptonfinancial.com
sferreirarq@jeff-lab.queensu.ca
tantalumn@juno.com
A big danke to ~S~ Gregor Samsa for some of the following
pointers
[http://www.symbols.com/index/wordindex-a.html]
(main cat)
[http://www.symbols.com/section/6/category/15/]
(graphic index)
[http://www.symbols.com/section/6/category/18/]
(Advanced graphic index)
http://www.vectorportal.com/symbols/type.asp?iType=66: "Vectorportal" symbols
[http://www.levity.com/alchemy/alchemical_symbols00.html]
Alchemical symbols, from Abstrahere to Zinziber
A brief digression about books searching on google print (or on amazon).
For symbols, an uncountornable book is
W. Cecil Wade's "The Symbolisms of Heraldry" or "A Treatise on the Meanings and Derivations of Armorial Bearings".
Published in London in 1898 and thus
not copyrighted anymore.
All books are very easy to find on the web anyway, the patent mafias powers that be and their political lackeys notwithstanding.
You can e.g. search inside this book in googlebooks... a.*|e.*|i.*|o.*|u.* to get
a wallop of pages and snippets and then with a small
script à la "butler" or "customizegoogle" you might try to
retrieve automatically many pages.
Of course with a.*|e.*|i.*|o.*|u.* some pages could still escape:
the old trick for a comprehensive (all pages) search is
to use "la totale" "the | of | to | and | a | in | is | it | you | that | he | was | for | on | are | with | as | I | his | they | be | at | one | have | this | from | or | had | by | hot | word | but | what | some | we | can | out | other | were | all | there | when | up | use | your | how | said | an | each | she | which | do | their | time | if | will | way | about | many | then | them | write | would | like | so | these | her | long | make | thing | see | him | two | has | look | more | day | could | go | come | did | number | sound | no | most | people | my | over | know | water | than | call | first | who | may | down | side | been | now | find | any | new | work | part | take | get | place | made | live | where | after | back | little | only | round | man | year | came | show | every | good | me | give | our | under"
(or some
variants thereof, there's a 32 words upper limit since 2005).
Now the problem is that -for crappy patent
enforcement reasons- many pages ARE BLOCKED FOR ALL USERS (both in google and in amazon) even
for books like this, that should be in the public domain.
And you cannot easily retrieve all pages of abook through googlebooks.
through the above query, you'll easily gather enough arrows in order to find
your targets (patented or not) elsewhere
on our lovely deep and fathomless wide web :-)
Google books galore
It is worth pointing out that seekers have recently (March 2009) found the way to -ahem- "recuperate integrally" most (if not all)
among the million
books scanned and stored by googlebooks... cum bona pace of the most vociferous and patent-obsessed
lackeys of the patent holders' mafias. While
this can be easily accomplished by any educated seeker, we did choose NOT to create an ad hoc script to avoid commercial
misuses by the unwashed and low life leechers.
If you are interested in this, visit and peruse the seeker's messageboard, where you'll quikly find (use our amazing "namazu"
search engine) more than
enough hints and/or more detailed explanations...
(c) 3rd Millennium: [fravia+], all rights reserved