Now that we have a grasp on what a search engine is and what
it does, let us travel back in time to the very first tool
created to search the Internet. This tool was named Archie,
which stands for 'archive' minus the 'v.' It was created by a
student named Alan Emtage in 1990. This program went out on the
Internet and downloaded the directories of all the files
located on public File Transfer Protocol or FTP sites and
created a searchable database of filenames.
The next step in search engines was created in 1991 by Mark
McCahill and was named the Gopher, after the small rodent that
burrows and digs through the dirt and the University of
Minnesota's mascot. Gopher, unlike Archie, indexed plain text
documents and since Gopher created text files, the Gopher sites
were easily converted to Web sites when the World Wide Web was
created.
Once Gopher was generally accepted as a viable search
option, other programs such as 'Veronica' and 'Jughead' were
developed to search the index files that Gopher created.
Veronica is an acronym for 'Very Easy Rodent-Oriented Net-wide
Index to Computerized Archives' and provided a keyword search
of Gopher's menu titles. Jonzy's Universal Gopher Hierarchy
Excavation And Display or Jughead for short obtained Gopher
menu information from various servers.
The first true search engine, now defunct, was named Wandex
and was developed in 1993 by Matthew Gray. Another search
engine that also appeared in 1993, and is working today, is
called Aliweb. Webcrawler was the first crawler based search
engine and came out in 1994. It differed from the previous
engines by allowing users to search for any word in ANY web
page. Lycos was also released in 1994 and quickly became a
major commercial enterprise.
Once the commercial market realized there was money to be
made many search engines appeared and fought for popularity.
Some of them still exist today, they are: Excite, Infoseek,
Inktomi, and AltaVista. These companies competed with
directories such as Yahoo in many ways causing directories to
add on search engine technology to offer greater
functionality.
So hopefully now you have a grasp of what a search engine
is, how it works, and the history of its development. Most of
us today that use the Web probably take this for granted but
let me assure you that before search engines existed finding
data was nearly impossible. I remember punch cards and
mainframes long before search engines were even thought of.
|