Google: The Missing Manual, Second Edition 155
Graeme Williams writes "In thinking about Google:
The Missing Manual, Second Edition it occurred to me that the Google search
box is like the Tardis -- there's a lot more inside that little box
than you expect. Writing a manual for Google must have felt a little bit like
writing a Manual of Everything, and I'm not sure I'm qualified to review Everything. However, I did read the book, and found a lot I
didn't know about Google and using it. You will too." Read the rest of Graeme's review.
Google: The Missing Manual, Second Edition | |
author | Sarah Milstein, J.D. Biersdorfer, Matthew MacDonald |
pages | xv + 446 |
publisher | O'Reilly Media |
rating | 9 |
reviewer | Graeme Williams |
ISBN | 0-596-10019-1 |
summary | An excellent overview, although understandably going out of date in real time |
Google: The Missing Manual, Second Edition adds two new authors, 151 pages and two chapters, Google Analytics and Gmail, to the first edition. One comment about the authors: Rael Dornfest, one of the two authors of the first edition, is included as an author in the online O'Reilly catalog entry but not in the actual paper book.
The first part of the book presents two related topics: searching and the search box. Because it's cumbersome to distinguish between searching for "blah blah blah" and "blah blah blah" (no quotes), I'll use slashes to delimit the text that goes into the search box: /"blah blah blah"/ versus /blah blah blah/.
The authors mention that a long time ago other search engines had pages that were slow to load, then Google introduced a fast loading search page with almost nothing on it, and partly because of that, it became popular. They single out Yahoo! as having a slow and bloated front page. But now Google has an alternative front page with more content, and Yahoo! has an alternative search page with less content. The comparison wouldn't be fair even if this was a book comparing Google and Yahoo!, and it isn't.
The book covers searching clearly and thoroughly, I'd be flabbergasted if you didn't discover something you didn't know. The book also presents nine other things you can type into the search box, such as /define:syzygy/, or /phonebook:white house washington dc/. You can find a list on the Google Web Search Features page. I think it's great that the authors included this section, although some of the "features" seem more robust than others.
The book explained one thing about searching I should have realized: the order of search terms matters. /red frog/ will give you slightly different results than /frog red/. For that example, the difference is small, but it's greater the more complicated the search. The authors would like more people to use the Search within Results feature: "Google has a great feature for helping you narrow down your results to find the really relevant pages, although almost nobody uses it". Almost nobody uses it because it's not all that useful. All it does is add the new term(s) to the end of your previous search. But to the extent that the order of search terms matters, maybe you want the new search term added to the beginning of the search. Or if you're searching for a phrase, perhaps the additional words should be part of the phrase, inside the quotes.
Here's one hack that's missing from the manual. Instead of enclosing a phrase in quotes, /"to be or not to be"/, you can replace the spaces with periods, /to.be.or.not.to.be/. This example turns out to fail, because Google thinks you're looking for a web site in Belgium, but it works most of the time. As a typing-impaired person I like it because it saves having to find the shift key.
The second part of Google: The Missing Manual is the largest part of the book, and the hardest to categorize. It's almost 200 pages long, and covers all the user features other than GMail and the basic search box. Depending on how you count them, there are over a dozen different services described, including desktop, image, news, and print search, shopping with Froogle, Google Local (which has absorbed maps), Groups, Answers, and the wireless and SMS interfaces. Browser features include searching from the sidebar, address bar, toolbar, Googlebar, buttons and bookmarklets.
When the book was written, the Google Deskbar was a search tool for the web with some useful specialized searches such as UPS and USPS, as well as the data indexed by desktop search. It had a miniviewer which I quite liked for looking at search results without opening a full browser window. The miniviewer has since disappeared, and the deskbar has morphed into the Google Desktop, which can appear either as a deskbar or a sidebar, and in the latter incarnation can be configured with multiple pop-out panes. There are other, less significant changes as well. If you have a Google account, your choices for personalized news are stored in your account, and news alerts is out of beta, and they're stored in your account as well. These changes affect the screenshots in the book more than the explanatory text.
Overall, the material in part two is very useful, even as it goes out of date. Just like other parts of the book, I'm sure you'll learn things you never knew, or have forgotten. During an excellent introduction to Froogle, Google's search-powered shopping service, the book reminded me of Google Catalogs, the service for searching catalogs.
The third part of the book is for webmasters, starting with a good introduction to the legitimate ways to structure your site to improve its ranking, as well as using a robots.txt file to hide some or all of your site from Google's spiders. Google: The Missing Manual also explains the two complementary programs for Google ads: Adsense is the service where Google provides ads for your site; Adwords is the service where you can advertise your site on Google, or on sites that have subscribed to Adsense. Finally, Analytics is a service for tracking visitors to your site. It integrates with Adsense but doesn't require it. At the moment, it's available only by invitation. Obviously, these services are of less general interest than the other parts of the book – you can't put Adwords on your MySpace or MSDN Spaces page.
The fourth part of Google: The Missing Manual describes Gmail. As with other parts of Google, there are new features that just don't appear in the book, like mailing lists or the built-in chat, as well as features that have moved around, like the new button for "Delete". Also, you used to need an invitation to sign up for GMail, but now you can sign up if you have a cell phone that can receive a text message from Google with a code in it.
The book mentions the fact that GMail includes a "standard HTML" mode for older browsers, but implies that this mode has limited functionality. I suspect that Google has improved the interface since the book was written, since I couldn't find any significant difference between the two modes, although the book does mention one difference: the lack of a spell checker in standard HTML.
The book confuses new messages, which Google doesn't keep track of, and unread messages, which are counted and displayed in bold.
The authors acknowledge (p 8) that between the time the book was written and the time it was published, Google will have introduced new services, such as Google Finance or Google Pages, as well as changes in existing services. Since it's not realistic to expect the book to describe the features Google put in yesterday, it might have made sense for the authors to mention when the contents of the book were frozen. It's sort of unfair, but a lot of this book will be ancient history in another year.
Despite the fact that some of the material in the book is out-of-date, I think everyone will find this book useful. When we get into a rut using programs and services in the same old way every time, we need a hard push to explore new features, and Google: The Missing Manual is just the thing to help learn more about Google. If you don't use Google, you should read it to find out all the neat features you're missing out on. If you DO use Google, you should read it to find out all the neat features you're not taking advantage of."
You can purchase Google: The Missing Manual, Second Edition from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Scanned? (Score:2, Funny)
Slightly OT - Google Notebook (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Slightly OT - Google Notebook (Score:2, Informative)
I am already a fan, mainly because of the "note this" feature it adds next to searches which is huge AFAIC.
Anyway, I think it rules.
Re:Slightly OT - Google Notebook (Score:1)
Re:Slightly OT - Google Notebook (Score:1)
so far, I really like the ease of adding notes to the notebook (it's nice that it's as simple as hilight and right-click with the firefox extension installed), but there are some things I'd change about the options for actuall
The Missing Manual.... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:The Missing Manual.... (Score:1)
404 File Not Found *Missing Manual?* (Score:2, Funny)
If you feel like it, mail the url, and where ya came from to pater@slashdot.org.
Way to get literal on me Slashdot.
Re:404 File Not Found *Missing Manual?* (Score:2)
This happens in rare cases when the article appears on the front page but the page it is linking to hasn't been created yet. I've never seen it take longer than 30 seconds to resolve.
Gmail (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Gmail (Score:2)
Hmm... no, and I have a couple of invites to sell you. interested?
Re:Gmail (Score:1)
Re:Gmail (Score:1)
I think it's to stop gmail from being used for spam.
Re:Gmail (Score:2)
Re:Gmail (Score:1)
Re:Gmail (Score:1)
Re:Gmail (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, it's still beta but considering how much things change on google why shouldn't it be included?
As for the invites? They're a dime a dozen. Infact I have enough invites right now to give 2 mail accounts to every Chinaman.
Re:Gmail (Score:2)
You can (providing you've got a mobile phone) get an account without any friends - Google SMS you an invite code.
https://www.google.com/accounts/SmsMailSignup1 [google.com]
The Manual of Everything... (Score:3, Funny)
TARDIS! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:TARDIS! (Score:2)
Re:TARDIS! (Score:2, Funny)
Graeme Williams gets several hundred bonus nerd points."
Excellent; we're finally narrowing in on that elusive exchange rate:
several hundred bonus nerd points == 5 Karma Whoring points
Re:TARDIS! (Score:2, Informative)
Unless of course you're referring to the title character of the 1960s American movie "Doctor Who And the Daleks", of course, which might make sense considering that 'Doctor Who' travelled around in the 'Tardis' which wasn't an acronym like TARDIS is.
Re:TARDIS! (Score:3, Informative)
True, but at the end of the show he's usually credited as 'Doctor Who' rather than 'The Doctor'.
Re:TARDIS! (Score:1, Informative)
The first season of the new series reverted it to "Doctor Who", however the second series has corrected this.
Re:TARDIS! (Score:2)
Re:TARDIS! (Score:1)
Re:TARDIS! (Score:2)
David Tennant (cf: Blackpool, Casanova) is the new Doctor, and he's already signed up for another year. Shows no signs of leaving, and is apparently a fan of the show from way back... I imagine we'll get a fair bit of mileage out of the Tenth Doctor.
Re:TARDIS! (Score:2)
Re:Please be Taking Remedial English (Score:1)
By the way, I'm assuming you're the same AC who originally complained about the use of the word dwindling, which incidentally was spot on. If you aren't, then you could probably mitigate that kind of confusion. I've heard there's a way to uniquely identify yourself when making a comment on Slashdot.
Re:Please be Taking Remedial English (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah... Just type your posts with correct punctuation, grammar and spelling. Your posts light up like a christmas tree..
Re:TARDIS! (Score:2)
Wow I know something else (Score:5, Funny)
And, if you replace the periods with dashes, behold... IT WORKS TOO!
Who needs a book on Google eh? just Google it, it's cheaper...
Just Google it... dangerous! (Score:3, Funny)
Won't that cause a tear in the space-time continuum?
Re:Wow I know something else (Score:2)
Re:Wow I know something else (Score:2)
Re:Wow I know something else (Score:2, Insightful)
New (To Me): Discography, FedEx Tracking (Score:4, Interesting)
For example, search for "U2 Joshua Tree Discography" and the top hit is for Google's own music CD database, giving me exactly what I wanted in a clean, efficient, fast-loading manner. (I know, this keeps me on their site, seeing their ads longer, but I'm still happy.)
The second feature is package tracking. Just type in the package number (for example: "736805130363") into the box and search. There is only one link - directly to the FedEx tracking page for the package. Given that I have a Google search box in my browser, this saves typing "fedex.com", waiting for it to load, then finding their own tracker search box.
Re:New (To Me): Discography, FedEx Tracking (Score:1)
I bet it doesnt talk about death rays... (Score:5, Insightful)
hmm (Score:5, Funny)
Blank stare...
Re:hmm (Score:3, Informative)
Re:hmm (Score:1)
Re:hmm (Score:1)
Re:hmm (Score:2)
Re:hmm (Score:3, Funny)
Don't.you.mean."blank.stare"?
Re:hmm (Score:2)
The whole point was to avoid using the shift key. How did you type the question mark?
Re:hmm (Score:1)
don't.you.mean.blank.stare.
or.something
Re:hmm (Score:2)
Useless book (Score:3, Interesting)
Useless?
Re:Useless book (Score:3, Interesting)
It's for people who want to read about Google and its uses, not for people who want to use Google.
A few years ago, between jobs, my wife bought me a "how to get a job" book produced (or at least endorsed) by the people at Monster. Equally useless. I needed to get a job, not read about how to get a job.
Re:Useless book (Score:2)
I tend to think not. When I did my undergraduate degree a mandatory course for all freshmen was a short 2 hour course on finding material at the library, and it helped me immensely. It seems simple enough, but most people I talk to don't know how to carry out basic research on the web. With Google's increasing role as a starting point for research online, I think a simple course on searching with it is equally important. Even obscure words can turn up millions of hits on Google, so knowing how t
Re:Useless book (Score:1)
But what if the internet is down? Huh?... oh wait.
Google hints online here (Score:1)
Specifically, you can find more information on Google Search tips on this page here:
http://www.google.com/help/features.html [google.com]
How valuable is this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How valuable is this? (Score:2)
Re:How valuable is this? (Score:1)
Re:How valuable is this? (Score:1)
omfg stop humping googles legs (Score:1, Funny)
My favorite google search (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My favorite google search (Score:1)
search even better
Re:My favorite google search (Score:3, Funny)
Re:My favorite google search (Score:2)
Re:My favorite google search (Score:1)
Re:My favorite google search (Score:2)
Re:My favorite google search (Score:1)
Hmm, intriguing: tan(pi/2) = 1.6e16 [google.co.nz]. Even my calculator has a bigger infinity than that!
Re:My favorite google search (Score:1)
42 = for tea two = tea for two: http://www.cafepress.com/42_tea_for_two [cafepress.com]
"So the best advice I can give to an American arriving in England is this. Go to Marks and Spencer and buy a packet of Earl Grey tea." --Douglas Adams Salmon of Doubt
Re:My favorite google search (Score:2)
We're sorry. Your search cannot be completed as dialed. Please rotate your query string ninety degrees and try your search again.
>life, the universe, and everything
If you search for the meaning of life on Google, you get to a not-bad philosophy page.
Missing? (Score:2)
Re:Missing? (Score:2)
Re:Missing? (Score:2)
But that would also be the last place you look too!
Punctuation (Score:5, Interesting)
\circle
\circle*
Google's dropping of all punctuation is quite annoying, and makes some queries impossible, as
Re:Punctuation (Score:2)
Just search for "latex circle" (sans quotes). You'll find plenty of results on the first page that answer your question. You don't need to be that precise.
Re:Punctuation (Score:2)
Except that sometimes I do. Checking popularity of two-word versus one hyphenated word constructions is difficult. For example, is the adjective "low income" or "low-income" and who uses which one?
Re:Punctuation (Score:2)
Re:Punctuation (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, the answer to your question is this: When a noun phrase is used to qualify another noun (i.e, used as an adjective), hyphenate it. Thus, you would say "I have a low income", but "Theirs is a low-income family". (Similarly with 'stainless-steel knife', etc.) This rule isn't very rigorously applied these d
Re:Punctuation (Score:1)
The answer seems to be the two word, not hyphenated.
Re:Punctuation (Score:2)
Have you tried Koders [koders.com], Codebase [codase.com] or even the OSS Gonzui [sourceforge.net]? Source-code specific search enginers are nothing new. (However, the ones I listed are limited to C and C type languages. And I'd hate to be a STFW troll, but if you spent < 5 minutes at Google looking for, say, "latex source code search engine [google.com]" you might get lucky.)
Re:Punctuation (Score:1)
Re:Punctuation (Score:1)
Gwigle (Score:5, Interesting)
MOD UP PARENT (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Gwigle (Score:2)
The question of the stock price is actually easier: the price displayed is for Friday 4:00 p.m. - that's the closing price, so an appropriate search reveals it quite easily.
Re:Gwigle (Score:1)
Re:Gwigle (Score:3, Funny)
Another interesting Google feature (Score:1)
san francisco real estate
You get an option to "refine your search" - if you use this interactive tool, you can search the MLS database in San Francisco for properties with specific characteristics. Who needs realtor.com anymore?
Save $9.25! (Score:2, Informative)
If Google uses the same technology as the Tardis (Score:2)
another useless feature (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.google.com/search?num=50&hl=en&lr=&new
Re:I don't trust a book that lies in the title (Score:1)
Re:Most rimmed company in teh world (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Tardis Analogy (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Tardis Analogy (Score:1, Informative)
Douglas Adams Wrote and Edited for Dr. Who for a couple of seasons under a pseudonym. City of Death is one of his works.
Re:Tardis Analogy (Score:1, Informative)
Looking for really good sunblock,
Omega
Shameless OT plug! (Score:2)
Anyway, the proof is - some of us DO remember the old stuff.
Re:Tardis Analogy (Score:1)
Re:Tardis Analogy (Score:3, Informative)
In other words: fewer people would be talking about Doctor Who if it wasn't currently on TV. Wow. Insight into the human condition there.
At any rate, even if there were not new episodes being aired, TARDIS analogies would certainly not be dead. Perhaps in the US t
Re:Tardis Analogy (Score:1)
Re:Tardis Analogy (Score:1)