History
Timeline (full list) | ||
---|---|---|
Year | Engine | Current status |
1993 | W3Catalog | Active |
Aliweb | Inactive | |
1994 | WebCrawler | Active, Aggregator |
Go.com | Active, Yahoo Search | |
Lycos | Active | |
1995 | AltaVista | Active, Yahoo Search |
Daum | Active | |
Magellan | Inactive | |
Excite | Active | |
SAPO | Active | |
Yahoo! 2008 | Active, Launched as a directory | |
1996 | Dogpile | Active, Aggregator |
Inktomi | Acquired by Yahoo! | |
HotBot | Active (lycos.com) | |
Ask Jeeves | Active (rebranded ask.com) | |
1997 | Northern Light | Inactive |
Yandex | Active | |
1998 | Goto | Inactive |
Active | ||
MSN Search | Active as Bing | |
empas | Inactive (merged with NATE) | |
1999 | AlltheWeb | Inactive (URL redirected to Yahoo!) |
GenieKnows | Active, rebranded Yellowee.com | |
Naver | Active | |
Teoma | Active | |
Vivisimo | Inactive | |
2000 | Baidu | Active |
Exalead | Inactive | |
2002 | Inktomi | Acquired by Yahoo! |
2003 | Info.com | Active |
Scroogle | Inactive | |
2004 | Yahoo! Search | Active, Launched own web search (see Yahoo! Directory, 1995) |
A9.com | Inactive | |
Sogou | Active | |
2005 | AOL Search | Active |
Ask.com | Active | |
GoodSearch | Active | |
SearchMe | Inactive | |
2006 | wikiseek | Inactive |
Quaero | Active | |
Ask.com | Active | |
Live Search | Active as Bing, Launched as rebranded MSN Search |
|
ChaCha | Active | |
Guruji.com | Active as BeeMP3.com | |
2007 | wikiseek | Inactive |
Sproose | Inactive | |
Wikia Search | Inactive | |
Blackle.com | Active, Google Search | |
2008 | Powerset | Inactive (redirects to Bing) |
Picollator | Inactive | |
Viewzi | Inactive | |
Boogami | Inactive | |
LeapFish | Inactive | |
Forestle | Inactive (redirects to Ecosia) | |
DuckDuckGo | Active | |
2009 | Bing | Active, Launched as rebranded Live Search |
Yebol | Inactive | |
Mugurdy | Inactive due to a lack of funding | |
Goby | Active | |
NATE | Active | |
2010 | Blekko | Active |
Cuil | Inactive | |
Yandex | Active, Launched global (English) search |
|
Yummly | Active | |
2011 | Interred | Active as Interredu |
2012 | Volunia | Active |
Open Drive | Active, cloud file search | |
2013 | iStella | Active |
Aoohe | Active |
During early development of the web, there was a list of webservers edited by Tim Berners-Lee and hosted on the CERN webserver. One historical snapshot from 1992 remains. As more webservers went online the central list could not keep up. On the NCSA site new servers were announced under the title "What's New!"
The very first tool used for searching on the Internet was Archie. The name stands for "archive" without the "v". It was created in 1990 by Alan Emtage, Bill Heelan and J. Peter Deutsch, computer science students at McGill University in Montreal. The program downloaded the directory listings of all the files located on public anonymous FTP (File Transfer Protocol) sites, creating a searchable database of file names; however, Archie did not index the contents of these sites since the amount of data was so limited it could be readily searched manually.
The rise of Gopher (created in 1991 by Mark McCahill at the University of Minnesota) led to two new search programs, Veronica and Jughead. Like Archie, they searched the file names and titles stored in Gopher index systems. Veronica (Very Easy Rodent-Oriented Net-wide Index to Computerized Archives) provided a keyword search of most Gopher menu titles in the entire Gopher listings. Jughead (Jonzy's Universal Gopher Hierarchy Excavation And Display) was a tool for obtaining menu information from specific Gopher servers. While the name of the search engine "Archie" was not a reference to the Archie comic book series, "Veronica" and "Jughead" are characters in the series, thus referencing their predecessor.
In the summer of 1993, no search engine existed for the web, though numerous specialized catalogues were maintained by hand. Oscar Nierstrasz at the University of Geneva wrote a series of Perl scripts that periodically mirrored these pages and rewrote them into a standard format. This formed the basis for W3Catalog, the web's first primitive search engine, released on September 2, 1993.
In June 1993, Matthew Gray, then at MIT, produced what was probably the first web robot, the Perl-based World Wide Web Wanderer, and used it to generate an index called 'Wandex'. The purpose of the Wanderer was to measure the size of the World Wide Web, which it did until late 1995. The web's second search engine Aliweb appeared in November 1993. Aliweb did not use a web robot, but instead depended on being notified by website administrators of the existence at each site of an index file in a particular format.
JumpStation (released in December 1993) used a web robot to find web pages and to build its index, and used a web form as the interface to its query program. It was thus the first WWW resource-discovery tool to combine the three essential features of a web search engine (crawling, indexing, and searching) as described below. Because of the limited resources available on the platform it ran on, its indexing and hence searching were limited to the titles and headings found in the web pages the crawler encountered.
One of the first "all text" crawler-based search engines was WebCrawler, which came out in 1994. Unlike its predecessors, it allowed users to search for any word in any webpage, which has become the standard for all major search engines since. It was also the first one widely known by the public. Also in 1994, Lycos (which started at Carnegie Mellon University) was launched and became a major commercial endeavor.
Soon after, many search engines appeared and vied for popularity. These included Magellan, Excite, Infoseek, Inktomi, Northern Light, and AltaVista. Yahoo! was among the most popular ways for people to find web pages of interest, but its search function operated on its web directory, rather than its full-text copies of web pages. Information seekers could also browse the directory instead of doing a keyword-based search.
Google adopted the idea of selling search terms in 1998, from a small search engine company named goto.com. This move had a significant effect on the SE business, which went from struggling to one of the most profitable businesses in the internet.
In 1996, Netscape was looking to give a single search engine an exclusive deal as the featured search engine on Netscape's web browser. There was so much interest that instead Netscape struck deals with five of the major search engines: for $5 million a year, each search engine would be in rotation on the Netscape search engine page. The five engines were Yahoo!, Magellan, Lycos, Infoseek, and Excite.
Search engines were also known as some of the brightest stars in the Internet investing frenzy that occurred in the late 1990s. Several companies entered the market spectacularly, receiving record gains during their initial public offerings. Some have taken down their public search engine, and are marketing enterprise-only editions, such as Northern Light. Many search engine companies were caught up in the dot-com bubble, a speculation-driven market boom that peaked in 1999 and ended in 2001.
Around 2000, Google's search engine rose to prominence. The company achieved better results for many searches with an innovation called PageRank. This iterative algorithm ranks web pages based on the number and PageRank of other web sites and pages that link there, on the premise that good or desirable pages are linked to more than others. Google also maintained a minimalist interface to its search engine. In contrast, many of its competitors embedded a search engine in a web portal.
By 2000, Yahoo! was providing search services based on Inktomi's search engine. Yahoo! acquired Inktomi in 2002, and Overture (which owned AlltheWeb and AltaVista) in 2003. Yahoo! switched to Google's search engine until 2004, when it launched its own search engine based on the combined technologies of its acquisitions.
Microsoft first launched MSN Search in the fall of 1998 using search results from Inktomi. In early 1999 the site began to display listings from Looksmart, blended with results from Inktomi. For a short time in 1999, MSN Search used results from AltaVista were instead. In 2004, Microsoft began a transition to its own search technology, powered by its own web crawler (called msnbot).
Microsoft's rebranded search engine, Bing, was launched on June 1, 2009. On July 29, 2009, Yahoo! and Microsoft finalized a deal in which Yahoo! Search would be powered by Microsoft Bing technology.
In 2012, following the April 24 release of Google Drive, Google released the Beta version of Open Drive (available as a Chrome app) to enable the search of files in the cloud that are publicly shared.
Read more about this topic: Search Engine
Famous quotes containing the word history:
“Yet poetry, though the last and finest result, is a natural fruit. As naturally as the oak bears an acorn, and the vine a gourd, man bears a poem, either spoken or done. It is the chief and most memorable success, for history is but a prose narrative of poetic deeds.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“The history of his present majesty, is a history of unremitting injuries and usurpations ... all of which have in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over these states. To prove this, let facts be submitted to a candid world, for the truth of which we pledge a faith yet unsullied by falsehood.”
—Thomas Jefferson (17431826)
“Every generation rewrites the past. In easy times history is more or less of an ornamental art, but in times of danger we are driven to the written record by a pressing need to find answers to the riddles of today.... In times of change and danger when there is a quicksand of fear under mens reasoning, a sense of continuity with generations gone before can stretch like a lifeline across the scary present and get us past that idiot delusion of the exceptional Now that blocks good thinking.”
—John Dos Passos (18961970)