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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4-page paper discusses the advantages and disadvantages to search engines. It also discusses why children should have access to the internet as long as the material they are viewing is closely monitored.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: PG56_GPAsearch.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
can range from movie times at a local theater to extensive research on colonial Africa in the 19th century. Just about anything can one can think of can be found
on some site on the World Wide Web. Once the user types a topic in the appropriate field, the search engine will generate thousands of different web sites with pertinent
information pertaining to that topic. It will also provide the user with additional links they can research that may be relevant to the topic entered. Search engines began to
emerge in the mid to late 1990s during the dot-com boom and have been constantly developed and enhanced by companies like Google, Yahoo, AOL, Bing, Lycos, etc. to make them
more efficient and user friendly. Nowadays, there are specific search engine sites that deal strictly with certain areas or specific industries like art, music, literature, etc. There are obviously advantages
to search engines such as convenience and accessibility, but there are some disadvantages as well, especially when it comes to children and the illicit material they can easily access over
the internet by using a number of different search engines. The benefits of using search engines are endless. They are not only convenient for average internet users to research
an array of topics, but they also help businesses market their companies (Odden 2007; Price and Robinson 2010). For example, if someone is looking for a cheap car wash in
their neighborhood, they can simply type "car wash" and the town that they live in and dozens of the closest car wash companies will pop up with addresses, phone numbers
and even web sites. The search engine also sorts the links by relevancy to try and give the user the most pertinent information he or she requested (Bradley 2000; Notess
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