Perhaps an end to the sizewars, as Google finally drops the index count off
its home page. SizeWars? Wars: Battle Of The Search Superpowers: Everyone's been arming themselves
to take on Google. Vista Size Controversy: The Google-Yahoo spat over...
However, dropping the home page count is a positive move that I think helps defuse the entire sizewars situation. End Of SizeWars? Google Says Most Comprehensive But Drops Home Page Count - Today, Google is dropping from its home page the famous...
Claims To Be Most Comprehensive - But Helps Defuse SizeWars By Dropping Home Today's search podcast covers Google's claim to be most comprehensive but
dropping indexsize as proof of that, plus Google's second birthday this month,
New IndexSize, Shifts Focus from Counting from John Battelle covers how
he also sees the indexwars as over "at least in terms of raw counting" and
how it shifts the debate "back to relevance, where honestly, it really
belongs.
Now Biggest, Most Comprehensive - But SizeWars Defused By Dropped Home Page Count covers the latest chapter in the dispute over search engine size that
started with last month's claim by Yahoo to have outdistanced Google in indexsize.
However, dropping the home page count is a positive move that I think helps defuse the entire sizewars situation. The latest sizewars broke out last month, when Yahoo said on its blog that it now provided access to over 19 billion web documents.
Aside from the relevancy quashing, the story also looks at how Microsoft
doesn't seem to be gaining in the search wars despite the technological
investment in build its own search engine and backing it with marketing money.
I Dare Google & Yahoo To Report On Relevancy looks at why in my opinion, the current dispute
over indexsize between Google and Yahoo is yet another waste of time that avoids focusing on the figure everyone really wants, a relevancy figure.
Search Engine SizeWars & Google's Supplemental Results covers more on deconstructing indexsize claims from 2003. Search Engine SizeWars & Google's Supplemental Results, Search Engine Watch, Sept. This is Search Engine SizeWars VI, by my count.
Search Engine SizeWars who's biggest" in August 2003. This is Search Engine SizeWars VI, by my count. Search Engine SizeWars V Erupts covers the self-reported figures and battle we had between Google and
For Gary, the search industy watcher, it's interesting to see another round of database sizewars up and running but it's still not a big deal in the searching sense. What Total SizeWars 2005 illustrates that pr/bragging rights and mindshare are...
Looks like we might have a search engine total sizewars beginning. Yahoo said its index, boosted by a recent upgrade, covers 20.5 billion online "objects," comprised of about 19 billion documents and 1.5 billion images.
Search Engine SizeWars V Erupts. The link command tells you nothing about the size of the index. Start here
to understand the minefield of search index sizes. So, if you start with this, all things being equal, if the google index is much
larger...
More on this in my past
article, Search Engine SizeWars V Erupts. Search Engine SizeWars V Erupts from last November and some historic articles on the Google has claimed to have the biggest search index, with 8.1
billion pages.
Search Engine SizeWars real" index is about 5 billion pages. We know that Google has at least two indexes is uses for web searches -- the "regular" one and a "supplemental" index (see Seems like that was an expansion of content to
the...
Engine SizeWars V Erupts. Fair to say they should
all should index web pages up to their full amounts or at least much higher than is currently done. Gary and I played some more
yesterday to test this and found an example briefly that showed its...
Google Fires New Salvo in Search Engine SizeWars SearchDay, Dec.http://searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article.php/2158371 Search Engine SizeWars Google Upgrades Appliance SearchDay, June 17, 2002 http://searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article...
As Chris blogged, Google has raised the stakes in the search engine sizewars by claiming an index of 8
billion pages. I love the idea of not getting into the sizewars again, which are never that productive.
Traditionally these volleys in the search engine sizewars have meant little, but have been picked up by the media because they are tangible and easy to report. On the eve of Microsoft's long anticipated launch of MSN Search, Google is reporting on...
As moderator Chris Sherman commented, this must have been the start of the "sizewars" at search engines. And the same applies to Google, which manages to copy a multi-terabyte index around the world on a regular basis.