IntroductionUsing Google is an everyday activity and many people now use Google for work or pleasure. Google has become the first search step in business or at home. Many people at work or at home rely on Google to find basic and detailed information. Using Google has become a daily chore at work and at home. A business or organization can use Google to research a customer, a supplier, or to search for a potential employee. Someone in the home environment may turn to Google to navigate to a destination, look up a recipe, or search for a job. The number of people using Google on a daily basis is rapidly increasing. The term "Google It" has become part of our everyday language. Who uses Google? Chances are, most people have used the Google search engine to access information from the World Wide Web. The question is, did you find what you were looking for? Did you find more than you needed? Haven't found enough? Have you retrieved many irrelevant results? If you used Google before you knew this, the results may vary from search to search depending on the words you type and also how the words are entered into the search string. Web search engines are not very "smart"; they don't understand the context of your research or the nuances of human language and thought. Computers don't think, they are literal - they simply process commands - so the intelligence must come from you (Bryan Sinclair, Public Services Librarian ~ UNCA, July 2005). Many things have changed in the world of research that could justify increased usage. Users can now expect to find a high-performance site-specific search engine on many content-rich websites. Growing mass of web content from blogs, news sites, image and video archives, personal websites, Internet users have the ability to turn to major search engines, but also to individual site search engines, such as vehicles to reach the information they are looking for.Studies shows that “While younger Internet users (55% of 18-
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