NUMISMATIC SEARCH ENGINE DEBUTS 上市 Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 9, Number 49, December 3, 2006, Article 3

    NUMISMATIC SEARCH ENGINE DEBUTS

    Wouldn't it be great if you could do a web search ONLY on sites
    that relate directly to numismatics? Well, now you can. Using
    the sites previously discussed in our Featured Web Site section or
    mentioned in E-Sylum articles, I've created a numismatics-only
    custom search engine using Google. Here's how I describe it on
    the new Coin and Paper Money search engine "home page":

    "Search coin and paper money web sites hand-picked for some of the
    best numismatic research information available on the web. Many have
    been highlighted as Featured Web Sites in The E-Sylum, our award-
    winning weekly email newsletter for researchers, writers and collectors
    of coins, medals, tokens, banknotes and other paper money. E-Sylum
    contributors include many of the top numismatic authors and dealers
    in the U.S. and the world."

    The URL for the numismatic search engine is:
    coinbooks.org/search

    The first web site added? Our own, of course: coinbooks.org.
    This ensures that the back issues of The E-Sylum are included.
    Next came many of the top numismatic auction house sites, since
    there is a great deal of good research information there. After
    that came many of the "usual suspects" - the major national, state,
    and specialty organization web sites, numismatic museums, mints,
    central banks etc. Many of these also include some good research
    material.

    Then came the Featured Web Sites. These are the real key to making
    the customized search engine useful. Many came recommended by our
    readership and all have been vetted by me. Sites with little
    original material, scanty content or offerings for sale with little
    accompanying information are excluded. A number of sites are
    unfortunately no longer available, and these had to be excluded.
    The engine description says "hand-picked", and that's very true.
    Literally true as well - my mouse-operating hand is sore from all
    the clicking.

    What's not included? Mainstream publishing sites like the New
    York Times, sites relating to non-numismatic history, and sites
    dealing with non-numismatic literature. Including these would
    dilute the laser-focus on numismatic topics. However, where
    individual pages on mainstream sites do refer to numismatic topics,
    these are included. For example, npr.org archives many National
    Public Radio stories, and if a particular story relates to
    numismatics, that particular page is included in the index.

    Many E-Sylum articles refer to individual news articles from
    publications around the world, and these particular web pages
    (assuming they still exist) are in the search engine as well.
    For example, the query "50 states quarter launch ceremony"
    locates contemporary articles on the launch parties for the
    Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Maine and Rhode Island coins.

    By excluding most non-numismatic sites, searches for numismatic
    connections can be very targeted. For example, simply entering
    "Zachary Taylor" into the numismatic search engine produces
    references to Taylor medals in the E-Sylum archive, on the Stack's,
    Coin World, and the U.S. Mint sites. The same search on the
    full-blown Google search engine produces little numismatic
    information. Other name searches such as "Martin Beistle" are
    also quite targeted, excluding similar "hits" on most non-numismatic
    web sites. Personal name searches are also quite informative -
    a very quick way to get broad background on any numismatic
    personality. I know you're dying to do it, so go ahead - do a
    vanity search on your own name.

    Searching for "Plagiarism" locates articles on numismatic
    plagiarism as well as sites with information on how to check for
    it or guard against it. Searching for "Liberty Dollar" locates
    a large number of articles on NORFED's private coin as well as
    items on Seated Liberty Dollars.

    As with any search engine, the more specific your query, the more
    specific your query, the more targeted the results. Using "seated
    liberty dollar" as a query, the result is a bullseye - the top
    links are the CoinFacts page on Seated Liberty dollars and a
    listing of Seated Liberty dollars lots sold by Bowers and Merena.

    To make the search engine as complete and current as possible, we
    rolled up our sleeves and built a tool to help. Many thanks to
    John Nebel for creating a program to cull all web links from our
    E-Sylum archive. After reviewing the list John's program generated
    and trimming it appropriately, I added these links to the search
    engine, bringing the total number of indexed web sites to well
    over 3,000. NBS webmaster Bruce Perdue added a new page for the
    search engine to our web site for easy access.

    Each week John's program will extract the web links for all web
    sites mentioned in the latest E-Sylum issue, and I'll add these
    to the search engine to keep it current.

    Remember, this is a work in progress. A search engine is like a
    big hulking machine with lots of knobs and levers to push. We'll
    continue to fine-tune it based on your feedback. Please give it
    a try and keep coming back whenever you want a more targeted
    search for numismatic information.

    Have a web site that ought to be included? Let us know. Getting
    funny results? Not seeing the search results you expect? Let us
    know that, too. Based on your input we'll turn the knobs and
    levers and see if we can improve the search results for everyone.
    Write to me anytime at whomren@coinlibrary.com.

    To use the numismatic search engine, see:
    coinbooks.org/search/

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  • 2006-12-03
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