Quantcast
PC World: Technology Advice You Can Trust
Find a Review
Free Newsletters
Receive the latest reviews, how-to's, news, and more.
Weekly Brief
Daily Downloads
Daily Technology News
WiFi Finder
Locate wireless services by a specific address, city, state, country, airport, or zip code.
RSS Feeds
Get our latest content via convenient RSS feeds.
Latest News
Today @ PC World
Become a PCW Member
Join the community and start enjoying the benefits:
  • Get tech advice from thousands of PC World Members
  • Rate and recommend the latest tech products
  • Share your thoughts in blog and article comments
  • Get free excerpts and exclusive discounts on Super Guides
Read More About: Topics

Netscape's Volunteer Army Indexes Web

Open Directory Project adopts open-source spirit to catalog the Web's best and share the wealth.

Wednesday, December 01, 1999 12:00 AM PST
Recommend this story?

It's true, there is strength in numbers. Just ask the folks at Netscape.

Once synonymous with the Navigator browser, America Online's Netscape Communications is gaining a reputation as a search leader. Through its Open Directory Project, Netscape harnesses the power of thousands of Internet volunteers to index the Web.

At last count, an army of 18,000 Netscape "editors" has indexed more than 1.2 million Web sites. That's enough to ruffle the feathers of the granddaddy of human-powered searches, Yahoo. It could also bode ill for other competitors say experts, who see Netscape as a formidable challenger in search technology.

The Human Touch

Much of the Open Directory's success, including Yahoo, is traced to the frustration felt by the many Web surfers who can't find what they seek. Both the Open Directory and Yahoo assume humans, not machines, are better suited to finding and indexing relevant Web sites.

However, unlike Yahoo, About.com, and LookSmart, who pay squads of editors to lead searchers, Netscape depends on the efforts of loyal volunteers. Netscape, in a seemingly selfless act of socialism, lets everyday Net surfers build its directory. In turn, anybody can stop by DMOZ.com and download the Open Directory index free of charge, as long as they give Netscape credit.

That small price tag interests big portals like AltaVista, Lycos, HotBot, Netscape sibling AOL.com, and others that have cut their staffing costs by using the Open Directory.

Leveraging the Power of Many

It works like this. Instead of expecting staff motivated by salary to organize a section on, say, automobiles, Netscape tries to inspire auto enthusiasts to organize car site directories. The idea is that motivated specialists can find a better car site than a mercenary surfer who is charged with being an expert on many subjects.

At the same time, Netscape solves one of the biggest challenges facing search firms today: scaling to meet the enormous expansion of the Web. Ideally, the number of Open Directory editors will keep pace with the Web's growth. This means Netscape will always have enough "staff" to add sites to the directory.

Yahoo has an estimated 1.2 million sites in its index and 150 staff editors. But it draws criticism for being slow to list submitted sites in its index.

Volunteer Surfers

Netscape's Nintendo listing is typical of its directory. Three editors have ranked what they consider the most useful Web pages.

The "Forbidden Nintendo Information Repository" tops the list. The editors describe the site as having "lots of technical info, little-known facts, history, and oddities." Down the list is Nintendo's official home page along with scores of other sites.

Scott Schmucker, a 17-year-old high school student from Ohio who helps maintain the Nintendo list, says he surfs the Internet four hours a day and is a Nintendo fanatic. "Believe me, there are a lot of bad Nintendo sites out there. But when I find a good one, I'll get it on the index."

Schmucker says he doesn't mind working for free because he cares about pointing people to quality Nintendo sites. He says he's "proud" to be a part of the Open Directory.

"Sure, there are a lot of other search sites out there, but there is only one that is created by real Net users," Schmucker says.


Recommend this story?
Latest News
Toshiba plans to begin mass production of Direct Methanol Fuel Cells by March next year and to have a television based on the... 09-May-2008
In the not-too-distant future, people could use computer printers to make simple medicines as part of a do-it-yourself model... 09-May-2008
Microsoft will launch Worldwide Telescope, a tool for exploring images of the night sky, by the end of May, free to anyone who... 09-May-2008
The growing disaster in Myanmar caused by Cyclone Nargis could have been at least party avoided had people living in the path... 09-May-2008
Spray them with water, subject them to extreme temperatures or drop them on the ground, NEC's rugged ShieldPro laptops are... 09-May-2008
Shipments of the Gran Turismo series of car racing games edged past the 50 million unit mark at the end of April, Sony said... 09-May-2008
Samsung has launched a high-definition (HD) video camera that can also snap high-resolution digital photos and take smooth... 09-May-2008
They say everything comes to those that wait. A year after it went on sale in the rest of the world customers in Japan will... 08-May-2008
Two giant offers for free Wi-Fi extended, one from AT&T to iPhone users, and another from Cablevision for its millions of home territory broadband subscribers. 08-May-2008
In the wake of collapsed talks with Yahoo, Microsoft reportedly is sniffing around social-networking site Facebook. 08-May-2008

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)