In: Categories » Internet » Search engines and SEO » How to Use Google Advanced Image Searching
|
As with Web searches, Google provides a collection of enhanced search tools on the Advanced Image Search page. Follow these steps to reach that page:
The Find results portion of the Advanced Image Search page is nearly identical to the Advanced Search page for Web searches.The difference is that the keyword modifiers here relate to images by matching file names, captions, and text surrounding the images. Use the keyword boxes to add search modifiers to your keywords, but don’t expect exact textual matches as with a Web search because images are not text. Below the Find results portion of the Advanced Image Search page are five settings that determine the type and location of your sought images:
In nearly all cases, the images you find through Google are owned and implicitly copyrighted by other people. There is some buzz among copyright scholars about the capability of search engines to display other people’s property on demand. Google itself puts a little copyright warning about using the images dished up in its search results. If you’re wondering whether you can download and apply a photo as desktop wallpaper, for example, the quick legal answer is no in most cases. The search results are meant to be informational, and Google is not intended as a warehouse of downloadable images. How you choose to approach online intellectual property is your business, but respect for property of others strengthens the online community. Besides, in Google of all places, it’s not too hard to find images whose owners invite downloads. Try using the keywords public domain or free download on the Advanced Image Search page to find images that you can legally reuse.
|
legal disclaimer
1) Our website is not responsible for the information contained by this article as well for any and all copyright infringements by authors and writers. E-articles is a free information resource. If you suspect this article for any copyright infringements, please read the Terms of service and contact us to investigate the problem.
2) The E-articles directory team is not responsible for inaccuracies, falsehoods, or any other types of misinformation this tutorial may contain and will not be liable for any loss or damage suffered by a user through the user's reliance on the information gained here. Please read the Terms of service
Useful tools and features
related articles
Google has and Advanced Search page. To get to this page, you click the Advanced Search link on the Google home page. Use Advanced Search for any one of three reasons: You want to focus a search more narrowly than a general keyword search You don’t want to bother with the complexity and thorny syntax of search operators You want to combine more than one search operation As you see in, the Advanced Search page bundles many keyword boxes ...
2. Basic Information About Google Catalogs
Most of Google’s great ideas depend on behind-the-scenes technology that works invisibly to precisely meet information needs. But one Google service relies more on hard work and continual maintenance than great programming: Google Catalogs, a searchable directory of mail-order catalogs, is brilliant in conception and execution. And keeping it going must require a monumental effort of scanning. Unlike Google’s Web index, which crawls through Web sites and reduces their content to a tagged database controlled by retrieval algorithms, t...
3. Breaking Down Google Web Search Results
Other elements on the search results page enable you to understand the result, continue the search, narrow the search, or avoid Internet traffic jams when seeing the target page. Some of these features are present on every search result, and some exist occasionally. Here they are. Page description Remember when I said that the search result text wasn’t composed by the Google staff? Well, sometimes part of the accompanying text is so composed. If the search result appears in Google Directory (which is built by h...
4. A Quick Tour of Google
Google is far more than a search siteit has grown to be a sizable collection of services and tools, and the collection is getting larger all the time. No longer is Google a single search site; instead, it's a conglomeration of multiple sites. And no longer can you even call it Web-based because Google now includes software that you download and run on your PC. This article often refers to tools and services. Although there is a lot of gray area in the definitions of these two terms, generally a service is a website run by Google. So,...
Arguably, the most useful of Google’s specialty search areas is that devoted to the U.S. government. Actually, this distinct search engine is both larger and smaller than the name implies. This engine is global in reach. At the same time, it reaches below federal government sites to the state and municipal level. You might think that this entire search engine merely replaces the site:.gov operator:keyword combination. Not so. In fact, site:.gov remains quite useful in the UncleSam search because the results pages dish up a hear...
6. Google Search Operators
Google allows you to search using search operators, special words and symbols that make it easy to get search results that match as closely as possible the information for which you're looking. You combine search operators with search terms to form a query, like this: zeppelin "Led Zeppelin" That search would bring back pages that had the word zeppelin on them, but did not have the term Led Zeppelin on them. Here are the common operators you can use with Google: ...
7. Recommended Searching Strategies
Everyone has her own strategies for better searching, so it's always a good idea to ask others for their ideas. But here are a few hints that should help you with Google searches: Be specific The Web is an enormous place, containing literally billions of pages. Almost any search you do brings back far too much information. So make sure that your search is as specific as possible. If you're looking for a history of the making of the album Blonde on Blonde, by Bob Dylan, don't just search for "Blonde on Blonde&q...
8. Searching Google Catalogs
As in Froogle, Google Catalogs presents a topical directory and keyword searching. After you get into the directory, you can limit further searching to that directory category or launch a global Catalogs search. Start at the Google Catalogs home page. catalogs.google.com The directory tempts by listing a few mail-order companies in each main category. Feel free to leap into the directory by clicking either a catalog or a topic on the home page.Google maintains an archive of past catalogs, which can gum up th...
9. Google`s Approach to Online Shopping
The main difference between Google’s shopping services and those in other major portals is that Google doesn’t get its hands on the money. You don’t buy anything through Google. Both Froogle and Google Catalogs function purely as directories to products, sending you elsewhere to get your hands on the goods. Google has no revenue-sharing association with e-commerce retailers (in Froogle) or mail-order companies (in Google Catalogs). The search results you get in both services are pure; preferred placement in the search resul...
10. How to Download and Install Google Tools
Many Google tools live on the Web and don't require you to install any special software. For example, Gmail, Froogle, and Blogger are all websites; to use them, you only need to point your browser to the right page. But other tools are software programs that live on your PC, and they require that you download and install them before you can use them.All are installed in the same basic way, as outlined in the following steps. The Google Toolbar is used as an example of how to install software. (To see other downloadable tools, go to ...










