It's easy to search Network World Fusion. Just type in a few words or
phrases. Try to use discriminating terms that are likely to be found
only in the documents you seek. The more words you give, the better
results you'll get. Here are some examples:
Search by typing words and phrases.
Bell Atlantic's VPN strategy
The search engine will find documents containing as many of these words and
phrases as possible, ranked so that the documents most relevant to your
query are presented first. Don't worry about missing a document because
it doesn't have one of the words in your search -- Ultraseek returns
relevant results even if they don't contain all query terms. By default, our search engine queries an article database for 2000 and 2001. If you want to search our archives back to 1995, you'll find a query box at the bottom of your results page with a check box for the older archives.
Identify phrases with quotation marks, separate with
commas.
"Bill Gates", "Microsoft Windows NT"
A phrase is entered using double quotation marks, and only matches those
words which appear adjacent to each other. Separate multiple phrases or
proper names with a comma.
Use + and - signs to require or exclude words or phrases
+Microsoft -"Bill Gates"
will bring up links to articles that mention Microsoft but NOT Bill Gates.
Use UPPER case to indicate exact match.
Scott McNealy, Sun
Search terms in lowercase will match words in any case, otherwise, an
exact case match is used. For example, next will find matches
for Next, next, and NeXT, whereas a query for
NeXT will only match NeXT.
Our default search engine currently finds documents from 2001 and 2002. We also have an archive of articles from 1995 through 2000. Use the form below to search these older articles:
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