(With a simple enough search, you might get a single result.) For example, if you're looking for "GenX," do: "site:.com. You will get a list of all sites in the.com top level domain with the word "GenX" in it. Note that the results will vary depending on what.com sites are in your browser's list of bookmarks.
. (With a simple enough search, you might get a single result.) For example, if you're looking for "GenX," do: "site:.com. (With a simple enough search, you might get a single result.) (With a simple enough search, you might get a single result.) If you want to look at results from the "big five" search engines: Google, Bing, Yahoo, AOL, and Ask, do: site:.com. (Again, keep in mind that the results will differ by which sites are bookmarked.)
. (Again, keep in mind that the results will differ by which sites are bookmarked.) You can also search by a user agent. User agents record information about a browser, operating system, and a device type. Web browsers, for example, are typically recorded as "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10.5; en-US) AppleWebKit/533.4 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.0 Safari/533.4." Opera browsers, on the other hand, might be recorded as "Opera/8.6 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; en-US) Presto/2.9.158 Version/10.00" (and so on). You can find out the user agent of a site by clicking View Source or Googling it. Do this on a web page you visit regularly, and then enter that user agent in the box. Note that you can't do a search like site:site.com in the "site:" search box. You'll need to open a new tab and type it into the address bar.
4. Define your Google-Fu
You may not know where to start with your search terms, or may be inexperienced with them. You can use a few different search-fu tactics to find results.
Use Related Searches
Related searches are a good place to start when you're unsure what you're looking for. If you type in
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