Google search engine

  1. Set your default search engine & site search shortcuts
  2. A Guide to Google Search Ranking Systems
  3. Make Google your homepage
  4. Is Google Dying? Or Did the Web Grow Up?
  5. Make Google your homepage
  6. Set your default search engine & site search shortcuts
  7. Is Google Dying? Or Did the Web Grow Up?
  8. A Guide to Google Search Ranking Systems
  9. Make Google your homepage
  10. Make Google your homepage


Download: Google search engine
Size: 69.14 MB

Set your default search engine & site search shortcuts

You can use the address bar (omnibox) as a search box. It automatically uses Google, but you can set another default search engine instead. If you notice unexpected changes in your search engine, you might have malware. Set your default search engine • On your computer, open Chrome. • At the top right, click More Settings. • Click Search engine. • Next to "Search engine used in the address bar," click the Down arrow . • Select a new default search engine. If you've tried to set your search engine but it doesn't work, you may have malware. • On your computer, open Chrome . • At the top right, click More Settings. • On the left, click Search engine Manage search engines and site search. • To change site search shortcuts: • Add: To the right of "Site search," click Add. After you fill out the text fields, click Add. • Edit: To the right of a site search shortcut, click Edit . • Set as default: To the right of a site search shortcut, click More Make default. • Deactivate: To the right of a site search shortcut, click More Deactivate. • Delete: To the right of a site search shortcut, click More Delete. Tips: • You can set up shortcuts to search specific sites. • Shortcuts for your open tabs, bookmarks, and browsing history are included in your site searches.You can edit or turn off these shortcuts, but they can't be deleted. • When you deactivate a site search shortcut, it moves to the "Inactive shortcuts" section. • You can also find other suggested sites listed in the "Inacti...

A Guide to Google Search Ranking Systems

Feature guides • All structured data features • Article • Book • Breadcrumb • Carousel • Course • COVID-19 announcements • Dataset • Education Q&A • Employer Aggregate Rating • Estimated salary • Event • Fact Check • FAQ • Home Activities • How-to • Image metadata • Job Posting • Learning Video • Local Business • Logo • Math solver • Movie • Practice problem • Product • Q&A • Recipe • Review snippet • Sitelinks search box • Software App • Speakable • Subscription and paywalled content • Video • Title links • International and multilingual • Overview • Managing multi-regional and multilingual sites • Tell Google about localized versions of your page • How Google crawls locale-adaptive pages • Education • SEO fundamentals • Introduction • Search Essentials • Get your website on Google • How Google Search Works • SEO starter guide • Do you need an SEO? • Crawling and indexing • Sitemaps • robots.txt • Meta tags • Crawler management • Removals • Canonicalization • Redirects • JavaScript SEO • Ranking and search appearance • Visual Elements gallery • Title links • Snippets • Images • Videos • Structured data • Favicons • Site-specific guides • Ecommerce • International and multilingual sites • Education • All updates • Documentation updates • Ranking updates • New YouTube videos • Recent podcast episodes A guide to Google Search ranking systems Google uses automated ranking systems that We regularly improve these systems through This page is a guide to understanding some of our...

Make Google your homepage

Google Search is installed but not set as your default search provider. To default to Google, here’s how you do it: • Click the Tools icon at the far right of the browser window. • Select Internet options. • In the General tab, find the Search section and click Settings. • Select Google. • Click Set as default and click Close. Option 2: Edit your preferences manually Click on Firefox in the top left corner, then select Options, and then click on Options in the right menu. Click on the General button in the top menu with the picture of a switch. Next to When Firefox starts, open the drop down menu and select Show my home page. Type www.google.com in the Home Page box, and click OK to save. Edit preferences or settings to make Google your homepage Oops! We can’t figure out which internet browser instructions to show you. Try clicking on the name of your browser in the top menu and then selecting Preferences, Settings, or Options. If you have Tools in the top menu, click on it and then select Internet Options. Or try downloading

Is Google Dying? Or Did the Web Grow Up?

This article was featured in One Story to Read Today, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a single must-read from The Atlantic , Monday through Friday. Sign up for it here. A few weeks ago my house had a septic-tank emergency, which is as awful as it sounds. As unspeakable things began to burble up from my shower drain, I did what any smartphone-dependent person would: I frantically Googled something along the lines of poop coming from shower drain bad what to do. I was met with a slew of cookie-cutter websites, most of which appeared hastily generated and were choked with enough repetitive buzzwords as to be barely readable. Virtually everything I found was unhelpful, so we did the old-fashioned thing and called a professional. The emergency came and went, but I kept thinking about those middling search results—how they typified a zombified internet wasteland. Like many, I use Google to answer most of the mundane questions that pop up in my day-to-day life. And yet that first page of search results feels like it’s been surfacing fewer satisfying answers lately. I’m not alone; the frustration has become a persistent meme: that Google Search, what many consider an indispensable tool of modern life, is dead or dying. For the past few years, across various forums and social-media platforms, people have been claiming in viral posts that Google’s flagship product is broken. Search google dying on Twitter or Reddit and you can see people grousing about it going back to t...

Make Google your homepage

You can quickly get to Google every time you open your browser by making Google your homepage. Change your homepage Choose a browser below, then follow thesteps on your computer.If you don't see your browser below, go to the "Help" section of your browser and look for information on how to change your browser’s homepage. • In the upper right corner of your browser, select More Settings. • Under "Set your homepage," click the Down arrow A specific page or pages. • If you have a current homepage: Next to the URL, click X. • Click *Enter a URL*. Then, type: www.google.com. Google is stuck as my homepage Google won'tchange your homepage settings without your permission. • Reset your homepage. Choosea browser above, then follow the steps to replace Google with the site you want as your homepage. • Check for unwanted programs. If resetting your homepage doesn't fix the problem, you might have unwanted programscalledmalware that's imitating the Google site. Learn • Make Google your homepage • Make Google your default search engine • Add & customize your Search widget • Change your Search browser settings • Change your display language on Google • Manage contact info from your devices • Update your knowledge panel • Turn off Discover • Change your Discover settings • Manage app info from your devices • How shopping recommendations work on Google Search • Search in Dark theme on Google • How Google determines the language of search results

Set your default search engine & site search shortcuts

You can use the address bar (omnibox) as a search box. It automatically uses Google, but you can set another default search engine instead. If you notice unexpected changes in your search engine, you might have malware. Set your default search engine • On your computer, open Chrome. • At the top right, click More Settings. • Click Search engine. • Next to "Search engine used in the address bar," click the Down arrow . • Select a new default search engine. If you've tried to set your search engine but it doesn't work, you may have malware. • On your computer, open Chrome . • At the top right, click More Settings. • On the left, click Search engine Manage search engines and site search. • To change site search shortcuts: • Add: To the right of "Site search," click Add. After you fill out the text fields, click Add. • Edit: To the right of a site search shortcut, click Edit . • Set as default: To the right of a site search shortcut, click More Make default. • Deactivate: To the right of a site search shortcut, click More Deactivate. • Delete: To the right of a site search shortcut, click More Delete. Tips: • You can set up shortcuts to search specific sites. • Shortcuts for your open tabs, bookmarks, and browsing history are included in your site searches.You can edit or turn off these shortcuts, but they can't be deleted. • When you deactivate a site search shortcut, it moves to the "Inactive shortcuts" section. • You can also find other suggested sites listed in the "Inacti...

Is Google Dying? Or Did the Web Grow Up?

This article was featured in One Story to Read Today, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a single must-read from The Atlantic , Monday through Friday. Sign up for it here. A few weeks ago my house had a septic-tank emergency, which is as awful as it sounds. As unspeakable things began to burble up from my shower drain, I did what any smartphone-dependent person would: I frantically Googled something along the lines of poop coming from shower drain bad what to do. I was met with a slew of cookie-cutter websites, most of which appeared hastily generated and were choked with enough repetitive buzzwords as to be barely readable. Virtually everything I found was unhelpful, so we did the old-fashioned thing and called a professional. The emergency came and went, but I kept thinking about those middling search results—how they typified a zombified internet wasteland. Like many, I use Google to answer most of the mundane questions that pop up in my day-to-day life. And yet that first page of search results feels like it’s been surfacing fewer satisfying answers lately. I’m not alone; the frustration has become a persistent meme: that Google Search, what many consider an indispensable tool of modern life, is dead or dying. For the past few years, across various forums and social-media platforms, people have been claiming in viral posts that Google’s flagship product is broken. Search google dying on Twitter or Reddit and you can see people grousing about it going back to t...

A Guide to Google Search Ranking Systems

Feature guides • All structured data features • Article • Book • Breadcrumb • Carousel • Course • COVID-19 announcements • Dataset • Education Q&A • Employer Aggregate Rating • Estimated salary • Event • Fact Check • FAQ • Home Activities • How-to • Image metadata • Job Posting • Learning Video • Local Business • Logo • Math solver • Movie • Practice problem • Product • Q&A • Recipe • Review snippet • Sitelinks search box • Software App • Speakable • Subscription and paywalled content • Video • Title links • International and multilingual • Overview • Managing multi-regional and multilingual sites • Tell Google about localized versions of your page • How Google crawls locale-adaptive pages • Education • SEO fundamentals • Introduction • Search Essentials • Get your website on Google • How Google Search Works • SEO starter guide • Do you need an SEO? • Crawling and indexing • Sitemaps • robots.txt • Meta tags • Crawler management • Removals • Canonicalization • Redirects • JavaScript SEO • Ranking and search appearance • Visual Elements gallery • Title links • Snippets • Images • Videos • Structured data • Favicons • Site-specific guides • Ecommerce • International and multilingual sites • Education • All updates • Documentation updates • Ranking updates • New YouTube videos • Recent podcast episodes A guide to Google Search ranking systems Google uses automated ranking systems that We regularly improve these systems through This page is a guide to understanding some of our...

Make Google your homepage

You can quickly get to Google every time you open your browser by making Google your homepage. Change your homepage Choose a browser below, then follow thesteps on your computer.If you don't see your browser below, go to the "Help" section of your browser and look for information on how to change your browser’s homepage. • In the upper right corner of your browser, select More Settings. • Under "Set your homepage," click the Down arrow A specific page or pages. • If you have a current homepage: Next to the URL, click X. • Click *Enter a URL*. Then, type: www.google.com. Google is stuck as my homepage Google won'tchange your homepage settings without your permission. • Reset your homepage. Choosea browser above, then follow the steps to replace Google with the site you want as your homepage. • Check for unwanted programs. If resetting your homepage doesn't fix the problem, you might have unwanted programscalledmalware that's imitating the Google site. Learn • Make Google your homepage • Make Google your default search engine • Add & customize your Search widget • Change your Search browser settings • Change your display language on Google • Manage contact info from your devices • Update your knowledge panel • Turn off Discover • Change your Discover settings • Manage app info from your devices • How shopping recommendations work on Google Search • Search in Dark theme on Google • How Google determines the language of search results

Make Google your homepage

Google Search is installed but not set as your default search provider. To default to Google, here’s how you do it: • Click the Tools icon at the far right of the browser window. • Select Internet options. • In the General tab, find the Search section and click Settings. • Select Google. • Click Set as default and click Close. Option 2: Edit your preferences manually Click on Firefox in the top left corner, then select Options, and then click on Options in the right menu. Click on the General button in the top menu with the picture of a switch. Next to When Firefox starts, open the drop down menu and select Show my home page. Type www.google.com in the Home Page box, and click OK to save. Edit preferences or settings to make Google your homepage Oops! We can’t figure out which internet browser instructions to show you. Try clicking on the name of your browser in the top menu and then selecting Preferences, Settings, or Options. If you have Tools in the top menu, click on it and then select Internet Options. Or try downloading