When I first saw the change, I assumed it had
something to do with the dispute over potential
copyright violations by caching material without
consent. With the change in terminology Google may be
on safer ground or at least can more easily change its
practice consistently with the new, rather vague
title.
Andy Grossman
University College London, SLAIS
--- "Levine, Jason" <8levine@jmls.edu> wrote:
> As I understand it, the "Show Matches" link beneath
> the results item shows
> the cached results, while clicking on the main item
> link would take you to
> the current page.
>
> Jason R. Levine
> Computer Reference Librarian
> The John Marshall Law School
> 315 S. Plymouth Ct.
> Chicago, IL 60604 E-Mail: 8levine@jmls.edu
> (312) 427-2737 ext. 551
>
> -----Original Message-----
>
>
>
> From: Robert S. Ryan [mailto:RRyan@HFBLLP.COM]
> Sent: Monday, April 24, 2000 12:02 PM
> To: 'law-lib@ucdavis.edu'
> Cc: 'cchick@earthlink.net'
> Subject: Change in Google
>
>
>
> I use Google as a Web search engine all the time and
> just noticed this
> morning that the Cached Results feature seems to
> have disappeared. This had
> been an extremely useful item - when a search hits
> on an article in an
> online periodical, very often the direct search
> result link takes you not to
> the article but to the current issue of the
> periodical. The cached result
> took you to the actual article, stored by Google.
>
> Anybody have any knowledge as to why the change?
>
> Bob Ryan
>
> Hill, Farrer & Burrill
> Los Angeles
> 213-620-0460, x1848
>
>
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Wed Nov 14 2007 - 20:33:34 PST