Text Only
Search

 
Website of the Week — Open Directory

20 October 2006
Website of the Week: Open Directory (MP3, 1.2MB) - Download (MP3) audio clip
Website of the Week: Open Directory (MP3, 1.2MB) - Listen (MP3) audio clip

Time again for our Website of the Week, when we showcase interesting and innovative online destinations. Our web guide is VOA's Art Chimes.

Before search engines came along to tame the World Wide Web, users looking for specific information relied on directories like Yahoo, with categorized listings organized like a library: all the Chinese cooking sites listed on one page, programming utilities on another, and so forth.

A few years back, search engines — notably Google — leapfrogged over directories to become the main way of finding stuff online. But the directories never completely went away, and this week we highlight one of the most comprehensive.

KEATING:  "The Open Directory Project is a volunteer-driven web directory that helps users navigate the Web. People from, really, all over the globe, contribute and edit categories in the directory and contribute links to really the quality websites across the web."

Bob Keating is Editor in Chief of the Open Directory Project, also known as DMOZ at dmoz.org.

Unlike Google, which relies on computer algorithms to help you locate the information you want, Open Directory uses 75,000 human editors — unpaid volunteers — to make sense of the vastness of the Web.

Although there are times when a search engine will be your best choice; other times, Keating says choosing Open Directory will be a smarter way to find what you're looking for.

KEATING:  "The web directory is good if you're looking to find information on a topic, and you just want to see what's out there, where a search engine is really most useful if you're looking for specific types of information."

In addition to subject categories, there are dozens of individual language categories.

Using volunteers makes Open Directory similar in some ways to a popular user-written online encyclopedia.

KEATING:  "The editor-contributor model like the Open Directory is similar to what you find today with Wikipedia and these other types of projects that have user-driven content. And the Open Directory was a precursor to those projects in that it was meant to be scalable by making it open to the maximum number of contributors."

Editor in Chief Bob Keating of the Open Directory Project, which is owned by AOL through their Netscape unit. Check it out at dmoz.org, or get the link from our site, voanews.com.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
Berlin Wall Celebration Marked by Joy and Caution  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Officials Warn of Possible Collapse of Palestinian Authority
Hariri Names New Lebanese Government After Five Week Vacuum  Audio Clip Available
US Had Previously Monitored Fort Hood Shooting Suspect
NATO: 130 Militants Killed in Afghanistan
US, Germany Press Afghan President on Reform  Audio Clip Available
Clinton Urges 'Compassion' for Americans Detained in Iran  Audio Clip Available
Iran Charges 3 US Detainees with Espionage
Iraq Electoral Official Says Vote Will Happen On Time   Audio Clip Available
Afghans React To Possible US Troop Surge  Audio Clip Available
Suicide Bomber Kills 3 in Northwestern Pakistan
China Executes Nine Ethnic Uighurs in July Unrest
APEC Economies Report Improved Trade Finance, Discuss Free Trade  Audio Clip Available
Scientists Report Abnormal Sea Level Rises Off Western Australia  Audio Clip Available
Tropical Storm Ida Aims For US Gulf Coast;  State of Emergency in Effect
Obama Makes First China Tour as Economic Interdependence Grows  Video clip available