PC Magazine has published short reviews of these tools. For their opinion, go to www.zdnet.com/pcmag/features/utili [...] netsearch. Web Seeker is as good as any of these tools, but because they all operate and produce results differently, it is difficult to compare them. Check out PC mag, to decide which ones seem to have the features more relevant to what you do when searching the Internet for information.
Designed for users interested in comprehensive searches from multiple engines, Web Seeker presents a list of results that can be saved, viewed offline, organized, and automatically updated. The result refining capability lets you drill down from an existing list of results, adding keywords and phrases to pinpoint the exact information you need.
When you finish a search, the results are compiled in a .html file, temporarily placed in your \windows\temp folder. If you want to save the results, you are allowed the standard Windows Save As function to give the file a name and a place, while keeping their proprietary .wsk file format extension. When you come back to open this file, you can either open Web Seeker and then open the .wsk file, or locate it in Explorer and double click on it to open Web Seeker.