By any chance does your client run a public service like education or govt? In this case you could just use googles free search. It's great. Really really good.
http://services.google.com/publicservice/login Apart from that maybe pay google for a premium search page, or use the API that are only really supposed to be used for development. Regards Gavin On Wed, 8 Dec 2004 16:58:33 +1100, Ryan Sabir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all, > I'm interested to find out how people have been implementing site-wide > search engines in their sites. > > Is there any search software that can be installed that will actually spider > a site following all the links, and make its search index automatically? I > would see this being useful in the case where a client is asking for a > search to be added to their site after it was already built. Hmm, is this > what 'vspider' is for? Is anyone using vspider with any degree of success, > or are there better options out there? > > The other option I guess would be to build the whole site within a CMS > framework so any piece of data could be identified within the page context > it is displayed in. Unless I go for an off the shelf CMS such as Farcry, is > this going to be way too much trouble? > > thanks all, bye! > > ----------------------- > Ryan Sabir > Newgency Pty Ltd > 2a Broughton St > Paddington 2021 > Sydney, Australia > Ph (02) 9331 2133 > Fax (02) 9331 5199 > Mobile: 0411 512 454 > http://www.newgency.com/index.cfm?referer=rysig > > --- > You are currently subscribed to cfaussie as: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Aussie Macromedia Developers: http://lists.daemon.com.au/ > --- You are currently subscribed to cfaussie as: [email protected] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Aussie Macromedia Developers: http://lists.daemon.com.au/
