marcandangel.com — I’ll bet you haven’t used Google to perform a quick Mp3 search for the nagging song that’s been stuck in your head all day. The truth is that Google can be used to conduct a search for almost any file type, including Mp3s, PDFs, and videos. This functionality has been available for a long time, but most users haven’t caught on to it.
Oct 15, 2006 View in Crawl 4
blargmanOct 16, 2006
@moonwell - yes they are going to disable inurl command, *rollseyes*
joeshirtOct 16, 2006
<a class="user" href="http://www.srchfor.com">http://www.srchfor.com</a> ! i use it
ostracizeOct 16, 2006
Agreed with much of what was said here. This method can sometimes be effective but usually requires half an hour or more of searching before you can finally get a hold of a complete and valid version of the song you are looking for. It is generally most effective for the overplayed crap on the radio. If you want a more obscure song, or one that hasn't had much attention recently, you're going to have to find different solutions.
bob_oliverOct 16, 2006
Another link to <a class="user" href="http://g2p.org">http://g2p.org</a> ...
kendetroitOct 18, 2006
....and altavista's image search is top rate as well....try it out for pr0n.
mrdorkesqOct 26, 2006
So here is the problem: For a year or more I have been using this complicated google search string to find files on the web.2 months ago I made a web interface for it. I can back this claim up with e-mails and the original source code that I saved.It isn't pretty because I made it mostly for my personal use.Now this Marc and Angel dude puts my (crappy) code on his blog and takes credit for it?.Kids, you can't take them anywhere.
gapponJan 27, 2008
who can remember all those Google search strings, this site does it for you www.gappon.comcheers
jamesasmithiiiJan 3, 2010
<a class="user" href="http://mp3frenzy.net" rel="nofollow">http://mp3frenzy.net</a> is good for finding full albums.