AJB2.COM Job Sites Search Engine
AJB2.COM is a different type of job search engine. Here we search for job sites, rather than individual jobs.
These sites are at companies, universities, governments, and any other type of organization that might hire people.
You can enter the type of job you are looking for in the search box, and you will be shown all the sites that may have that type of job posted.
For example, you can enter the field, Geology and the search engine will return all the sites that may have geology related jobs.
You can also use the preset searches below.
Simple Tips for More Exact Searches
Searches are case insensitive. Searching for "Job" will match the lowercase "job" and uppercase "JOB".
Including or excluding words:
To make sure that a specific word is always included in your search
topic, place the plus (+) symbol before the key word in the search box.
To make sure that a specific word is always excluded from your search
topic, place a minus (-) sign before the keyword in the search box.
Expand your search using wildcards (*):
By typing an * at the end of a keyword, you can search for the word with multiple endings.
Example: Try wish*, to find wish, wishes, wishful, wishbone, and wishy-washy.
Fancy Features for Typical Searches
You can search more than just text. Here are all of the other ways
you can search:
link:address
Finds pages that link to the specified address, or a substring of it.
Use link:ajb.com to find all pages linking to
Arthur's Job Base.
text:text
Finds pages that contain the specified text in any part of the page other
than an image tag, link, or URL. The search text:cow9 would find all pages
with the term cow9 in them.
title:text
Finds pages that contain the specified word or phrase in the page title
(which appears in the title bar of most browsers). The search title:career
would find pages with career in the title.
url:text
Finds pages with a specific word or phrase in the URL. Use url:search
to find all pages on all servers that have the word "search" in the host
name, path, or filename - the complete URL, in other words.
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