
When you're trying to find someone online, Google's not the only game
in town. In the last two years, a handful of new people search engines
have come onto the scene that offer better ways to pinpoint people info
by name, handle, location, or place of employment. While there's still
no killer, one-stop people search, there are more ways than ever to
track down a long-lost friend, stalk an ex, or screen a potential date
or employee. The next time you wonder, "What ever happened to
so-and-so?" you've got a few power people search tools to turn to.
Note: Stalking is serious business. When we say 'stalk,' we're exaggerating, not recommending.
Find Phone Numbers and Addresses with ZabaSearch

Look up anyone's home address(es) and phone numbers at
ZabaSearch, a
creepily-comprehensive
people search engine that will freak you out when you search on your
own name but save your ass when you desperately need a former
coworker's phone number. ZabaSearch's index includes listed
and unlisted numbers and addresses (though the
founders say all the info is public record.)
Search the "Deep Web" with Pipl

My favorite new search engine of the bunch,
Pipl digs up information about a person Google often misses, supposedly by searching the "deep web" (or "
invisible web.")
Pipl returns an impressive number of results for most people who use
their "real" names online, including personal web pages, press
mentions, MySpace pages, and Amazon wishlists. You can also narrow your
search for common names by entering city, state and country, too.
Search Several Social Sites at Once with Wink

So
the person you're looking for likely has a Friendster, LinkedIn,
MySpace, Twitter, or Xanga account? Instead of searching each service
individually, enter their full name or screen name, plus other
identifying information like interests and location at
Wink to do a one-hit comprehensive search of all those services at once.
Get Employment Results at ZoomInfo

Job-centric search engine
ZoomInfo
aggregates people and company information in one place to help
candidates find the right job, but its people search tool also turns up
information about corporate types especially well. ZoomInfo's
information listings on people, culled from the web, include people's
employment history and current job title, whether or not they're
looking for a job. Search by a person's full name at ZoomInfo, and when
you get too many results, filter them by geography (U.S. and Canada
only.)
Find More than College Students at Facebook
Incessant notifications, Beacon, and zombies aside, one of
Facebook's
greatest utilities is finding people online, and it's not just for
students anymore. Chances are your grandmother set up a Facebook
account this year, so all those annoying emails might be worth tracking
down your best friend when you were 9 years old who moved to Florida on
Facebook.
Practice Your Google-fu for Better People Results

Okay, fine, you can't talk finding people online without mentioning the
big G. For internet superstars you'll get great results by just typing
his/her name into Google's search box, but for civilians, common names
or names with double meanings, a few advanced Google techniques can
help narrow down the field of results.
- Enclose the first and last name of the person you're searching for in quotes when you enter it into the search box (like "John Smith").
- Include other relevant words, like the person's profession,
employer, location, or screen name, too (like banker or Austin, Texas.)
- If the person you're searching for is likely to appear on a
particular web site—like a school—search only that site using the
site:URL operator (like site:ucla.edu "John Smith").
- To look up people by face, search for them on Google Images to get a quick visual—especially useful for people with common names, or to determine the gender of a name you never heard before.
Get Context-Menu Access to People Search Engines with the Who Is This Person? Firefox extension

Finally, if you run across folks online you want to know more about often, search a ton of engines for someone's name with the
Who Is This Person? Firefox extension.
Simply highlight the name on any web page and look 'em up on Wink,
LinkedIn, Wikipedia, Facebook, Google News, Technorati, Yahoo Person
Search, Spock, WikiYou, ZoomInfo, IMDB, MySpace and other engines from
the Who Is This Person? context menu item.
For more online sleuthing resources, check out Wendy's great tutorial on searching public records online. To make yourself more findable? Have a say in what Google says about you.
Also, many of these services let you "claim" your name and add
information to your results. Do a search for your own name and click
the link that says, in effect, "Is this you?"
Does the current crop of people search engines make you want to
change your name, fail you entirely, or help you get in touch? Let us
know what you think in the comments.
Gina Trapani, the editor of Lifehacker, likes to find and be found. Her weekly feature, Geek to Live, appears every Friday on Lifehacker. Subscribe to the Geek to Live feed to get new installments in your newsreader.