This is the basic search bar, as it appears on archive.org's front page, along with icons representing various Internet Archive media types.
Clicking on any of the icons will lead you to a collection page containing items of that particular media type.
If you click on the Search bar, it will expand to show an additional menu where you can select a specific search type:
On interior pages the same search box appears in the banner, at the top right of the page.
When you click on this search box, a menu for selecting a search type appears, just like on the front page.
Due to the sheer size of Internet Archive, searching all content via the basic search can lead to an overwhelming number of results; searching within collections can help make your searches more accurate.
All items in the Archive are organized into one or more collections or sub-collections. Collections are used in many ways. In addition to thematic collections, generic collections exist for every media type; there is a "texts" collection, an "audio" collection, and so on. Likewise, every user has a collection containing items they have uploaded, as well as a collection of favorite items.
To search within a collection, use the search box on the left side of the page, above the list of filters. This area is highlighted with a red box in the image here.
Internet Archive offers a powerful tool that is unavailable to users of almost any other search engines or digital repository platforms: instead of just seeing a list of search results in your web browser, search results can be returned as a downloadable, structured data file in XML, JSON, CSV, and more!
You can also specify exactly which metadata attributes you would like included in your results - from just a title to nearly complete descriptive, technical, and preservation metadata records.