Inurl+view+index+shtml+bedroom+link

Inurl+view+index+shtml+bedroom+link

intitle:index.of "index.shtml" bedroom

To find URLs containing "view" and "index.shtml," you need:

inurl:view inurl:index.shtml

Or for exact phrase in URL:

allinurl:view index.shtml

If you want pages that link to a specific URL containing those terms (deprecated but sometimes functional on Bing/Yahoo): inurl+view+index+shtml+bedroom+link

link:http://example.com/view/index.shtml

Better approach: Use site: and content matching: intitle:index

site:example.com inurl:view "index.shtml" bedroom

The string inurl+view+index+shtml+bedroom+link is likely a corrupted Google dork—a fragment of a more powerful search that was once used to find SSI-based content management systems, old virtual tour software, or even exposed webcams in bedrooms (a disturbing but real discovery in the early 2000s). To find URLs containing "view" and "index

Today, this exact string serves as a case study in why syntax matters and how web technologies evolve. No modern e-commerce site, hotel booking engine, or real estate platform relies on index.shtml for core functionality. The few remaining uses are in legacy intranets, outdated public records sites, or museum-piece web servers.

For the curious searcher: learn proper Google operators (site:, intitle:, inurl:, filetype:, - exclusion). Understand current web tech (REST APIs, JavaScript frameworks, static site generators). Respect privacy and legality. You will find far more interesting—and safe—information than chasing the ghost of index.shtml.


"bedroom" "index.shtml" inurl:room