Archive for the ‘search engines’ Category

It’s 2014. What happened to the news?

Tuesday, January 17th, 2006

In the year 2014, the NewYork Times has gone offline. The Fourth Estate’s fortunes have waned. What happened to the news? And what is EPIC? (8 minute time-shifted transmission).

NYTimes article about AdSense

Monday, January 16th, 2006

The New York Times features an article in today’s (January 16, 2005) issue about AdSense, featuring Shawn Hogan of San Diego based DigitalPoint. The article touches on the revenue-sharing approach for forum participants and reveals that ” for every dollar the company brings in through AdSense and other places that distribute its ads, it pays roughly 78.5 cents back to sites like Digital Point that display the ads”.

Nofollow Attribute For Links

Friday, January 6th, 2006

I’m a little late to the use of the “nofollow” attribute in links. I’ve used in in nofollow in the robots META tag before, but having recently discovered the links version, I’m posting about their use.

The new link attribute is called “nofollow” with rel=”nofollow” being the format inserted within an anchor tag. When added to any link, it will serve as a flag that the link has not been explicitly approved by the site owner.

For example, this is how the HTML markup for an ordinary link might look:

<a href="http://www.site.com/page.html">Visit My Page</a>

This is how the link would look after the nofollow attribute has been added, with the attribute portion shown in bold

<a href="http://www.site.com/page.html" rel="nofollow" >Visit My Page</a>

This would also be acceptable, as order of elements within the anchor tag makes no difference:

<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.site.com/page.html">Visit My Page</a>

Once added, the search engines supporting the attribute will understand that the link has not been vetted in some way by the site owner. Think of it as a way to flag to them, “I didn’t post this link — someone else did.” Use it wherever it means that another person placed a link on your site.

If Google sees nofollow as part of a link, it will:

  1. NOT follow through to that page.
  2. NOT count the link in calculating PageRank link popularity scores.
  3. NOT count the anchor text in determining what terms the page being linked to is relevant for.

If you need to link to a site but are worried that a search engine might consider it a “bad neighborhood,” , nofollow could offer peace of mind.

Those who are swapping links with other sites now have a whole new thing to look out for. If someone offers to link to you, you’ll want to make sure they don’t make use of the nofollow tag — at least if you were hoping for some search engine gain. Otherwise, the link’s not going to count.

Y!Q Link Generator

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2006

Posted about Y!Q previously back in July 2005. Jeremy Zawodny writes about updating the template for his individual post pages to include Y!Q.

Here’s a WordPress Y!Q plugin.

Here’s a Y!Q Link Generator.

del.ico.us search

Saturday, December 17th, 2005

Searching del.ico.us for antenna returns 155 links to diy wireless antennas.

AOL Top Searches for 2005

Wednesday, December 14th, 2005

Millions of people search online through AOL Search for a wide spectrum of things, but there are those terms that are looked-up more frequently than others,” said Jim Riesenbach, senior vice president of AOL Search and Directional Media. “From news and people that grab attention to popular products and common queries, the most searched for topics online during 2005 are a reflection of what was top of mind or what people wanted to find more information about.

Part of the list:

Top Words: 1) Lottery; 2) Horoscopes; 3) Tattoos; 4) Lyrics; 5) Ringtones; 6) IRS; 7) Jokes; 8] American Idol; 9) Hairstyles; 10) NASCAR.

Top Gadgets/Gadget Brands: 1) iPod; 2) Cell Phones; 3) Playstation 3; 4) Xbox 360; 5) mp3 Players; 6) XM Radio; 7) Laptops; 8] Palm Pilot; 9) Sirius Radio; 10) GPS.

Top Cars: 1) Ford Mustang; 2) MINI Cooper; 3) Scion; 4) Chevrolet Corvette; 5) Ford GT; 6) Hummer; 7) Dodge Charger; 8]Porsche; 9) Chevrolet Camaro; 10) Honda Civic.

A few tips on ranking in Google

Wednesday, December 14th, 2005

From an interview with Matt Cutts.

I wouldn’t bother with year/month/day in blog urls; I’d just use the first few words from the title of the post in the url. Don’t try to rank for a huge phrase at first–pick a smaller niche and get to be known as an expert there, and then build your way out and up. Controversial posts are sure to build links, but too many controversial posts may undermine your credibility. I think you attract more links with a conversational style, humor, and doing your own research to produce new insights or tidbits of info. In my opinion, just commenting on other blogs isn’t as useful. There are a lot of ways to build a reputation, from having a great blog to producing a unique service to speaking at conferences. A single creative idea that catches fire in the blogosphere or digg.com is probably more useful than just chasing/buying/trading links. Original information or research is great bait to attract links. :)