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Monday, June 16, 2008

6/16/2008 8:07:12 AM 比尔盖茨和社区主管的茶话会 >> joycode

[原文发表地址]:Inspirational session with Bill and community leaders
[原文发表时间]:Friday, June 06, 2008 7:05 PM by Somasegar

 这周前几天我一直在佛罗里达州的奥兰多参加 TechEd 2008. 

我有机会参加了一些非常难忘的活动, 首先是与微软的第一个员工和开发人员Bill Gates一起做了主题演讲。 

几个小时后,我招待了一群有影响力的社区成员,与Bill Gates进行午餐会谈,这群人包含了MVP’s, 地区总监,INETA主管和其他一些人,选择他们参与会谈是因为他们在社区中对支持他人作出的杰出贡献。

老实说,我并不确定这次会谈的主题将会是什么,也不确定面临当前各种技术发展的挑战,他们的想法会是什么。但最后,我认为这是一个非常棒的会谈,同时也是一次让我感到惭愧体验。 

离开时,我的感觉被大家对一个主题所具有的激情所淹没, 这个主题占据了我们会谈的大部分时间。会谈主要围绕在我们怎样使IT 技能和专家技术在非盈利的健康和教育等领域更好的结合。所有的谈话和评论都聚集在怎么使在场的每个人采取行动,提供他们在技术和IT方面的经验来帮助那些贫困的人们。 

Bill在这次午餐会上说的一些事情非常令我动容:“当一次灾难来临的时候,有如此多的人打开他们的心灵,敞开他们的思想,动用他们的财富,并献出他们的时间,这是很伟大的。但是,在灾难发生前1年或2年完成一套应急响应体系将更具影响力,这使我们能够更加快速的对一场灾难做出响应。在我们被各种灾难的消息轰炸之前,并不是我们所有的人都在我们日常生活中考虑到这些事情。” 

参加这次午餐会的Kate Gregory,提到了一个叫MatchIT的组织。这是一个将IT专业人员和非盈利性组织进行配对的加拿大组织。我了解到微软加拿大的同事已经参与到了这个组织。我真的非常喜欢这个主意并且希望存在其他一些相似的组织或者这些组织已经在各个社区萌芽发展。 

如我所说,这个话题所具有的激情和信服力令我非常感动。我满怀欣喜地看到,支持着我们微软开发者社区的那些有影响力的人们对满足贫困人们的需求同样具有激情.

Namaste!

6/16/2008 12:01:18 PM Totlol: YouTube Videos for Toddlers >> Google Blogoscoped

Totlol is a community-moderated video site for "those between the ages of 6 months and 6 years." Its video embeddings -- like the Googleheads song -- are based on the YouTube API, making for a customized, integrated look*. Totlol"s About page explains, "Online video is a great new experience, and new parents discovered that showing their tots videos on the computer screen is a great way to spend time together. So they head to the leading video websites." Totlol steps in, the explanation reads, because some of the bigger video sites "provide no way to filter anything that may be inappropriate and they provide very limited tools ...

6/16/2008 11:17:29 AM Nokia Helper Templates >> Google Blogoscoped

When preparing a new text message to someone on the mobile phone I use, you"re offered to pick from ready-made text templates like "I am late. I will be there at ___" or "I"m busy right now. I"ll call you later." Another template Nokia decided to include reads: I love you too Thank you Nokia developers of the world for making our busy lives a bit simpler!

6/16/2008 10:52:25 AM Googolopoly Game >> Google Blogoscoped

Googolopoly by Box.net is a game of Monopoly where the goal is to "organize all of the world"s information." To achieve this, you can buy or build internet properties. The board includes fields like "Go" ("collect 200 shares of VC funding as you pass") or a "deadpool" jail ("404 error file not found"), and properties you can buy range from Jotspot, YouTube, SketchUp, over to PayPal, eBay, Yahoo and Microsoft... [Via Spreeblick. Thanks Ionut!]

6/16/2008 2:50:08 PM How a Search Engine Might Use a Searcher’s Knowledge, Interests, and Education to Rerank and Validate Search Results >> seobythesea

The amount of pages on the Web that a search engine could try to index is extremely large, and the approaches that search engines attempt to use to index and rank those pages is mostly an automated effort, but that doesn’t mean that the search engines don’t have people take a look at search results, [...]

6/16/2008 11:59:36 PM Impact Your Industry Through Blogging >> Bruce Clay, Inc. Blog

Jeremiah Owyang had a great post on Friday about the opportunities and challenges of corporate, team and personal blogs. A lot gets said about blogging. People talk about how it"s a great way to add content to your Web site, to establish yourself as a leader, to join the conversation,...

6/16/2008 8:40:51 PM The AP Hates The Blogosphere. We Hate Them Back >> Bruce Clay, Inc. Blog

Over the past few weeks I"ve come to find that my patience for stupidity is at its lowest in the morning. Combined with the fact that it"s Monday, the most sleepy and irritating day of the week, you can imagine my reaction when I opened up my feeds and heard...

6/16/2008 1:58:58 PM Google Toolbar已经支持Firefox3.0系列 >> 分享网络2.0

为了迎接明天Firefox3.0的正式发布以及Firefox3.0下载日的到来,Google 也于今天终于推出了兼容于Firefox3.0系列的Google Toolbar!(via)

Google Toolbar 是一款相当优秀的Firefox插件,特别是它的划词翻译以及书签收藏等功能尤为深入人心。在 Firefox2.0 的时代,它成了我装机必备,也是到目前为止唯一一款能够让不少网友心甘情愿下载和安装的浏览器工具栏。如今,Google 终于发布了兼容于Firefox3.0系列的G-Toolbar,显然,Google Toolbar团队的这一举动是为了迎接明天Firefox3.0的正式发布以及Firefox3.0下载日的到来!

让我们一起期待和创造2008年6月17日 24小时内下载最多软件的吉尼斯世界记录的诞生吧!


Copyright © 2008 本站作品采用知识共享署名-非商业性使用-禁止演绎 2.5 中国大陆许可协议进行许可 ...

6/16/2008 7:46:53 AM Qooboo:关注家庭 关注宝宝的SNS社区 >> 分享网络2.0

Qooboo 是国内一家新近上线运营的SNS网络社区,关注于家庭以及育儿成长。

Qooboo 是一个关注于家庭以及育儿领域的SNS社区网站,它强调育儿圈中孩子父母们之间的交流等。相比于育儿领域的领军人物宝宝树而言,Qooboo 本身并没有并没有太多的亮点,产品线也相对比较单一,倒是它们的用户界面,很Q很Web2.0,给人以很强的亲和力,尤其迎合了网站主题和年轻爸爸妈妈的心态。

中国的SNS正从一家独大向细分化和垂直化的方向的发展,满足细分专业人群的个性化网络需求正是目前国内绝大多数分众型网站最明显的一大优势;像Babytree这样的母婴类SNS的迅速崛起从侧面足以说明这些问题。我觉得,在中国育儿类社交网站仍然有着巨大的市场需求的,首先,它是相比于校园型、娱乐型、商务型等社区网站而言,育儿类SNS在国内仍然一个竞争相对弱化的领域;其次,此类网站面向的用户群是那些对互联网有着执着热情70和80后年轻一代父母们,资本相对独立,这有助于网站后期商业模式的不断探索。


Copyright © 2008 本站作品采用知识共享署名-非商业性使用-禁止演绎 2.5 中国大陆许可协议进行许可 ...

6/16/2008 10:33:24 PM 马勒泽布的脑袋 >> 王建硕

最近有很多热点的讨论,比如:金晶反对抵制家乐福的事情,比如王石关于捐款的事情,比如范美忠老师(大众称呼是范跑跑)的事情,每次都有些什么要说,却在迷茫中理不出一个明确的思路来;虽随手记了些凌乱的思考,却没有想好是不是应该发出来。发出来的结果,三位同志已经试验过了。这个社会,在0到100游戏中,愿意用近乎自杀方式表明自己选择为10以下的人,需要勇气。

不知为什么我竟然突然想起1789年巴黎革命成功后,唯一一个站出来为革命的目标路易十六辩护的马勒泽布。在路易十六统治下保护《百科全书》和那批思想家的是他,路易王朝被推翻后,为其辩护的也是他。他的行为的后果可想而知,"人民“在断头台砍了路易十六的头的同时,也顺手把他的头给砍了。

如果在18世纪末法国人还没有明白,屠杀的对象是否罪大恶极不是关键,关键是它们必须得到公正的审判的道理,我希望300年后,在中国,有更多的人明白理性和制度对于一个民族的得救的重要。巴黎1789年开始的百年腥风血雨,以及在中国最近几十年出现的重演的历史明白的告诉我们。

马勒泽布虽然和现实的论战的关系不大,但就是不知怎地,看到很多评论的时候,心中总惦记着马勒泽布被不经意扫去的脑袋。

后注:林达的《带一本书去巴黎》是很值得一读的书。因为这本书,我把他们写的另外八本书,也一并读了。

原文:http://home.wangjianshuo.com/cn/20080616_ecee.htm

6/16/2008 7:39:21 PM Check your search box for XSS exploits >> Matt

Just a quick reminder that websites should check for XSS holes on their site, especially freeform text input such as search boxes. Even big sites can have these issues with XSS and escaping user input. (Note: don’t click on these search results.) If you’ve noticed that your rankings in Google seem to be affected, you might [...]

6/16/2008 8:30:56 PM CCTV使用微软卫星地图 >> 月光博客

  据Ogle Earth分析,早前微软的 Virtual Earth/Live Maps报道的中国中央电视台(CCTV)网站开始使用微软的Virtual Earth卫星地图来定位2008年欧洲杯的地理位置,同时CCTV还打算在北京奥运会中使用相同的工具,值得注意到是,CCTV的网站在中国,目标用户使中国观众。有两点值得注意:

  1、同样是卫星地图,微软提供的Virtual Earth就可以在主流网站使用,而Google提供的Google Earth要受到管制。

  2、央视使用的微软Virtual Earth卫星地图是完全版(没有任何阉割),非中国的数据库,点击其中一个按钮可以显示包括中国在内的全部高解析度卫星图像(微软中国地图并没有提供卫星图像,Google中国地图也一样),经过一些缩放和移动,可以清晰看到中国区域的卫星地图。

微软卫星地图

  换句话说,中央电视台也发现互联网地图好处,并设法变通的使用,这个例子也说明不应该对互联网地图这种有用的工具采取限制或禁止的管理方式,否则别人就会使用类似的方式进行规避而“非法”的使用互联网地图。




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6/16/2008 10:08:46 AM The Associated Press Uses the DMCA to Try and Shut Down Bloggers >> SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

Posted by Sarah Bird, Esquire

May It Please the Mozzers,

I have some disconcerting news to report on today"s Legal Monday.

In a move that it will surely regret, the Associated Press (AP) declared war on the internet. Maybe that"s a slight overstatement, but the AP will certainly rue the day it decided to adopt a policy of sending DMCA take-down notices to bloggers and social news aggregators.

Last week, the AP sent seven DMCA take-down notices to The Drudge Retort, a site parodying The Drudge Report and serving as a social news aggregator. The 8,500 site users create blog entries with links to interesting news articles on the web.

Rogers Cadenhead, owner of the Drudge Retort, received a letter from the AP"s attorneys claiming that the Drudge Retort was infringing on the AP"s copyright by allowing its users to publish short (39 to 79 words) quotations from AP articles with links back to the original. Five of the six alleged infringements used different titles than the original AP article. The seventh claimed infringement was in a blog comment that used a short quote of an original AP article and linked back to it.

Cadenhead provides the following example of an alleged infringement on his site detailing the claims:

Here"s one of the six disputed blog entries:

Clinton Expects Race to End Next Week

Hillary Rodham Clinton says she expects her marathon Democratic race against Barack Obama to be resolved next week, as superdelegates decide who is the stronger candidate in the fall. "I think that after the final primaries, people are going to start making up their minds," she said. "I think that is the natural progression that one would expect."

If you follow the link, you"ll see that the blog entry reproduces 18 words from the story and a 32-word quote by Hillary Clinton under a user-written headline. The blog entry drew 108 comments in the ensuing discussion.

While this is the most surprising and poorly conceived of the AP"s anti-internet campaigns, it is not the first. The AP sued Moreover, All Headlines News, and Google for copyright-related claims.

According to the New York Times, the AP has retreated from its staunch position and admitted that it was "heavy handed" in its treatment of bloggers.

I"m relieved to hear that the AP is rethinking its policy, but I"m still a bit skeptical given the AP"s recent litigious history. The AP talks about embracing the internet era, but its actions consistently demonstrate a desire to return pre-internet days where distribution control was vital for earnings.

So here"s a little gratis news flash to the AP: Links are the currency of the internet. Instead of harassing bloggers etc., you should be praising them for bringing people to your content. It"s a very poor business decision to ask people not to facilitate access to your product. The people posting and commenting on aggregator sites like Digg and Mixx are clicking through to your stories, thereby increasing your revenue. Many bloggers are indicating that they will stop linking to AP stories at all.

Also, from a legal perspective, an infringement case would be very weak. There is strong argument for a fair use defense here. The little quotations posted by bloggers are not stifling demand for the AP"s product. Bloggers are creating demand, not decreasing demand by creating replacement supply. Further, posting excerpts of the articles and linking to the original facilitates and invites critical discussion of the content, one of the primary reasons for the fair use defense.

Whatever internal discussion is going on at the AP right now, I hope that people who understand the value of links and the economy and ethics of the internet will prevail.

Very truly yours,
Sarah Bird

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6/16/2008 1:25:52 AM The Quizzical Duality of Paid Links >> SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

Posted by randfish

Google"s been pretty clear - buy or sell links, particularly those that come from broker-type services, and we"ll take steps to penalize your site. At one time, this meant simply devaluing the links that come from paid sources, essentially erasing them from the link graph so as to "take the money out of the rankings." Now, however, a considerable amount of new evidence has emerged to suggest Google"s doing more than just leveling the field - they"re exacting revenge.

How Paid Links Work on a Network Level:

For the last 4 years, a number of large, generally well-known link brokers have operated in the gray area of Google"s paid links guidelines. Their operations generally follow a similar thread:

  1. Contact a number of medium-high PageRank/Trusted websites about monetizing ad blocks with "juice"-passing links. Very often, these sites will simply sell the space without even realizing the potential Google-related implications.
  2. Start selling links through relationship marketing - connecting with SEO firms who can re-sell the links, attending conferences for personal connections to potential buyers, and even advertising on the web (Google may have killed ads for "text links," but you can still find a full cadre of advertisers for link brokers, high pagerank links, link buying, etc).
  3. Create blocks of text link ads that point to the client pages from the seller, paying the rental price for the link space while earning a bonus on the extra amount earned from the buyers.

Smart link brokers have taken a number of additional steps to help prevent discovery (and devaluation) by Google, including:

  • Anonymizing & randomizing the HTML code used to display the ads. One smaller company I"ve seen will never use the same HTML styles twice to minimize the likelihood of discovery.
  • Linking to half clients / half non-clients in the ad blocks, to help dissuade the engines from wholesale punishing the sites in the ads
  • Modifying anchor text and link source (linking to multiple pages on a domain, or even domains/URLs that 301-redirect to the client"s pages).
  • Running only a few ad blocks per site to help lessen the risk of identification through sitewide/multiple links from a domain type detection.

How Google Fights Paid Links & Text Link Sellers:

On the other side of the coin, Google"s actions have turned from preventative and reactive to real aggression:

  • Actively penalizing not only sites that sell, but sites that buy (a significant change from 1.5-2 years ago, when those links were merely devalued). Naturally, this suggests that the system is ripe for abuse, but I haven"t heard of a "false positive" though I certainly expect to see a few in the very near future.
  • Penalties include lowering of rankings (which is somewhat new - most of the penalties used to be just in the toolbar PageRank score). In my experience, there"s a two-tier system in place here. Usually, large, important sites will only lose rankings on the specific pages buying and selling the links, rather than the entire domain. Meanwhile, smaller and mid-size domains can experience site-wide rankings drops (the now famous "-XX penalty" is the one I see a lot here, where XX can be anything from 10 to 100).
  • Google"s spending significant engineering resources to investigate paid link networks and brokers and bring down entire businesses that use this strategy. Obviously, since many advertise and run websites, and some even use their own networks to help their rankings (or the rankings of other sites that share their registrant data), Google has some fairly low-hanging fruit to pluck. I"ve heard tell that Google may even have some people posing as link buyers to attempt to get data about the sites selling links - personally, I can"t imagine why they wouldn"t do this. If I were in charge of the paid link detection team, I"d have two full-time interns with lots of fake websites and businesses calling up every link broker I could find and trying to get their full inventory.
  • Using "poison," high-commercial value keywords in anchor text as a methodology to discover the sites buying and selling.
  • Finding buyers and sellers by playing connect-the-dots. Once Google finds one seller or buyer, they can reverse the link patterns to/from a domain and catch an entire network of link sales.

One of the most interesting tactics I"ve seen employed thanks to this new, take-off-the-gloves approach from Google is link sellers who work with buyers to first send links to their competitors" sites. If the buying site loses rankings, it"s a win for the client and the seller keeps them up. If the competition gains rankings, the links are switched by the seller to point to the buyer"s site (so they get the positive impact). I"ve only heard of this strategy being employed by a single buyer, albeit with multiple sellers, and don"t know the final outcome (but it is a brilliant strategy).

The Two Sides of the Paid Link Ethics & Business Case Debate:

First off, I want to say that I am largely agnostic when it comes to the "ethics" of paid links, but I know that others have strong feelings about this. Even my fiancée thinks that buying links to grow search engine rankings is akin to cheating the web ecosphere, but it"s one of the rare areas where we disagree. What I do see are two entirely competing business objectives from very different kinds of organizations.

For Google, keeping link value from passing through directly purchased links is a no-brainer. They have to do it, or risk losing serious relevancy. Find a great link broker, even today, and you can use a mid-level domain (PR 6+, relatively high trust, lots of good links, significant history) to rank for very competitive terms and phrases. Google can"t have that weakness exploited or they risk being leapfrogged by a competitor in the search space who does a better job with spam detection.

Many times, when I hear Matt Cutts or Adam Lasnik talk about paid links, they address it almost like a philosophy or ethical issue, which, in my mind, is by far the weaker argument. Tell people that your job is to serve the best results, and sadly, the correlation between link buyers and relevance is frequently low. This perfectly explains why you have to discount perturbances like paid links. Make it about the business, and the business owners and operators in the room will respect you. Make it about the lack of morality among SEOs and you build grudges, animosity, and spite ("Oh yeah, I"ll show them - I"m gonna go buy me a bunch of links!"). I"m not even personally immune to this gut-level reaction when I hear what should be a cut-and-dry business case presented as though it were a religious edict.

For link buyers, the opportunity to potentially rank atop the engines is irresistible, and even if 9/10 links turn out to pass no value, the ROI is often still there to get the 10% that do send the juice. Businesses justify this with the sales and marketing value they get by being on top of the rankings, and those top rankings can often be leveraged into more natural links (see the now-classic rich get richer theory).

My Problem With How Google Handles Manipulative Linking:

Google"s methodology for handling paid links creates, in my opinion, more problems than it solves, and it penalizes the more innocent players far more than those Google truly wishes to damage. How?

  • When Google finds paid links, it may discount those links without impacting rankings or toolbar PageRank of the linkind/linked-to page, or it might ding one or both of these in addition.
  • This inconsistency in patterns means there"s no clear way to determine if Google knows a page is selling links (the toolbar PR can be a good sign, but even then it"s not always 100%).
  • Google likes this setup, because it means link buyers don"t have clear signals about what to buy vs. what to avoid, and link sellers don"t know which pages/domains might be passing juice vs. hurting their clients.

In this scenario, the biggest losers are those who buy the links, who end up spending far more than they should, and those who sell links, who often don"t realize that link sales are even a bad thing (seriously, go call up a few dozen ad departments at big media websites and ask them if they"ve heard of nofollow or Google paid links debate - there"s simply no awareness in these circles). Now, Google might argue that these are precisely the targets of their Machiavellian machinations, but I find it ridiculous. The real target should be the link brokers and link network operators, who continue to profit no matter what action Google takes.

If Google really wanted to fight the source of the issue, they need to provide some transparency about which sites and pages are penalized (and reducing toolbar PR, which fluctuates naturally is a terrible way to do it, particularly since there"s no real source for historical PR information - unless you count SEOmoz"s historical PageRank checking tool).

My Proposals for How Google Could Really Fight Paid Links Effectively:

Don"t be like Microsoft and try security through obscurity. Be transparent and kick ass at your job. Create a yellow or red alert in the Google toolbar when a site/page has been penalized. Buyers will stay away, sellers will drop the links, and brokers/networks won"t be able to use the site anymore. The buyers and sellers still suffer the same retribution, but now you"ve gone one step further and started on the path to actually eliminating the market itself - fighting the source of the problem, rather than just its symptoms.

Currently, the paid link market is like the casinos in Vegas. The house is the broker, who wins no matter who"s playing or how they do. Our link sellers are likely to be the newbies - often with no idea of how much they really stand to gain or lose, or even how the game is played. The buyers are savvier, but with equally bad odds, and only a rudimentary understanding of the game"s mechanics. Google plays the dual role of timid regulator and savvy card shark, too paralyzed (maybe by fear?) that a few clever casinos & gamers will find brilliant workarounds if they expose the rules they"re enforcing and happy to let the gamblers part with their money. They"d rather have full tables where everyone"s losing to the house than empty the floor of all but a few of the smartest and most aggressive players.

Google in Vegas
Photo credit - mandj98 on Flickr.

Of course, I could be wrong - maybe Google would love to even the odds, shut down the industry and eliminate the brokers. Perhaps it"s not actually paid links they"re afraid of. Maybe there"s some other reason they"re playing fast and loose when a more straightforward strategy makes sense. Let"s say Google did expose their knowledge of who"s manipulating the system. What might happen? The link brokers would be largely out of business (and those who weren"t would find it hard to keep customers so long as Google continues to do a good job finding and shutting down the links). Sellers would stop working with brokers

But... There"s another angle that hasn"t been talked about before (to my knowledge). If Google were to expose their paid link knowledge, you can bet that Microsoft, Yahoo!, Ask, and every other startup engine would leverage that data for their own purposes. Perhaps the paid link industry isn"t actually the demon Google claims it is, but an ace-up-its-sleeve in the war for search dominance. After all, if Google"s the best spam-fighter among the engines, why share the golden goose?

Just for argument"s sake, let"s assume that"s the case. I"ll make one more recommendation to the Google search team - don"t expose the data publicly; just do it inside Webmaster Tools on an individual site basis. You still shut down the industry, but only those sites who"ve bought or sold know which links you"ve targeted, and any outside entity is going to have a near-impossible time discovering usable, scalable data.

Final Thoughts:

Until Google takes a more transparent, serious approach to fighting paid links at the source, it"s going to be hard to take their indignant righteousness on the subject at face value. Until then, I"d recommend that sellers, brokers and buyers keep their activities as clandestine and randomized as possible. Google"s built on pattern-detection - eliminate patterns and you maintain the best chance of retaining value. If and when Google comes around on the issue, I"ll more strongly consider empathizing with them. It"s a hard thing to do when you talk to dozens of folks who"ve spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on what they think is good SEO (or sold ad space to link brokers completely ignorant of the potential consequences) because of Google"s desire for search domination (or unwillingness to do anything but spread fear to those SEOs who pay close attention).

I"m particularly unsympathetic on this last point. Google alerts sites that have been hacked, those who have hidden text, and pages that otherwise fall outside their guidelines (at least, in many cases). I"m not buying the "if we draw the line, spammers can go right up to it" argument on paid links - it doesn"t fit. Google knows they created the paid linking industry, has potential solutions to fix it, yet chooses to continue letting the so-called "scoundrels" profit most and suffer least. Google has to understand the boundaries of information dissemination through the SEO world. It"s far more insular than we often perceive (as insiders), and to punish those who have no way to know what they"re doing is wrong, while rewarding the savvy brokers seriously weakens their legitimacy on the topic.

BTW - As with all posts on SEOmoz, the content above represents my personal opinion, and shouldn"t be construed as gospel truth.

P.S. This post might make it seem that I have sympathy for the brokers, but none for Google, when both are often guilty of the same offense - benefiting from the lack of knowledge in the market. I reserve harsher judgement for Google, both because I expect better from them and because in many cases, it really is only Google who knows the field, while brokers fumble as blindly as buyers and sellers. I also think it"s a bit naive to create a valuable supply (links) and demand (rankings) then stand back and say, "Hey, we didn"t say you could create a market economy here!"


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6/16/2008 9:43:11 PM Puppy"s Picks for 06/16/08 >> Search Engine Guide : Small Business Search Marketing

by Jennifer Laycock

A round-up of interesting posts, resources and articles from around the web today. From site maps to link bait to the Google/Yahoo deal, find out what stories I thought were interesting enough to share with you today.


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6/16/2008 3:35:14 PM Website Architecture Questions Answered, Part VI >> Search Engine Guide : Small Business Search Marketing

by Stoney deGeyter

This is a continuation of the questions I was asked during a webinar presentation on website architecture. Before and during he presentation I was submitted over 70 question and each week I"ve been answering a handful of them. You can check out Parts one, two, three, four and five. Each of these Q&A has a lot of good information covering a variety of topics. Let"s continue with the next round of questions...

How do you rank WordPress as a CMS?
-- Scott

It depends on the context of your question. Like any CMS Wordpress has it"s pros and cons. But the question is, what do you want to do with it? As a blogging platform Wordpress is great. I like that fact that it is open source allowing plugins to be created fairly easily. You can get Wordpress to do just abut anything you want without having to hack up the source code.

If you"re looking to use Wordpress in another fashion then you"ll simply have to weigh that against other CMS programs. Investigate throughly to make sure you"ll be able to do what you need in order to accomplish your goals

How about optimizing for password protected areas such as online educational courses? The site is in drupal.
-- Amber

If you have password protected an area of your site properly then optimizing it won"t do much good. Search engines are unable to request a password so they would have no way to get past that barrier into the content. You"ll have to decide what"s more important, getting that content indexed in the search engines or keeping it hidden from anybody without a password. It"s difficult to accomplish both.

Although you can make snippets of the content available on protected pages. For the sake of simplicity I"ll assume that you have a bunch of articles that you want people to pay to subscribe to. For each article you can create a page that displays a paragraph or two of that content. A link at the end would be "click here to continue reading". If the readers is already logged in then they are given the rest of the content. If not then they are directed to a page that encourages them to subscribe so they can read the rest of the content.

Use that page to explain all the benefits of having a subscription to your content, and give them a form in which to register. On the same page you"ll want a place where current subscribers can login so they can get right to the content.

Of course there are a number of other types of content that you would want protected content so you"ll have to figure out what strategy will work best in terms of making some of that content available to the search engines. But remember, if you"re only making small portions of information available, that"s all the search engines will have in which to determine the relevance of the whole document. By keeping the bulk of it protected you"ll miss out on getting rankings for a lot of long-tail phrases.

Are iframes searchable as well?
-- Steffi

Typically iframes pull content into a web page on the client side, rather than the server side. That means the visitor sees the content in the browser, but it"s not really there on the page. I just found a page with an iframe and viewed the source code. Here is what I saw:

<iframe src="/default.asp" width="100%"></iframe>

Technically, the search engine can follow that link and index the content separately. I suppose if they really wanted to they could then incorporate the information pulled from that separate file into the page that framed it in but I have not seen or heard about this ever happening.

The best way to accomplish what an iframe does but make sure the content is included in the page properly is to use a server side include. You can implement includes fairly easily with PHP. The difference with the server-side includes is that the information being pulled in actually gets inserted into the source code of the page. So to any visitor or search engine the included file appears to be hardcoded into the page being analyzed.

How big of an issue is multiple paths to the same content (with different URLs)? What are the main problems of this from an SEO perspective?
-- Andrew

Having multiple paths to the same content, if the URL for that content remains the same, is all good. The problem is if that content gets pulled into different URLs depending on the navigation path used. This is something you want to avoid for a number of reasons.

First you have the duplicate content issue. Same content, different URLs essentially makes two or more pages that are just repeats each other. The search engines will then have to decide which one of pages should get dropped from the index and which page to keep. It may not be the one you want.

If the search engines find enough duplicate content on your site this may slow down the speed and frequency of them indexing your pages. They don"t want to use up their resources grabbing page after page of dupes so they"ll likely index fewer pages before moving on and possibly not return as frequently for further rounds of indexing.

Finally, by having duplicate pages out there you ill very likely be splitting your incoming link juice. If you can consolidate both your internal and external inbound links to a single page then that page will perform far better in the search results than if the link flow is split to several other pages that may have already been dropped from the search engine"s index.

A site overhaul can cause a duplicate URL for content pages. For instance old site used http://domain.com/product/1.html new site uses http://domain.com/products/1/. Since this might create a duplicate content issue, should a redirect be used to push the old URL to the new URL?
-- Robert

The only way this would create duplicate content is if you left the content at the old location. Typically the content would be removed from the old location in favor of the new location. But yes, you do want to implement redirects. Even if the content is no longer at the old location, you want to redirect any visitors and search engines who would frequent back to that old location so they find the new location.

Is it a bad practice to use alloneword file names? i.e. productsandservices.asp siteanddata.asp
-- Ernie

No, not at all. I tend to use dashes because it"s easier to read but there are also inherit usability issues with doing that. For that reason I don"t like hyphens in the domain name, but don"t have any real problems with them in the page filename. But either way, the search engines can decipher well enough what the words are in the file name based on the content of the page.

What are the rules for naming files to get a good ranking
Kimberly

There really are none. My suggestion is you use keywords in the file names but don"t make them too long. If you use hyphens, don"t use more than two if you can help it. If you use a keyword in a sub-directory then you don"t necessarily need to use it in the file name too. There is nothing wrong with doing so, but just be wise about it.

That"s about it, really. Filenames are not given a whole lot of weight. They can help, but they won"t give you rankings all by themselves.

If you have any questions that haven"t been answered yet feel free to email me or comment here and I"ll be happy to answer it for you.


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6/16/2008 1:13:29 AM 一場「迷你退休」後,反而省下100萬台幣 >> Mr. 6 - 趨勢.創業.網路.生活

最近物價飛漲,水貴、電貴、油貴、食物貴…,記者們在市場裡鑽牛角尖,最後就算坐在家裡什麼都不買只盯著電視新聞看,也會覺得身上的錢正在急速的流失!這時候,我拿出一張壓箱的文章,裡面教人一個「終極省錢法」。 它提出一個我沒聽過的新字──「迷你退休」(mini-retirement)。 ...

To be continued in http://mr6.cc

6/16/2008 1:09:08 AM 大西洋報:Google讓我們愈變愈笨? >> Mr. 6 - 趨勢.創業.網路.生活

The Atlantic上周出了一篇很有爭議的網路評論(其他相關評論也見此),斗大的字,儘管已經打了一個問號,仍不減它標題的一種叫囂式的聳動感── 「Google是否正在讓我們愈變愈笨?」 愈變愈笨?我們都以為,Google讓我們愈變愈聰明呢?這篇文章的作者是Nicholas Carr,就像《你在看誰的部落格》一樣,他也出了一本《The Big Switch: Rewiring the...

To be continued in http://mr6.cc


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