Tuesday, July 31, 200710 Steps to Success on the ’Net Without SEO Tadeusz Szewczyk of onReact.com is a freelance search engine optimizer, blogger and journalist born in Poland. He’s been living in Germany for two decades now. Tadeusz writes about art, design, and SEO. Search Engine Optimization (SEO) as we know and detest it is obsolete in this day and age. When some while ago Philipp asked me to
My aunt and uncle from Cologne called asking how they could successfully get their new site into Google. I want to wrap up some of the tips I gave them – if you already know about SEO (Search Engine Optimization) feel free to skip. If not; there are three important steps to rank your site well with search engines. First, you got to create good content. Second, you ought to make your content access
John Biundo and Eric Enge of Stone Temple Consulting both worked in the tech industry for over two decades. Eric’s also the creator of the Custom Search Guide. Google Custom Search Engines (CSE) are designed to be fast and easy to implement, and don’t require any coding, at least for basic features. The Custom Search Engine user interface deliberately keeps things simple, as does the accompanying
Back in 2004, Google wrote, “For Internet users in China, Google remains the only major search engine that does not censor any web pages.” Using a dictionary of 10,000 English words I probed Google self-censorship two years later. In 2006, the following 9% of words return search results which Google agreed to censor in China*: abreast, abundant, acceptable, accusation, accuse, accused, adjacent, a
James in the forum points to a very in-depth Something Awful discussion board interview with what seems to be the guy who took over the Google Calculator project as his current 20% project (I can’t confirm that he’s indeed a Google employee, though his answers look credible). His nickame is “ZorbaTHut” and he’s been programming for 17 years. Here are some interesting bits from the multi-page inter
I'm a regular reader of Google Blogoscoped, and yesterday, I experienced a huge shock with regards to my GMail account. I was able to check my GMail account and emails fine at work. However just an hour later, when I reached home and attempted to access http://gmail.com, I was greeted by a "Server Error" as follows: <blockquote>Server Error We're sorry, but Gmail is temporarily unavailable. We're
Fiction: HTML is not a programming language. It is a markup language. It lacks all necessary functionality (like if-else branching, variables, loops) to program in it, and in fact, even comparing it to a programming language completely misses the point of HTML’s beautiful simplicity. Truth: Many managers in IT work environments understand HTML is a kind of programming language. And CSS is, too. Te
Via Waxy, a B3ta reader caricatures Google China; in the results, you can see several spots strangely “missing” in the images. While this might seem highly unrealistic, it’s not. Compare the actual results of Google.cn vs Google.com for a search for tiananmen square (Google.cn misses thousands of images, and at the bottom there’s the censorship disclaimer, as usual – on all 3 pages of the results,
Here are some search syntax basics and advanced tricks for Google.com. You might know most of these, but if you spot a new one, it may come in handy in future searches. A quote/ phrase search can be written with both quotations ["like this"] as well as a minus in-between words, [like-this]. Google didn’t always understand certain special characters like [#], but now they do; a search for [C#], for
Friday, August 26, 2011The Emperor’s GardenThe Emperor instructed the gardener to set up the new court’s garden. “I want you to plant five trees growing the Crataan fruit,” the Emperor said, “Because we asked people what fruit they like best, and most named the Crataan fruit!” The gardener replied, “Emperor, that is excellent thinking! But let me make some suggestions: First, how about we make one
“There are a number of gems in this presentation, which is overall very rousing about the possibilities of new technology and democratic empowerment. The one that made me think the most was the discussion of a UPC reader on a computer that looked the code up in a database and then did a Google search on that product, allowing you to know who things like whether the product was manufactured in an e
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