![]() |
SEO Information |
|
|
The Other Side of the Search Gods Abracadabra!
Thousands of servers ...billions of web pages.... the possibility of individually sifting through the WWW is null. The search engine gods cull the information you need from the Internet...from tracking down an elusive expert for communication to presenting the most unconventional views on the planet. Name it and click it. Beyond all the hype created about the web heavens they rule, let's attempt to keep the argument balanced. From Google to Voice of the Shuttle (for humanities research) these ubiquitous gods that enrich the net, can be unfair ...and do wear pitfalls. And considering the rate at which the Internet continues to grow, the problems of these gods are only exacerbated further. Primarily, what you need to digest is the fact that search engines fall short of Mandrake's magic mechanism! They simply don't create URLs out of thin air but instead send their spiders crawling across those sites that have rendered prayers (and expensive offerings!) to them for consideration. Even when sites like Google claim to have a massive 3 billion web pages in its database, a large portion of the web nation is invisible to these spiders. To think they are simply ignorant of the Invisible Web. This invisible web holds that content, normal search engines can't index because the information on many web sites is in databases that are only searchable within that site. Sites like www.imdb.com - The Internet Movie Database , www.incywincy.com - IncyWincy, the invisible web search engine and www.completeplanet.com - The Complete Planet that cover this area are perhaps the only way you can access content from that portion of the Internet, invisible to the search gods. Here, you don't perform a direct content search but search for the resources that may access the content. (Meaning - be sure to set aside considerable time for digging.) None of the search engines indexes everything on the Web (I mean none). Tried research literature on popular search engines? AltaVista to Yahoo, will list thousands of sources on education, human resource development, etc. etc. but mostly from magazines, newspapers, and various organizations' own Web pages, rather than from research journals and dissertations- the main sources of research literature. That's because most of the journals and dissertations are not yet available publicly on the Web. Thought they'll get you all that's hosted on the web? Think again. The Web is huge and growing exponentially. Simple searches, using a single word or phrase, will often yield thousands of "hits", most of which will be irrelevant. A layman going in for a piece of info to the internet has to deal with a more severe issue - too much information! And if you don't learn how to control the information overload from these websites, returned by a search result, roll out the red carpet for some frustration. A very common problem results from sites that have a lot of pages with similar content. For e.g., if a discussion thread (in a forum) goes on for a hundred posts there will be a hundred pages all with similar titles, each containing a wee bit of information. Now instead of just one link, all hundred of those darn pages will crop up your search result, crowding out other relevant site. Regardless of all the sophistication technology has brought in, many well thought-out search phrases produce list after list of irrelevant web pages. The typical search still requires sifting through dirt to find the gold. If you are not specific enough, you may get too many irrelevant hits. As said, these search engines do not actually search the web directly but their centralized server instead. And unless this database is updated continually to index modified, moved, deleted or renamed documents, you will land yourself amidst broken links and stale copies of web pages. So if they inadequately handle dynamic web pages whose content changes frequently, chances are for the information they reference to quickly go out-of-date. After they wage their never ending war with over-zealous promoters (spamdexers rather), where do they have time to keep their databases current and their search algorithms tuned? No surprise if a perfectly worthwhile site may go unlisted! Similarly, many of the Web search engines are undergoing rapid development and are not well documented. You will have only an approximate idea of how they are working, and unknown shortcomings may cause them to miss desired information. Not to mention, amongst the first class information, the web also houses false, misleading, deceptive and dressed up information actually produced by charlatans. The Web itself is unstable and tomorrow they may not find you the site they found you today. Well if you could predict them, they would not be god!...would they?! The syntax (word order and punctuation) for various types of complex searches varies some from search engine to search engine, and small errors in the syntax can seriously compromise the search. For instance, try the same phrase search on different search engines and you'll know what I mean. Novices... read this line - using search engines does involve a learning curve. Many beginning Internet users, because of these disadvantages, become discouraged and frustrated. The possibility of these 'for-profit' search gods (which haven't yet made much profit) for taking fees to skew their searches, can't be ruled out. But as a searcher, the hit list you are provided with by the engine should obviously rank in the order of relevancy and interest. Search command languages can often be complex and confusing and the ranking algorithm is unique to each god based on the number of occurrences of the search phrase in a page, if it appears in the page title, or in a heading, or the URL itself, or the meta tag etc. or on a weighted average of a number of these relevance scores. E.g. Google (www.google.com) uses its patented PageRank TM and ranks the importance of search results by examining the links that lead to a specific site. The more links that lead to a site, the higher the site is ranked. Pop on popularity! Alta Vista, HotBot, Lycos, Infoseek and MSN Search use keyword indexes - fast access to millions of documents. The lack of an index structure and poor accuracy of the size of the WWW, will not make searching any easier. Large number of sites indexed. Keyword searching can be difficult to get right. From the very first search engine - Yahoo to about.com, Snap.com, Magellan, NetGuide, Go Network, LookSmart, NBCi and Starting Point, all subject directories index and review documents under categories - making them more manageable. Unlike active search engines, these passive or human-selected search engines like don't roam the web directly and are human controlled, relying on individual submissions. Perhaps the easiest to use in town, but the indexing structure these search engines cover only a small portion of the actual number of WWW sites and thus is certainly not your bet if you intend specific, narrow or complex topics. And here's about those meta search engines. A comprehensive search on the entire WWW using The Big Hub, Dogpile, Highway61, Internet Sleuth or Savvysearch , covering as many documents as possible may sound as good an idea as a one stop shopping.Meta search engines do not create their own databases. They rely on existing active and passive search engine indexes to retrieve search results. And the very fact that they access multiple keyword indexes reduces their response time. It sure does save your time by searching several search engines at once but at the expense of redundant, unwanted and overwhelming results....much more - important misses. The default search mode differs from search site to search site, so the same search is not always appropriate in different search engine software. The quality and size of the databases vary widely. Weighted Search Engines like Ask Jeeves and RagingSearch allows the user to type queries in plain English without advanced searching knowledge, again at the expense of inaccurate and undetailed searching. Review or Ranking Sources like Argus Clearinghouse (www.clearinghouse.net),
|
Conductor Searchlight Now Includes Enhanced Task Management and SEO Workflow ... MarketWatch (press release) NEW YORK, NY, Feb 07, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Conductor, the leading provider of SEO technology software, announces the launch of a suite of innovative SEO workflow and task management features available in its leading SEO platform, Searchlight ... |
![]() King of How To News | Future of SEO: Change, Convergence, Collaboration Search Engine Watch Like it or not, SEO has changed and its future relies upon a complex relationship with content marketing, social media, and collaborative technology. The end result is a whole new way of thinking about utilizing SEO and social media strategy and ... SEO tasks that can be carried out in under 15 minutes Oylist Announce New Next Generation SEO Profit By Search, The Leading SEO Services India Reaches A Record Achievement ... |
![]() PR Web (press release) | Algonquin Studios Shares Thought Leadership Reports on Web Design, SEO ... PR Web (press release) Covering topics including web site design, SEO myths, and advantages associated with using a content management system, the reports are now available for download on Algonquin's corporate web site. Algonquin began a company blog in September 2011 and ... |
SEO Link Monster Bonus CubsNet.com With today's release of the SEO Link Network product SEO Link Monster, Internet Marketers have been awaiting the release of associated bonuses. Today one such bonus has been revealed. It's been a long time in the making, but the 7th February sees the ... SEO Tips Getting Top Search Engine Rankings with SEO Link Monster Link Building Company Announces Increase in Search for Keyword, 'Backlink ... |
Joint Effort Marketing Named Second Best Video SEO Company by topseos.com for ... Press Media Wire The independent authority on Search vendors, tospeos.com, has named Joint Effort Marketing the second best video SEO company in the online marketing industry for the month of February 2012. topseos.com has named Joint Effort Marketing the second best ... 1SEO.com Named Best Integrated Search Company by topseos.com for February 2012 |
Slingshot SEO Names John Lawrence VP of Applications Development MarketWatch (press release) INDIANAPOLIS, IN, Feb 06, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Slingshot SEO, the innovative firm delivering digital relevance to deserving brands, has announced that John Lawrence has joined its growing team as VP of Applications Development. |
SEO Positive Treats Staff To Night Out PR Web (press release) The management team at SEO Positive treated staff to a night out at Essex hotspot Southend Casino to celebrate a record month for sales. Ben Austin, Managing Director at SEO Positive, treated his staff to a night out at the Rendezvous Southend Casino ... |
![]() SEOmoz (blog) | Building a Technical SEO Process SEOmoz (blog) The author's posts are entirely his or her own (excluding the unlikely event of hypnosis) and may not always reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc. One of the biggest challenges many of my clients face is building the right SEO processes in place, ... Does your web team know how to use Webmaster Tools? |
![]() Search Engine Roundtable | Google: SEO Isn't Good For Users Or The Internet Search Engine Roundtable Instead of being able to SEO the entire Internet, businesses can now only affect the search results for a tiny percentage of users. That's a good thing because SEO can't scale, and SEO isn't good for users or the Internet at large. |
SEO.in Named Fourth Best Android Development Company by bestwebdesignagencies ... Press Media Wire SEO.in has been named the fourth best Android development company based on the results of a meticulous evaluation process which benchmarks various aspects of mobile development and application creation services. Hundreds of mobile development companies ... |
| home | site map |
| © 2006 |