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Moderator Alumni![]() Group: Hall Of Fame
Joined: 31-August 02
Posts: 15,634
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Dec 11 2006, 02:52 PM |
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QUOTE Do Google release statements saying QUOTE "OK, The duplicate content filter is now in place." for example ? or QUOTE "OK, any reputable sites which reciprocal link with one another will be penalised ?" Google: Webmaster Guidelines Google Webmaster Help (look for posts from Adam Lasnik and Vanessa Fox) Official Google Blog other search engines: Microsoft: Guidelines for successful indexing Yahoo: Yahoo Search Help |
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Moderator Alumni![]() Group: Hall Of Fame
Joined: 31-August 02
Posts: 15,634
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Dec 11 2006, 05:13 PM |
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QUOTE Bill's patent research is superb, but how much effect are we seeing and what sort of time delays occur before these things are implemented ? Who says they have to be implemented? Who says that they have to share that information with anyone? If you're taking those statements from search patents as gospel, you're missing the point. Consider them as possibilities. Consider them as primary resources that might provide a little insight into how search engineers might think. Consider them as methods and processes that the search engines found valuable enought to protect as intellectual property. But don't consider them as guidelines to the inner workings and secrets of the search engines. Should you use text links, as opposed to what? Flash-based menus? Option boxes? Java script obfuscated links? Depends. Do you want search engines to index those pages? If so, text based links make it easier, and more likely. Should you use frames? If you're building web applications and secured areas of a web site that you don't want indexed by search engines, sure. If you want people to link to individual pages of a site, or to help the search engines index those pages, there are ways other than frames that provide the benefits that frames may. Liquid CSS layouts? Doesn't make a difference to me. What issue have people been raising that you are whinging about them? Reciprocal links? Doesn't hurt to link back and forth with people. But getting involved with large, organized, link exchanges and relying upon those to get some type of link popularity value isn't recommended because search engines can identify them (as a search engineer from Google stated a couple years ago at a "Meet the Crawlers" session at the New York SES about how easy or difficult that might be: "We have lots and lots of computers.") Read some of the Trustrank/link Spam Detection /Web Spam Taxonomy papers. Flash Animations? Flash is great when used as directed - see the Best Practices for Flash Player Detection from Adobe which recommends an effective means of inserting flash into an HTML page, providing html based alternative content, and meaningful content when javascript is disabled. Java script menus? If you use them in a manner in which search engine spiders can't follow them, and you want pages linked to indexed, then maybe you should reconsider using them. I've recommended people use the son of suckerfish approach, which uses a little java script, but only for deficiencies in IE. Spiders can follow those links without problems. Dont have duplicate content? Big site, small site, doesn't matter. Filtering can happen at the crawling, indexing and serving stages. Failing to make pages unique enough, or URL structures, and it may be difficult to find your pages in search engines. Plenty of discussions here in the forum pointing to whitepapers, search engine statements, etc on the topic. Use the forum search box. Usabilty standards must be employed or the world will end? Of course, it's much better to make an aesthetically pleasing site than it is to make one that people will use, and that will meet the goals of the site owner (sarcasm). I don't think that you have to give up an interesting and engaging design to also make a usable design. Marketing plans must be administered or doom will sweep across the scolded face of the earth in a firey apocalypse? Not every site is as lucky as YouTube. Most aren't. Is there a problem with actually sitting down and trying to do a little planning? |
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Joined: 15-January 04
Posts: 4,736
From: Rimouski, Canada
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Dec 12 2006, 10:37 AM |
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You seem to present your view in a very balanced, logical way. BUt really, is it?
QUOTE("Travis") I was once a loose goose until I came here, and there is much knowledge which I have gained in SEO thanks mainly to the two geese above. But a plump (collective noun for geese on water) can pass on fear as well, and all I was trying to say is that we need not be afraid of techniques which are outside the flock mentality, thats all. You have been able to pluck through the gaggle, the forum psychology, the gospel, the fear tactiques -- yet you fear others would not be able to safe for you blurting out "oh no, this is not true!"? And what do you plan to offer in return? You imply well researched solid fact but come back with opinion. QUOTE("Travis") We reciprocal link with websites, and it works a treat. [...] I think this forum sometimes runs a fear campaign [...] It needs to be vibrant and different and capture the mood of the company [...] Sometimes I look at usability websites, and fall asleep. I dont think the internet was designed for walls of text. [...] After which you do go on to demand proof for others' statements and warnings. QUOTE("Travis") I dont mind people giving solid advice, but we need to back it up with something. Precisely. If you've been here even a week you see that all views are well presented, each with their own input, resources and research. Where's yours? You feel reciprocal linking is OK to advise because you do it on your site and hey, works great. Does it? Or is your site doing greate despite the reciprocal linking? At what point would you warn someone about reciprocal linking and when would you advise it? Why? And what is with this "we" stuff? QUOTE("Travis") But again, in SEO, we need to be careful of the phrase "may be true" because I think it is, versus "this it true" because I have facts to back it up. "We" know that no-one on this forum is giving out The One ANd Only Gospel as provided by Google. "We" know we're having an ongoing discussion, exchange of ideas, here regarding what we see, read, do and observe. Apart from that, the above advice doesn't come close to making sense. I would almost demand that when someone thinks something is true, they would say "may be true... could be" vs. "this is true". I know of at least one poster who should apply that "is this an absolute truth or not?" rule to his (or her...) own posts... QUOTE("Travis") [...] we need not be afraid of techniques which are outside the flock mentality [...] ... Where in the world have you been reading? It's so grand of you to secure our feelings and offer us permission to step outside the box, step outside group thinking.... but Travis... that is what this place was about long before you came here. It is the reason that you feel that you have gained in SEO from this place up to the point that you feel confident you can offer free SEO as a side dish, an "also", an aside of your web design company. Frankly, I think that it may be true that what you offer in counterbalance to the "fear campaign" is not even opinion -- it's mere speculation based on quoting things you've read on forums 3 years ago. Seriously, someone who purports to offer a balanced, informed SEO view and then states, in 2006 (!!), the following while wanting to come across as a teacher and not a student, cannot be taken completely serious: QUOTE("Travis") To be honest, if a client asks for good SEO performance, then we start with removing a lot of Flash and Javascript dropdowns to accommodate. Compare that with a solid... QUOTE("A.N.onym") However, one has to remember that there's no definite answer to his questions. Sometimes Flash is the best solution to the task at hand and it won't sacrifice user convenience and SE visibility. It's clear what the source of the fear campaign, if any, is. Which "I think..." opinions are being presented as facts. Who sticks to information 3, 4 years old. Thanks for the heads-up, Travis! I and many other members appreciate it! ps: metadata |
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