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(first you have to download the Alexa toolbar as listed below,this action will not hurt your computer, but will help stop pop ups)


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Patented
Alexa gives you information about the sites you visit.

Helpful
A healthy community is built on trust and open information.

  • Who owns this site and how do I contact them?
  • Do people like this site?
  • How much traffic does this site get?
  • Are there other sites I should visit instead?

Friendly
Alexa learns from people. The more people use it, the better it gets!

 



Search Engine News about Alexa.com
Few webmasters are aware of the existence of Alexa.com.   Alexa is a compilation of the top 100,000 websites on the internet.  If you're not there yet, you're not there yet.  Here's how to get your website, and a snapshot of your website on alexa.com.  

First you need to install the alexa.com toolbar and then visit your website from the alexa.com homepage, that visit triggers Alexa to take notice of your website.  Then you can take a snapshot of your website from alexa.com .  This will display a thumbnail of your website on alexa.com.

Alexa Snapshot

The Alexa Snapshot provides one-click access to Alexa's award winning information, including Related Links, website owner Contact Information, and Site Statistics. Plus, it is available on more browsers and platforms, including the MSN Browser, Macintosh, Linux/Unix, Netscape and America Online.

Search Engine Optimization News: from Entire Web

Quick loading web pages - a must for website optimization and a good policy in search engine optimization.
Why Quick Loading Web Pages?

Unless you rely ONLY on users with high speed Internet connections, you must take into consideration the quick loading issue for your web pages. According to statistics, a first-time visitor will not "waste" more than 5 seconds until seeing the content of your web page or, at least, until he/she gets an idea about what the web page is about. This means that for an average transfer rate of 3 Kbytes per second your web page must take maximum 15 Kbytes of disk space.

If we understand this as being the size of all the displayed elements (page's script + graphics + content), then 15 KB doesn't seem so much, right? Let's see what we can put into 15 KB:

* one graphic element (your web optimized logo) with a disk size around 1Kb
* 1000 words of content (you should have content-rich pages)
* 3 KB of script (HTML, CSS)
* another graphic element of, let's say, 2 KB (your linking partner's banner etc.)

It is not so bad, is it? Of course, if you need to have pictures on your page, you will not be able to keep size within 15Kb. But even so, if in 5 seconds from click your logo and your content are displayed on your visitor's screen, then it is OK. If the visitor is interested, they will wait another 5 seconds or more for your images to load.
How to minimize the "disk size" of a web page and how to make it load quicker

1. Minimize Scripting
Try to stick with plain HTML when designing your web pages. Do not abuse of text formatting and/or excessive special effects. Use CSS to define the behavior of the links on your web pages. If you use a WYSIWYG-type HTML tool, make sure that you delete all unnecessary blank spaces this tool inserts in your HTML code.

2. Keep Content to the Point
Keep your content simple and easy understandable. Use short and eloquent sentences. Do not use "high-tech" terms, unless your readers are of academic level. Use HTML Heading Tags to emphasize what's important.

3. Minimize Graphics Size
Because graphic elements are critical when it comes to the size of a web page, you must pay a lot of attention to the graphics optimization issue. Carefully choose what type of image format you choose (GIF, JPEG or PNG) and make sure that you find for your graphics the limit point of the "screen size / quality / number of colors / detail level" ratio. If possible, keep the size of your small, simple graphics below 1 KB. It will load almost instantly due to the way the TCP IP protocol transfers data.

4. Split Website into Sections
Split your website into more small-sized sections (web pages), instead of single pages with large amounts of information. Especially if you have to display a lot of pictures on your pages.

5. Minimize use of Graphics
Try to have no more than 4 graphic elements on each of your web pages. Replace, when possible, image-buttons with simple text links towards the other sections of your website or towards your linking partners' websites.
Interlace GIF Images

When saving big graphics in GIF format, make sure you check the "interlaced" box in your image processing software's "Save As" box. This will not minimize the size of the GIF file, but it will tell the browser to load the graphic in two phases and quickly put something on your visitor's display.
Is quick loading an advantage in Search Engine Optimization?

I can tell you for sure that it is not an inconvenience. In terms of Search Engine Optimization it is also recommended to have quick loading web pages. At least at their first visits, the search engines robots will spend little time crawling your website. If they can easily access the content of your pages they will be able to gather more information in less time and this is a good thing, isn't it?

Bottom line: In terms of Website Optimization and Web Efficiency, we must make sure that we do what we can to ensure our web pages will load as quickly as possible on our visitor's display. There are more chances for The Quick to survive on The Net, than for The Slow.

About the author:Decebal (Dudi) Scraba of http://www.ewolwe.com/


What's Google Doing Now?About "Google Bourbon" Changes as of May 2005.  (Did your website take a dive on Google?)

  • Googleguy reminds people again that Bourbon is only "halfway through".

  • He suggests that Googlebot pretty much ignores any page with "&id=" in its URL - this is done to avoid indexing duplicates of pages with different session ID strings.

  • Google's PageRank ™ is continuously updated by dedicated machines, the toolbar PR is only a "snapshot in time" (didn't we all know that already?).

  • That webmasters should use absolute links instead of relative links on their pages, and that it is highly recommended that sites use a 301 redirect to send non-WWW requests to the WWW (or vice versa - pick one and stick with it). Furthermore he recommends that webmasters chose a single home page convention and use it consistently through the site (all links to the home page should be www.dotcomicide.com, not www.dotcomicide.com/index.html, and other variations.

  • He stresses the importance of natural, organic growth of a site's links, and suggests that a site that has a "viral" growth spurt won't be harmed by a sudden influx of links (but won't be helped either) - citing as an example, a "friendster" type site that has surged in popularity, gaining massive links in recent months.

  • Googleguy suggests that webmasters submitting a "reinclusion request" for a site send in detail a complete description of what the site was doing wrong, and expect at least 4-6 weeks for the request to be processed.

All in all, some great answers from Googleguy - with more to come.

 

 Facts of the week: What the Google patent means for SEO

We summarize the most important parts of the patent specification in this issue so that you have a quick overview about how Google might rank your web site according to this patent.

Google might use the following to determine the ranking of your pages:

  • the frequency of web page changes
  • the amount of web page changes (substantial or shallow changes)
  • the change in keyword density
  • the number of new web pages that link to a web page
  • the changes in anchor texts (the text that is used to link to a web page)
  • the number of links to low trust web sites (for example too many affiliate links on one web page)

Your Google rankings can also be influenced by your domain name:

  • the length of the domain registration (one year vs. several years)
  • the address of the web site owner, the admin and the technical contact
  • the stability of data and host company
  • the number of pages on a web site (web sites must have more than one page)

How Google might rate the links to your web site:

  • the anchor text and the discovery date of links are recorded
  • the appearance and disappearance of a link over time might be monitored
  • the growth rates of links as well as the link growth of independent peer documents might be monitored
  • the changes in the anchor texts over a given period of time might be monitored
  • the rate at which new links to a web page appear and disappear might be recorded
  • the distribution rating for the age of all links might be recorded
  • links with a long life span might get a higher rating than links with a short life span
  • links from fresh pages might be considered more important
  • if a stale document continues to get incoming links, it will be considered fresh
  • Google doesn't expect that new web sites have a large number of links
  • if a new web site gets many new links, this will be tolerated if some of the links are from authorative sites
  • Google indicates that it is better if link growth remains constant and slow
  • Google indicates that anchor texts should be varied as much as possible
  • Google indicates that burst link growth may be a strong indicator of search engine spam

Search results and user behavior might influence your Google rankings:

  • the volume of searches over time is recorded and monitored for
    increases
  • the information regarding a web page's rankings are recorded and monitored for changes
  • the click through rates are monitored for changes in seasonality, fast increases, or other spike traffic
  • the click through rates are monitored for increase or decrease trends
  • the click through rates are monitored to find out if stale or fresh web pages are preferred for a search query
  • the click through rates for web pages for a search term is recorded
  • the traffic to a web page is recorded and monitored for changes
  • the user behavior on web pages is monitored and recorded for changes
    (for example the use of the back button etc.)
  • the user behavior might also be monitored through bookmarks, cache, favorites, and temporary files
  • bookmarks and favorites are monitored for both additions and deletions
  • the overall user behavior for documents is monitored for trend changes
  • the time a user spends on a web page might be used to indicate the quality and freshness of a web page

Miscellaneous factors that can influence your Google rankings:

  • web pages with frequent ranking changes might be considered untrustworthy
  • keywords that have little change in the result pages are probably matched to domains with stable rankings
  • keywords with many changes in the results are probably matched to domains with more votality

How to optimize your web site for Google's ranking algorithm

Detailed information on how to react to the different ranking factors can be found in the previous five issues of this newsletter.

Remember that this patent doesn't mean that Google really uses all of this. The patent only lists options that might be used by Google in addition to their main ranking algorithm.

The most important factors for high rankings on Google are good incoming links and optimized web page content. You should make sure that your web site has both if you want high rankings on Google.

1. How your firewall can destroy your search engine rankings

Some webmasters recently experienced a delisting from the search engines without any good reason. The webmasters had not done anything wrong and their web sites were optimized for search engines. Nevertheless, the web sites had been removed from search engines.

Poorly configured firewalls can block search engine spiders

It turned out that the delisted web sites were all hosted by the same hosting company. More precisely, the web sites were all hosted by a hosting company that used a special firewall software by SonicWALL Inc.

The importance of robots.txt

Although the robots.txt file is a very important file if you want to have a good ranking on search engines, many Web sites don't offer this file.

If your Web site doesn't have a robots.txt file yet, read on to learn how to create one. If you already have a robots.txt file, read our tips to make sure that it doesn't contain errors.

What is robots.txt?

When a search engine crawler comes to your site, it will look for a special file on your site. That file is called robots.txt and it tells the search engine spider, which Web pages of your site should be indexed and which Web pages should be ignored.

The robots.txt file is a simple text file (no HTML), that must be placed in your root directory, for example:

    http://www.yourwebsite.com/robots.txt

How do I create a robots.txt file?

As mentioned above, the robots.txt file is a simple text file. Open a simple text editor to create it. The content of a robots.txt file consists of so-called "records".

A record contains the information for a special search engine. Each record consists of two fields: the user agent line and one or more Disallow lines. Here's an example:

    User-agent: googlebot
    Disallow: /cgi-bin/

This robots.txt file would allow the "googlebot", which is the search engine spider of Google, to retrieve every page from your site except for files from the "cgi-bin" directory. All files in the "cgi-bin" directory will be
ignored by googlebot.

The Disallow command works like a wildcard. If you enter

    User-agent: googlebot
    Disallow: /support

both "/support-desk/index.html" and "/support/index.html" as well as all other files in the "support" directory would not be indexed by search engines.

If you leave the Disallow line blank, you're telling the search engine that all files may be indexed. In any case, you must enter a Disallow line for every User-agent record.

If you want to give all search engine spiders the same rights, use the following robots.txt content:

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /cgi-bin/

Where can I find user agent names?

You can find user agent names in your log files by checking for requests to robots.txt. Most often, all search engine spiders should be given the same rights. in that case, use "User-agent: *" as mentioned above.

Things you should avoid

If you don't format your robots.txt file properly, some or all files of your Web site might not get indexed by search engines. To avoid this, do the following:

  1. Don't use comments in the robots.txt file

    Although comments are allowed in a robots.txt file, they might confuse some search engine spiders.

    "Disallow: support # Don't index the support directory" might be misinterepreted as "Disallow: support#Don't index the support directory".


  2. Don't use white space at the beginning of a line. For example, don't write

    placeholder User-agent: *
    place Disallow: /support

    but

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /support


  3. Don't change the order of the commands. If your robots.txt file should work, don't mix it up. Don't write

    Disallow: /support
    User-agent: *

    but

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /support


  4. Don't use more than one directory in a Disallow line. Do not use the following

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /support /cgi-bin/ /images/

    Search engine spiders cannot understand that format. The correct syntax for this is

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /support
    Disallow: /cgi-bin/
    Disallow: /images/


  5. Be sure to use the right case. The file names on your server are case sensitve. If the name of your directory is "Support", don't write "support" in the robots.txt file.


  6. Don't list all files. If you want a search engine spider to ignore all files in a special directory, you don't have to list all files. For example:

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /support/orders.html
    Disallow: /support/technical.html
    Disallow: /support/helpdesk.html
    Disallow: /support/index.html

    You can replace this with

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /support


  7. There is no "Allow" command

    Don't use an "Allow" command in your robots.txt file. Only mention files and directories that you don't want to be indexed. All other files will be indexed automatically if they are linked on your site.

Tips and tricks:

1. How to allow all search engine spiders to index all files

    Use the following content for your robots.txt file if you want to allow all search engine spiders to index all files of your Web site:

    User-agent: *
    Disallow:

2. How to disallow all spiders to index any file

    If you don't want search engines to index any file of your Web site, use the following:

    User-agent: *
    Disallow: /

3. Where to find more complex examples.

    If you want to see more complex examples, of robots.txt files, view the robots.txt files of big Web sites:

 

That firewall stopped the search engine spiders from accessing their web sites. Google, Yahoo, MSN and all other search engines that request the robots.txt file couldn't index the web site anymore because the firewall didn't allow that:

"An attacker could retrieve robots.txt from the server, then use the contents of this file to discover the path of an unprotected administration interface for the server. The attacker may gain control of the webserver using this interface.

The information gathered from robots.txt could be used for system compromise and control of the web server." (source)

This is the standard security settings of the SonicWALL firewall and it basically means that your web site won't be spidered by search engines if you use this firewall without customizing it.

A firewall with these settings will drop the connection to anyone requesting the robots.txt file so that it looks as if the web site is offline. From an SEO point of view, this is very bad for your web site because all good search engine spiders request the robots.txt file before indexing your web site.

What does this mean to you?

If your web site is not listed on search engines although it has many good incoming links and , you should ask your web host if their firewall blocks search engines that request the robots.txt file. Your web host might not be aware of the problem.

2. Search engine news of the week

Google introduces personalized home pages

    "In what appears to be a broadside aimed at MyYahoo, Google rolled out a new feature on Thursday that lets people set up a personalized Google home page.

    The feature [...] lets people with Gmail and other Google accounts create a home page with different modules that they can drag and drop across their page, giving them one place to go for e-mail, headlines, weather reports, maps, movie schedules and, of course, Web search."



Ask Jeeves Buys Excite Europe

"The acquisition of Excite Europe will give [Ask Jeeves] ownership of Excite's Internet domains throughout Europe as well as control of existing portal offerings in several major European markets including Spain, Italy, France, Britain, Germany, Austria and the Netherlands.

Ask Jeeves will also have the ability to extend its search technology to Excite Europe users."



Espotting wins deals with Lycos in Scandinavia

    "Espotting Media, a leading European paid listings provider, today announces that it has renewed its agreement with 2 major sites in Scandinavia - Spray in Sweden and Jubii in Denmark, both of which are owned by Lycos."



Seekport UK-specific search engine moves out of beta phase
    "[Seekport returns] UK-relevant content from nine out of every ten searches. This contrasts significantly with the ‘three out of ten’ performance from US search engines such as Google, Yahoo and MSN Search."



3. Articles of the week

Google CEO defends privacy policies

    "Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt acknowledged that his company's search engine can ruffle privacy feathers [...] Many people are disturbed to find their home phone number. But we found it because it was a public piece of information."



Attorneys seek advertisers for click fraud class action

    "The attorneys have a pending class action suit in the circuit court of Miller County, Arkansas. Plaintiffs in the case are Lane's Gifts and Collectibles and Caulfield Investigations, while the named defendants include Google, Yahoo!, Lycos, AskJeeves, FindWhat.com, Buena Vista Internet Group, LookSmart, America Online, Netscape and Time Warner."



A Google project pains publishers

    "The major presses are raising thorny legal issues with the search giant's initiative to digitize the books of the world's great libraries."



Google searches its soul

    "The Web search king wants to offer portal-like features without cluttering its site. Can it pull it off? Despite claims to the contrary, over the past couple of years Google Inc. has evolved from a simple search engine to a full-featured Internet portal, offering news headlines, maps, e-mail, and more."



Non-traditional sources cloud Google News results

    "Additional research suggests that the search engine's selection of online-only news sources to include in Google News skews its search results toward political extremes."

Back to table of contents - Visit Axandra.com

4. Recommended resources

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