Archive for the ‘Google’ Category

Search engines July stats

Friday, August 12th, 2005 |

Search engine market shares in July 2005: Google - 59.2%, Yahoo! - 28.8%, MSN - 5.5% by ZDNet’s ZDNet Research — HitWise says Google, Yahoo! Search and MSN Search accounted for 93.5% of US searches in July 2005. Google garnered 59.2% of searches. Yahoo! Search and MSN Search captured 28.8% and 5.5% shares, respectively.

Double standards

Saturday, August 6th, 2005 |

Of course a post about Google :)

Spotted through Search Engine Watch there is a note mentioning the fact that Google is not talking to CNET writers. Following the trails, we find this:

“Google representatives have instituted a policy of not talking with CNET News.com reporters until July 2006 in response to privacy issues raised by a previous story.”

Source

A previous story…about Eric Schmidt (Google CEO) and some facts about his financial status. Those data were obtained by using Google and other public records (nothing illegal).

I really don’t understand why Google is pissed off on that. Johnny Long has been showing from quite a long time that Google likes storing various kinds of data and a good partof that data people would like to keep it private.

See also John Battelle’s post on this and Slashdot. And for a smiling closure of this don’t forget to check Fuckedgoogle.com’s point of view

Daily news

Saturday, August 6th, 2005 |

By way of Search Engine Watch Moderator, OptimizeOnline, Google Launch Phase 2 of Longer Ad Text Beta Programme. Basically, Google AdWords will up the description character limit to 200 and then test the CTR rates of those ads versus the original ads. OptimizeOnline …
http://www.searchenginejournal.com/index.php?p=1992

As it was obvious, Google didn’t contemplate Yahoo launching their contextual ad network and already is making it’s move to consolidate the grounds

Notice anything different in your Yahoo News listings on Yahoo’s homepage, My Yahoo, and other pages within the Yahoo network where Yahoo News stories are listed? Yahoo is placing a little TV screen next to some news stories to showcase its News …
http://www.searchenginejournal.com/index.php?p=1986

This is quite a goody. Why watching only CNN when you can choose to watch multiple video versions of the same story. Add this to human moderated news (Google does that automatically) and you have a good contender to the role of news king

The Mozilla Foundation this week went “for profit” with the launch of a commercial subsidiary which will focus on the Firefox browser. The for profit version of Mozilla (Cashzilla?) will also be responsible for the development, testing, and distribution of the organization’s open …
http://www.searchenginejournal.com/index.php?p=1985

I just hope that this step will lead the way to Firefox branded browsers. Today I was looking too see if clones of Firefox exist and I was amazed to see that there are none. I mean what’s wrong in the picture? IE is not open source but clones like Maxthon and Avant Browser (to name just a few) are here for quite a long time. I expect (and also want) a Yahoo branded browser to give me quick access to the Yahoo services for example. And the ways to explore this are vitually unlimited

P.S. I am doing this kind of post as an experiment. If it works I will stick to it. The ideea is the following:
1. I have installed Blog Navigator and inserted my daily readings (more to be added soon) 2. From the daily posts I will make a selection of the most important (from my point of view) and try to add some personal comments

Indexing examples

Tuesday, July 19th, 2005 |

Mike Banks Valentine has an article based on his experience on how spiders behave when indexing. For example he concludes:

1) Google crawls 250 pages on first discovery of links to site. Then they don’t return until they find more links and crawl slowly. Google has failed to index new domain for 60 days.

2) Yahoo looks for errors pages and once they find bad links will crawl them ceaselessly until you tell them to stop it. Then won’t crawl at all for weeks until crawling heavily one day and lightly the next in random fashion.

Even though I don’t agree with it’s conclusions on Google (see this example, the part on Yahoo it’s interesting.

The complete results of his analysis is here . What I see that he ommited is what submission steps he took if any. As far as I know no one will spider your domain out of the blue ;)

Search engines vulnerable to spam

Tuesday, July 5th, 2005 |

Last night doing some research on the romanian real estate market I almost felt off my chair.
Google,Yahoo, MSN were spammed beyond recognition by a site using the old keyword stuffing technique.
Look for “chirii garsoniere” (translation rent single rooms) and see the results.

Google
Yahoo
Msn

Spammed results are those that include “Delta Dunarii”. What is more curious, all the other organic results seem to be gone.

Aparently the guy used a query like “allinurl: _post.htm” to identify old message boards that allow unmoderated posting. Because those results are from old sites their relevancy in all the search engines is higher.

So…what we have heard lately…big words like “human raters” “personalization” “anti-spam filters”and so on are just cheap PR.

The proof is there that any determined low life spammer can mess with results

Next search frontier: PERSONALIZATION

Saturday, July 2nd, 2005 |

This week has been a busy week for PR people, journalists and bloggers. Google and Yahoo (and even Amazon’s A9) launched interesting and future will proove how usefull products.

Both Google and Yahoo made a step further in their ranking process and accepted the fact that any alghoritm can be partially replicated. To compete with that they are using the net users as volunteers raters. But the way they approached this is completly different:

Google:

Google’s way is somehow….cloaked. In order to use it you have to login to any Google service and the rest is on automated pilot. This is the G00d thing and the UGLY thing.

  • Good: fits well the grandma test. You don’t have to be a power/medium user in order to rip the benefits. Sites you click in results pages are placed higher when you repeat the query. As simple as that
  • UGLY. Well here is more. First of all I don’t know how many users will nptice that something has been added. That makes imposibile for them to pause the whole tracking process. Second I’ll tell you my searching bhavior. I use Firefox and when I do a search I open in new tabs all the first ten results and evaluate them. That means that in time I will have the same results on TOP 10 and I will miss fresh content. That is VERY ugly

Yahoo:

Yahoo’s approach is rather geeky. There is no automated process and you will have to manually save the pages you find usefull in a section called MyWeb (this time Yahoo has brought Google’s BETAmania to a higher level; both MyWeb1 and MyWeb2 are in beta….). They have also added tagging functions and social functions by connecting groups of users.

What both Google and Yahoo avoid telling is to mention how those features will affect the “public” results ;)

P.S.

If you want to see a complete summary of this full week check out Guillaume’s coverage

On spiders and search engines

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2005 |

On the last few days when analyzing the logs of a site I have seen 2 interesting spiders:

First is Google AdSense and authentificates itself as a spider. Usually after it comes Googlebot. What is more curious is that the site didn’t had AdSense

The second authentificates itself as a user and it’s eating a lot of pages. Apparently it’s origin is http://beta.exalead.com/search/C=0/?2u=3. This seem to be a new search engine with some very good features.

  • results clustering
  • audio/video search
  • clean interface apparently ajax based (can anyone figure for wahat are the boxes below the serach box on the main page?Personalization?)
  • multiple ways to see the results
  • filtering results based on GeoIP(?)

It seems that they started digging from DMOZ like Google. From the amount the pages I have seen on that site they seem prepared to ingest a large amount of data.

While writing this post I found this on their site:

Bred from the prestigious Ecole des Mines in Paris, the founding members of Exalead cut their teeth on the first generation of Web search engines. Since the creation of Exalead in 2000, they have concentrated their efforts on facilitating access to their client’s information bases for all users: Employees, customers, suppliers, and the general public.

It has also been mentioned on Search Engine Watch

You can spot the spiders if you look in visitors after: ng21.exabot.com

Pretty good european job. Waiting for the Desktop Beta

Yahoo Dance :)

Tuesday, June 21st, 2005 |

Yahoo just announced on their blog a new update of their index:

This is our second weather report. We will be making changes to the index tonight so you should be seeing more of your pages in the index as well as some fluctuations in the rankings of results from previous searches.

Let’s play the “Conspiracy Game” and read between the the lines….
We will see this:

It promises to be hot, humid and rainy down on Bourbon Street

:)

If we are playing the game we will see the threat….but we are not paranoid …aren’t we?

Yahoo gets serious with VoIP

Wednesday, June 15th, 2005 |

Eventhough latest IM product is VoIP enabled the quality is not always the best. To compensate this they made another quick move and:

Barely a month after launching its own VoIP enabled IM beta product, the company snapped up DialPad, a VoIP company that sells PC2PC and PC2Phone services to consumers. “What we saw in DialPad was quick way to add PC2Phone and inbound calls,” says Joanna Stevens, Yahoo’s VP of Corporate Communications. Yahoo will integrate Dialpad’s services with its new IM product.

Source

Advancedippipeline asks themselves:

How long until Microsoft and Google react?

I don’t say anything about Microsoft because they have MSN Messenger. But Google…ahem. Err with what to react? With a Hello?

Yahoo Browser?

Sunday, June 12th, 2005 |



Everyone has heard the rumors on the Gbrowser but no official comments from Google.

Again Yahoo seems to make a step further further than their competitors:

Yahoo Inc., owner of the most-visited Web site, may consider developing its own Internet browser to help attract more users and advertisers toits Web sites, Chief Executive Officer Terry Semel said.

“You could look to Yahoo to do most everything that makes sense on the Internet going forward,” Semel said Friday in an interview in New York. Developing a browser may make sense “at some point in time,” he said.

Source

Corelate that piece of info with:

However, a Yahoo spokesperson told ZDNet Australia on Tuesday( 16 March 2005) that the company would not launch any new products or services in the future without ensuring that they work on both IE and Firefox.

Source

And with the fact that 3 months later:

Yahoo has quietly updated its Instant Messenger software to be fully compatible with Firefox, almost three months after the company pledged to do so.

Source

And you will see on what Yahoo research labs are working and why they love Foxes…errrrrrr Deers :)

That proves once again how Yahoo has a good and very clear strategy while Google lacks one

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Here I'll share my knowledge, discovery and experience related to my hobby and work. Most articles on this site are related to blog design, short reviews, tips and make money online. More

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