Help Search Engines get Smarter, ROR your Website!

April 7th, 2005 § § permalink

What is ROR?
ROR (Resources of a Resource) is an exciting new website content description tool and format. It makes it very easy to describe the content, objects, and structure of your website so search engines and other web applications can better find and understand your information.

For example if you are selling products, ROR enables you to document your product names, descriptions, prices, images, availability, affiliate programs, etc. Or if your site or blog provides information on a given topic, it allows you to describe how this information is organized (sitemap, topics, categories, new information, archive, blogroll, etc). ROR also provides terms for documenting objects such as contacts, articles, newsletter, feeds, images, audio, links, reviews, privacy policy, copyrights, and more.

ROR information can be easily added to your website by adding a ROR File called ror.xml. To create the file ROR provides templates and examples. It also provide a ROR File Editor, which will extract information from your website and allow you to describe it further. Larger websites can also generate ROR files from their databases.

Why Describe?
But why is it important to describe your website? Well, consider this phrase: “We offer a 10% discount on all our products until Mother’s Day”. While these words mean a lot to your visitors, they unfortunately won’t mean much to a search engine or shopping search engine. Language is extremely complex and it will take time even for Google to elevate search to such levels of sophistication. And that’s just one language, English.

So for now, to communicate your product information to shopping search engines you typically need to provide a feed (a machine-readable description of your products), and re-submit that feed to each engine each time the information changes. And to make matters worse, none of these feeds have the same format, so you also have to learn each format.

Another Approach
ROR suggests a better approach. Since search engines already come to your site to read text information about your products, it makes sense to also read additional information like prices, image URLs, discounts, etc. This way, you only change the information once, in your ROR file, and that’s it. Product information is just one example but it illustrates this issue rather well.

ROR information can also be displayed on your website in a generic fashion so visitors can quickly and easily find information, without the need to re-learn or remember the structure and navigation of each website they visit. For that purpose, ROR provides an Info Button. The button reads the information directly from your ROR file.

ROR simply makes a lot of sense! It’s powerful, easy, and very flexible.

ROR your Website, Spread the Word
You can get your ROR file at http://www.rorweb.com, it only takes a few minutes for a basic file. You can always add more information later. You can also help spread the word by adding this article on your website, or a link to it.

Happy RORing!

The ROR Team

http://www.rorweb.com

[You may reprint this article on your website, blog, newsletter, or magazine as long as you don't modify its content or author information.]

Indexability of Yahoo 360 (II)

April 3rd, 2005 § § permalink

Saturday evening will be the time for the weekly analysis of Yahoo’s 360 indexability.

On the first post things weren’t so good but that was quite normal due to the fact that was immediately after launch. What was curious then was the domination of MSN search in the number of the indexed pages.

Let’s see scores for today:

Google: 3860 pages

Yahoo: 9370 pages (WOW)

MSN: 130 pages

What is interesting today is the clear supremacy of Yahoo over Google. In a previous post I was dissapointed of Yahoo on not indexing properly their services. In a way is logical to do that. Who wants to search within their profiles should use their search. But that’s not a reason enough though. Now they learnt something and even better they applied it.

Now. What those number tell us:

1. Already there is a large number of active users
2. 360 is findable and in the next period we will see it more on results
3. Being visible, quality content will get feedback and will motivate the users on being active

Edit: While writing this post I was thinking when this serial analysis will stop. Well 2 Kents later (damn there is no Kent page…makes u wonder) I figured it out. I will stop it when the number will be double than those:

Google: 8.110.000
Yahoo: 35,700,000 (hey I wasn’t expecting this one. Are they taking steroids or something else???)
MSN: 26,657 (yeah yeah great job Microsoft. Hope that Longhorn will not be as “good”)

Anybody feeling lucky to figure out what I am speaking about?

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Good marketing rules

April 1st, 2005 § § permalink

Good examples of marketing:

1. Keeping alive. On the friends list, the order is given by the content shared. K. What means that. Let’s say you are on a public person friend list. By sharing content you will always be on his homepage among the visible friends. By the rule of association you become tied with his image. Vanity is Al Pacino’s favourite sin….and apparently of Yahoo’s also.

2. Gmail had 1G. Yahoo will have 1G. Apparently the size does matter and not the quality. Gmail is better because of its free pop3 and they could have stayed at 1G without problems. But the crowd wants size and not quality. It was logic that they will raise at 2G BUT doing it without some trick would have been just a lame reaction to Yahoo’s move. The result? Instead of poping-up in your face 2G they showed you a gradually filling of the amount. On the front page they show you a fast moving counter with megs flowing into the users accounts. Result? A nice trick. More attention. The impression of fluidity. The felling of a dynamic company (which they lack lately with their use of long beta periods)

Good jobs PR guys ;)

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Yahoo offensive

April 1st, 2005 § § permalink

K. First was . Than they tried catching up with Gmail…but the main battle between Yahoo and Google is taking place in fact on search engine users. And tonight is the first big offensive

We’re releasing a new index tonight. You should see a lot of new content in the index as well as fluctuations in the rankings of results from previous searches. If you have any feedback for us about the new index please email: ystfeedback@yahoo.com.

Now, grab a beer, popcorn and let the games begin :)

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New Yahoo product release :)

April 1st, 2005 § § permalink

Check this great product from Yahoo.
Hope that Google can handle a litlle irony :D

For those like me that have to google for slacker here is the definition:

slack1 (slăk) pronunciation
adj., slack·er, slack·est.

1. Moving slowly; sluggish: a slack pace.
2. Lacking in activity; not busy: a slack season for the travel business.
3. Not tense or taut; loose: a slack rope; slack muscles. See synonyms at loose.
4. Lacking firmness; flaccid: a slack grip.
5. Lacking in diligence or due care or concern; negligent: a slack worker. See synonyms at negligent.
6. Flowing or blowing with little speed: a slack current; slack winds.
7. Linguistics. Pronounced with the muscles of the tongue and jaw relatively relaxed; lax.

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