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Cuil - Google Killer or Big G Roadkill?

August 22nd, 2008 by Krunal

A couple weeks ago a new internet search engine named Cuil.com burst onto the internet scene fueled by media hype and the celebrated resume of it’s co-founders, husband and wife team Tom Costello and Anna Patterson, the latter of whom was formerly one of Google’s top engineers, as well as a couple of other ex Google top-level employees Russell Power and Louis Monier.

Although Cuil launched July 28th, I wanted to wait a couple weeks to give them a chance to iron out any bugs before forming an opinion as it’s debut was marred by it’s server crashing due to overload as well as the search engine returning photos from competing sites and attributing them to the wrong site. Naturally this lead to people in the SEO world jumping on the bandwagon to predict it’s early demise, however I wanted to take some time to let Cuil get it’s act together before really evaluating it’s potential… after all, Rome was not built in a day and lest people forget, neither was Google. I know because I was a very early adopter of Google and began using it within months of it’s launch on September 21, 1999 and while better than anything else around at the time, I can assure you Google was not nearly as refined an engine as the Google of 2008.

Ok, so now that I have given this startup time to get it’s act together and refine it’s results, how exactly does it rate in terms of actual performance?

Well, it seems that the photo attribution glitch has been corrected and there have been no more reports of server crashes. As for the returned results, that is a mixed story.

In several tests I have performed on various search terms, Cuil, who claims to have indexed more web pages than any other search engine (over 120 Billion) returns relatively few results for keywords that should have substantially more results. Also, in terms of the relevancy of the SERP’s (Search Engine Results Pages), Cuil seems to be hit or miss, with them returning irrelevant results seemingly as many times as they return relevant ones. This is a difficult thing to quantify as one could enter 1 Million search phrases and still be scratching the surface in terms of the amount of actual searches done monthly on the myriad of search engines around, not to mention for a true quantitative analysis you would need to actually compare the results across all the engines and in the end except in obvious cases, who is to say definitively what results are more relevant?

This much is safe to say though- while sometimes Cuil is reasonably accurate, there is definite room for improvement.

The founders of Cuil claim that rather than just primarilly looking at the number and quality of links to a webpage as Google’s technology does to determine ranking results, Cuil claims to understand more about the information on a page and the terms that people use to search.

Because of this fundamental shift in algorithm priorities, Cuil promises to re-emphasize the actual content of websites vs. in Googles case placing much too much emphasis on inbound, and especially non-reciprocal links to judge relevancy.

This is very ironic because it was precisely because of Search Engine Optimization professionals gaming the system by over-aggressive SEO (some would say) in the first place that led to Google adjusting thier algorithm to place more weight on inbound links to establish a so-called relevant site. In actuality however, while some SEO consultants definitely are mischievious and up to no good, the bulk of SEO companies are merely determining what best facilitates the search engine spiders ability to read and judge the content in a viable and effective way and then presenting it to them as such. That Google was incapable of weeding out over-optimized sites and not truly relevant sites is not necessarilly the fault of any SEO company, but rather falls on the shoulders of the “Big G” themselves for not having a more robust algorithm to detect this foul play, so it will be very interesting to see if Cuil’s algorithm over time can perform and retrieve the most relevant results based of the content on a given webpage rather than simply judging it to be the best largely because of the number of inbound links the site in question has.

Anyone that uses a search engine is painstakingly familiar with Wikipedia dominating the SERP’s with often times completely irrelevant pages merely because they have the most inbound links. After all, which is more preferrable as a result for your search engine query; a single page on a subject, or an entire website devoted to that same subject as the case may be? Sure, Wikipedia pages are sometimes very helpful and relevant but just as often the results return an outdated, or innacurate page, sometimes with information taken from the “authority site” that it actually outranking. Hardly the most relevant result many times, but due to the overwhelming number of inbound and unreciprocated links Wikipedia has (due to thier use of the no-follow attribute), Google judges it to be the best result based seemingly almost solely on that single factor.

Another key difference between Cuil and the other search engines is that Cuil does not log your I.P. information as does Google which is sure to be viewed as a positive by privacy activists.

As for cosmetic issues, one thing that seems to be universally condemned by just about everyone is Cuil’s odd choice of a 3 column design for it’s results as it makes it somewhat confusing as to which site actually ranks where although one does have the option to change to a 2 column results page which in this writers opinion is not much better.

Also, for a company that raised 33 Million in venture capital, one would think they could come up with a better domain name than “cuil” (pronounced as “cool”) which supposedly means “knowledge” in Gaelic.

So in summary, what is the final verdict on Cuil? Well honestly, after only 2 weeks it is still much too soon to tell. As mentioned earlier many of the results are irrelevant, with some being dead-on. Given the state of search today and with many people becoming more and more uncomfortable with the behemoth that is Google and competitors like Yahoo turning over thier users search data to the Chinese government, many people are hungry for a young upstart to challenge Goliath and the narrative of it being done by ex-Google employees defecting to start thier own operation has a nice ring to it, but only time will tell if they are up to the challenge.

Realistically though, Google is not going anywhere anytime soon if at all, however from what I have been able to see, Cuil’s results are already better than most “second tier” search engines (the ones below Google, Yahoo and MSN) so maybe given some time it’s not unreasonable to think Cuil can nibble away at some of Yahoo’s and MSN’s share of the pie… or they could simply agree to be bought out to avoid the competition. At this point it’s a crapshoot to know how things will shake out, but either way it will be interesting to watch.

Source: Professional Seo

Addition Google Trends Google AdWords

August 11th, 2008 by Krunal

Google finally launched new addition in Google Adwords programme and in Google trends. This new updated inform us “Inside Search of Google” with this tool, we will be able to understand which types of keywords are being search by visitors in Google so we can have better idea to optimize our site for particular keywords.

We all SEO’s works hard on optimization and we also got top ranking on our some keywords but still we have no visitors, here we will have an idea for keywords which all web users, who are not connected with seo and who don’t know about seo, so we can get their thinking point on Google search for some query for some searching criteria.

Note: As per online survey with all Web Masters, who are working for on page seo projects and also for link exchange, Google Trends has 60% more traffic than Adwords. Keywords selected for Adwords are not so effective for seo purpose, but we can easily target particular country related keywords with help of Google Trends

Launch of a new semantic search engine

May 16th, 2008 by Krunal

The San Francisco startup Powerset went live on Monday (12th May 2008) with its new semantic search engine for the Internet. The launch of the service has been anticipated for months, with US media speculating about the chances for success of the service, referred to both as the “Google killer” and a takeover target for Microsoft.

The search engine is designed to understand natural language input, although single search terms can also be used. The now publicly accessible service is still in the beta phase. For many questions it actually does deliver a clear answer, as well as an additional summary of information pertaining to the question and a list of the most important sources on the internet.

Unlike Google or Yahoo, Powerset doesn’t index the entire web. Instead, it currently only searches Wikipedia files and the Freebase open database. Once the search machine proves stable, other sources will gradually be added.

The service analyses the entry word for word, instead of just filtering out key terms like conventional search machines do. The extent of a Powerset search in cyberspace is therefore significantly smaller, but it also takes much longer to analyze an individual page. According to Barney Pell, one of the founders of Powerset, an individual processor may need several seconds for a single page.

Several of Powerset’s founders are former employees of NASA and Xerox PARC and the search algorithms used in Powerset are derived from NASA research, as well as research by Xerox PARC and SRI International institutes. The company has existed since 2005 and is funded by several venture capital firms, including Foundation Capital and Founders Fund. (Erich Bonnert)

source: heise.de

POWERSET

http://www.powerset.com 

Optimizing News Content for Search Engines

April 30th, 2008 by rajeev

Optimizing News Content for Search Engines

The buzz about SEO in the public relations industry has grown tremendously over the past 2-3 years. Press releases in particular, have been the easy target for promotion as candidates for optimization. With the growing use of Google and Yahoo News, optimizing press releases have been an easy way to gain prominent visibility in the short term and in some cases, long term visibility in standard search engines.

As both a SEO and a PR practitioner for companies ranging from startups for Fortune 20 corporations, our Online Marketing Agency is tasked with educating audiences in both industries. For example, at public relations conferences, I’m the SEO guy talking about optimized PR. At search marketing conferences, I’m the PR guy talking about using PR for SEO. Our Account Managers like Jolina Pettice and Mike Yanke do the same thing with clients.

The continuing convergence of public relations and SEO is inevitable. Neither is based on pay to play, ie advertising. Editorial visibility in offline and online publications is “earned” as is the top ranking of a web page on search engines like Google, Yahoo and Microsoft Live.

Public relations practitioners have significantly warmed up to well documented possibilities and opportunities to extend their effectiveness for clients through implementing search engine optimization into their programs. However, the reality is that PR doesn’t have control over all of a company’s digital assets and web properties.

While corporate public relations may not be able to influence their newfound SEO knowledge and enthusiasm across a company’s web content, there are several areas readily available in most cases.

The most common web site content areas under the influence of PR, at least from a content management perspective, include: press releases, online newsrooms, re-published media coverage, videos, podcasts, images, webinars, white papers, newsletters, in some cases a blog and routine announcements and media communications.

The first step is to take inventory of the digital assets you have to work with. For PR organizations, that means developing keyword glossaries relevant to categories of information and then train those individuals in the organization responsible for publishing news content, to reference the keyword glossaries when making decisions about titling documents, keywords within the copy and linking between pages.

The types of news content to optimize varies by site but often includes:

  • Press releases
  • Online newsrooms
  • Corporate blogs
  • Special reports / white papers
  • Archived email newsletters
  • Archived webinars
  • Archived podcasts / Internet radio shows
  • Interviews where keywords are included in media relations training

There are entire programs organizations can implement that leverage news content optimization independently, or ideally, in concert with the optimization of an overall company web site.

To learn more about optimizing news content, be sure to check out the PRSA Digital Impact Conference, June 9 & 10 in New York. Keynote speakers include Josh Bernoff of Forrester and David Carr from the New York Times. I will be presenting on a session “SEO for News Content” that goes into the details of how public relations content producers can optimize content specific to news audiences: journalists, bloggers and direct to consumers.

Google To Launch BigTable As Web Service

April 5th, 2008 by Krunal

Google may be releasing BigTable, its internal database system, as a web service to compete with Amazon SimpleDB, according to a source with knowledge of the launch. There are also rumors that press is being pre-briefed on the product, although we haven’t been contacted by Google.

BigTable is a highly scalable database system used internally by Google to support over 60 of its products and projects. A source says Google has plans to announce next week that it will make BigTable available to outside developers as a service. Amazon provides a similar service through SimpleDB, a cloud database solution announced in December.

Google started development on BigTable in early 2004 and began using it actively in February 2005. The non-relational, proprietary system was designed internally to fulfill Google’s peculiar need for access to massive amounts of data at very high speeds (millions of read/writes per second). BigTable is based on the Google File System (GFS) and designed for distribution across thousands of commodity servers that collectively store petabytes of data. Services that rely on it include Google Search, Google Earth and Maps, Google Finance, Google Print, Orkut, YouTube, and Blogger.

The decision to open up BigTable would seem to mark Google’s challenge to Amazon Web Services (AWS) suite, which also includes the Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) for cloud processing power and Simple Storage Service (S3) for cloud storage. The Amazon triumvirate of SimpleDB, S3, and EC2 is meant solve the scalability needs of web developers with a utility-like model. Customers pay for just the storage, computations, and bandwidth they need, and none they don’t. While Google has yet to announce the pricing for BigTable, we presume it will share the same model as AWS.

If Google does indeed announce public access to BigTable next week, expect the company to follow up with cloud storage and processing solutions as well, since there are substantial synergies between the three.

For more information about BigTable, see a paper (PDF) that was written about it in 2006. You can also watch a talk about it given at the University of Washington in October 2005.

Alibaba.com Enters Content Sharing Partnership With Ringier

March 6th, 2008 by Krunal

Hong Kong, 3 March 2008 – Alibaba.com, the world’s largest business website connecting buyers and suppliers, and Ringier Trade Publishing, Switzerland’s largest media group and a leading publisher of trade magazines, today announced a content sharing partnership in Asia.

Alibaba.com will provide Ringier’s trade related articles and technical information to its online community of members. In return, Ringier will include a page highlighting product and supplier leads from Alibaba.com members in both print and electronic versions of its Asian trade magazines.

One of the largest publishing houses in China and Asia, Ringier publishes titles in 15 industry categories including plastics, packaging, food, metalworking, textiles and pharmaceuticals. Its magazines in Asia have a combined annual circulation of more than 1.6 million.

“Alibaba.com wants to partner with best-in-class organizations to bring more value to our members,” said Kenneth Liu, Alibaba.com Vice President of Global Operations. “Ringier’s high quality information can help our members keep abreast of the latest trade news and enhance our suppliers’ technical know-how. By delivering trade information in multiple media formats we can connect buyers and sellers around the world who have different media consumption habits.”

“The content swap agreement with Alibaba.com is an excellent example of how print and online media can support each other and offer our respective media users with relevant information that is vital to their business,” said Mike Hay, President of Ringier Trade Publishing Ltd, Hong Kong. “Alibaba.com’s content in our trade journals will provide our readers with new sales leads and potential business. At the same time, our high value technical articles and trade news will provide Alibaba.com members with important technical and marketing news. “

About Alibaba.com Limited

Alibaba.com (HKSE:1688), a member of the Alibaba Group of companies, is one of the world’s premier e-commerce brands and the largest business website connecting small and medium-sized buyers and suppliers. Our international marketplace (www.alibaba.com) focuses on global importers and exporters and our China marketplace (www.alibaba.com.cn) focuses on suppliers and buyers trading domestically in China. Together our marketplaces form a community of more than 24 million registered users from over 200 countries and regions.

About Ringier Trade Publishing Ltd.

Established in Hong Kong in 1998, Ringier Trade Publishing is a division of Ringier AG of Switzerland, the country’s largest media group. Today, Ringier Trade publishes 25 industry titles for the China market in sectors such as plastics, metalworking, pharmaceutical, automotive, food and chemical processing, along with five industry titles for S.E. Asia. It also has an active conference business that held 16 high-level two-day technical conferences in China in 2007. In India, Ringier publishes five industry titles covering the plastics, packaging, food processing and textile categories.

More Info: alibaba.com

Image Search Engine Goes Live

January 9th, 2008 by Krunal
 

The image search engine on the SpivO search network is back online with improved features.

SpivO’s image search engine (spivo.com/images) went back online today with upgraded features. SpivO originally launched the image search engine in 2006 and included select filter technology to prevent children from looking at inappropriate images without censoring their content.

The new version of the image search engine has an improved filtering method which makes it easier for adults to search through uncensored images while making it more difficult for children.

SpivO’s select filtering technology is explained by Jack Thomas of SpivO.com. “When working on the image search engine for SpivO, we decided to take a different approach to filtering. We maintain a no censorship policy for our content but at the same time we feel a need to prevent younger users from accessing inappropriate content. If we used a filter that could be turned off and on, then some younger users may be able to find a way to disable it. However, by having a built in filter that only allows descriptive searches that an adult would use when searching for content, it makes it more difficult for the younger SpivO Image Search user to access adult content.”

Another advancement that SpivO users will find on the image search engine and other SpivO channels, is the faster inquiry response time. This is accredited to the new servers being used for SpivO.com, Spivomail.com, and Spivovideo.com. SpivO’s server environment was previously hosted and managed by a smaller group that was unable to support a web site the size of SpivO.

The faster server environment is a necessary upgrade as SpivO prepares to launch other media search engines such as SpivO Web Video Search and SpivO User Video Search. These are scheduled to launch this week.

To learn more, visit www.spivo.com/images.

SpivO
9280 Bay Plaza Blvd Suite 706
Tampa, FL 33619
1.813.600.3017

The SpivO Search Engine and Network offers a variety of channels to help users find information online.

Search Engine College Launches World First: Search Engine Wiki (BETA)

November 24th, 2007 by Krunal

Online training institution Search Engine College, has today launched Search Engine Wiki (http://www.searchenginewiki.com) (BETA), the world’s first vertical wiki dedicated to search engines and search engine marketing. The idea behind Search Engine Wiki is to provide a collaborative online library of search engine marketing (SEM) resources.

Some of the extensive resources found on the site include:

•    Lists of international search engines - categorized by country, type and industry.

•    A glossary of definitions for common terms used in Search Engine Optimization (SEO), Pay Per Click Advertising (PPC) and Search Engine Marketing (SEM).

•    A library of search engine marketing articles.

•    Employment resources listing SEO, PPC and SEM job vacancies.

•    A collection of popular search engine marketing blogs and news feeds.

•    Frequently Asked Questions about search engines and SEM.

•    Lists of popular search engine marketing tools and time saving software.

•    Links to upcoming search industry conferences and events.

•    Introductions to well known search industry personalities.

Search Engine Wiki is the brainchild of Kalena and Jerry Jordan, the founders of Search Engine College (http://www.searchenginecollege.com), and is the result of over 10 years worth of industry research and practice.

“Search Engine Wiki actually began life as a massive collection of bookmarks, tools and site links that we’d gathered over the past 10 years as search engine optimization consultants”, says Kalena.

“As I was constantly referencing these within the SEO courses that I teach at Search Engine College and in my Search Engine Advice Column (http://www.searchenginecollege.com/blog.htm), I realized that the collection would make fantastic starter content for a community-driven wiki. Last year, we discovered that the perfect domain (SearchEngineWiki.com) was available and it seemed like serendipity. We’ve been growing the Wiki ever since.”

Like Wikipedia and most other wikis, Search Engine Wiki is designed for interactivity. Wiki users can suggest resources and definitions to be added or sign up to become editors and add these resources themselves. Search Engine College students are also encouraged to collaborate and contribute to the Wiki during their training and beyond.

Search Engine Wiki is now in BETA release and welcomes contributions from the public.

About Search Engine Wiki

Search Engine Wiki (http://www.searchenginewiki.com) is the world’s first public wiki dedicated to search engines and search engine marketing. It provides a collaborative online library of search engine marketing resources that is constantly updated and evolving. Search Engine Wiki is owned by Jordan Consulting Group and managed by Search Engine College staff and community volunteer editors.

About Search Engine College

Search Engine College (http://www.searchenginecollege.com) is an online training institution offering instructor-led short courses and downloadable self-study courses in Search Engine Optimization and Search Engine Marketing subjects. SEC is owned by Jordan Consulting Group and managed by well-known search engine optimization industry expert Kalena Jordan. All classes are run in conjunction with experienced tutors specialized in various aspects of search engine marketing and well-respected in the industry.

For further inquiries or information contact:

Search Engine College

Kalena Jordan

Director of Studies

Phone / Fax : + 61 2 6655 9216

Email: kalena(at)searchenginecollege.com

AOL Mobile Search - Launches Improved Mobile Search

August 16th, 2007 by Krunal

AOL MOBILE:

AOL has improved its Mobile Search Capability, especially for Windows Mobile devices. Earlier I had incorrectly reported that there had been a full relaunch of its mobile portal. Only the search functionality has been improved and relaunched. There are now two types of search experiences: an enhanced Windows Mobile experience and a non-Windows Mobile version, which is also improved but with a slightly different presentation.

AOL noticed that a disproportionate number of users were using Windows Mobile devices (and mobile search), so the company created an experience with horizontal tabs that dynamically change depending on the query or context of the search.

Here’s an example for Click Here

12 Ways Webmasters Create Duplicate Content

July 27th, 2007 by Krunal

At the start of this session, the search engines all talked about various types of duplicate content. But let’s take a deeper look at the way that duplicate content happens. Here are 12 ways people unintentionally create dupe content:

  1. Build a site for the sole purpose of promoting affiliate offers, and use the canned text supplied by the agency managing the affiliate program.
  2. Generate lots of pages with little unique text. Weak directory sites could be an example of this.
  3. Use a CMS that allows multiple URLs to refer to the same content. For example, do you have a dynamic site where http://www.yoursite.com/level1id/level2id pulls up the exact same content as http://www.yoursite.com/level2id? If so, you have duplicate content. This is made worse if your site actually refers to these pages using multiple methods. A surprising number of large sites do this.
  4. Use a CMS that resolves sub domains to your main domain. As with the prior point, a surprising number of large sites have this problem as well.
  5. Generate pages that differ only by simple word substitutions. The classic example of this is to generate pages for blue widgets for each state where the only difference between the pages is a simple word substitution (e.g. Alabama Blue Widgets, Arizona Blue Widgets, …).
  6. Forget to implement a canonical redirect. For example, not 301 redirecting http://yoursite.com to http://www.yoursite.com (or vice versa) for all the pages on your site. Regardless of which form you pick to be the preferred form of URL for your site, someone out there will link to the other form, so implementing the 301 redirect will eliminate that duplicate content problem for you, as well as consolidate all the page rank from your inbound links.
  7. Having your on site links back to your home page link to http://www.yoursite.com/index.html (or index.htm, or index.shtml, or …). Since most of the rest of the world will link to http://www.yoursite.com, you now have created duplicate content, and divided your page rank, if you have done this.
  8. Implement printer pages, but not using robots.txt to keep them from being crawled.
  9. Implement archive pages, but not using robots.txt to keep them from being crawled.
  10. Using Session ID parameters on your URLs. This means every time the crawler comes to your site it thinks it is seeing different pages.
  11. Implement parameters on your URLs for other tracking related purposes. One of the most popular is to implement an affiliate program. The search engine will see http://www.yoursite.com?affid=1234 as a duplicate of http://www.yoursite.com. This is made worse if you leave the “affid” on the URL throughout the user’s visit to your site. A better solution is to remove the ID when they arrive at the site, after storing the affiliate information in a cookie. Note that I have seen a case where an affiliate had a strong enough site that http://www.yoursite.com?affid=1234 started showing up in the search engines rather than http://www.yoursite.com (NOT good).
  12. Implement a site where parameters on URLs are ignored. If you, or someone else, links to your site with a parameter on the URL, it will look like dupe content.

There are many ways that people intentionally create duplicate content, by various scraping techniques, but there is no need to cover that here.

Source by stonetemple.com

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