Archive for April 11th, 2008

11
Apr
08

White Hat vs. Black Hat

Search engine optimization methods are divided in two categories: black hat SEO and white hat SEO. Both methods can help you to get high rankings for your website on search engines. However, the black hat method is likely to get your website banned on search engines.

What is white hat SEO?
 
White hat SEO means that the webmaster doesn’t try to trick search engines. White hat SEO means playing by the rules. Web pages that are created with white-hat SEO methods are beneficial to web surfers, search engines and webmasters.
What is black hat SEO?

Black hat SEO attempts to improve rankings in ways that are disapproved of by the search engines. These methods include cloaking, doorway pages, hidden text, etc.
Google and other search engines have made it clear that they penalize websites that use black hat SEO methods when they detect them.

You have probably  seen some web pages in the search results that looked strange or hardly related to what you’ve actually searched.  Some black-hat SEO methods can lead to these good results. There are quite a few webmasters who obtained high rankings for their web pages although they optimized them with methods that were not approved by Google and the other search engines.

The good news is that nearly all black-hat SEO methods have been detected by search engines sooner or later. Javascript redirects or doorway pages used to work in the past but nowadays, these methods are usually the ticket to the land of banned websites, and once a website is banned it’s very likely that it will carry this flag on it for the rest of its existence.

A website can get in trouble even if it used black-hat methods years ago

Things that cannot be detected by Google now might be detected by Google tomorrow. And Google might also be able to find out what you did in the past.

So be aware of those so called SEO specialists which promisses you Top 10 rankings in Google,Yahoo,MSN… in less than a month, some might use black hat SEO methods which will eventualy bann your website to appear in the search engines for ever.

11
Apr
08

Windows is a virus

If you type the word VIRUS in the search box on Apple dot com, the result is very funny.
Apple illustrating a good sense of humor, shows a little smiley with the result WINDOWS, recommending its TV ads.
Try for yourself.

11
Apr
08

No kids for Google!

Google’s terms of service, while ignored by the vast majority of users, contain a pretty shocking clause: Under 18’s are not permitted to use any of Google’s Web properties. That’s right, kids–no search, YouTube, Gmail, news, or images.

Google’s terms of service, thick with legalese, state that:

“You may not use … Google’s products, software, services and web sites … and may not accept the Terms if … you are not of legal age to form a binding contract with Google.”

11
Apr
08

Google’s name comes from… googol

Googol is the large number ten at its hundreth power, that is, the digit 1 followed by one hundred zeros (in decimal representation). The term was coined in 1920 by nine-year-old Milton Sirotta.

11
Apr
08

Online Sales Expected to Grow 17 Pct In 2008

Despite the bum economy, Internet retail sales will rise 16.6 % in 2008 to $204 billion, about the same rate of growth as in 2007, according to the latest annual study by Forrester Research. That’s way above the 3.5% growth in overall retail sales predicted for 2008 by the National Retail Federation. The biggest online categories: apparel (due to rise by $3.9 billion, or 17%), computers (up $3.2 billion, or 15%) and autos (up $2.5 billion, or 15%).

Of course, “e-tailing,” despite becoming more and more prevalent over the last few years, still accounts for less than 5% of the overall retail market in the U.S. The relatively small dollar base all but assures double-digit annual growth.

11
Apr
08

Hitwise Give Google 67% of US Searches in March 2008

Google Inc. received 67% of all U.S. Internet searches during the four weeks ended March 29, according to information service Hitwise.

Google received 64% of all U.S. Internet searches in the same period a year earlier.

 

Yahoo Inc.’s search engine received 20% of U.S. Web searches in the more recent period, while Microsoft Corp.’s MSN Search drew 7% and Ask.com 4%.

 

The remaining 46 search engines in Hitwise’s search engine analysis tool accounted for about 2% of searches in the U.S.