SEO 2.0
Spider, really your preferred audience? Source.For years Google has preached to build websites for humans not spiders. Nonetheless in reality Google still relies on webmasters to make their pages spider-friendly. To be honest I don’t like big Google and I don’t like spiders. I like humans very much though. That& (Read More)
SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog
Posted by Tom_CI recently read a couple of posts on e-consultancy about the state of play with major UK retail brands and how they perform online. First was 10 things Asda could do better online, which while I enjoyed didn't touch on any of the SEO failings of these companies. Kevin's Supermarkets ignoring SEO for major key (Read More)
Search Engine Land
Historically, search engines have been unable to extract content, such as text and links, from Flash (SWF) files. Subsequently, much of the Flash-based content on the web has been unavailable in search results. This situation has been frustrating for web developers, who have tried to come up with workarounds to help get sea (Read More)
Submitted by Caparazon
from Delicious:
FireFox is the most customizable browser I am aware of and hence it is my favorite one. A while ago ... (Read More)
Belongs to the News Networks :
none (yet) -- click "share" to share with a network.
TechCrunch
All week, Technorati is releasing data from its 2008 State of the Blogosphere report. On Monday, Technorati told us that bloggers only need 100,000 visitors a month to make $75,000 a year (yeah, right). Today, it offers up something more believable: the more you post, the higher you are likely to rank on Technorati.Bloggi (Read More)
Submitted by Bergholt:
Nicholas Carr argues in The Atlantic that our brains are accommodating to the ways information is distributed. According to Carr, brain scans show suggestive evidence that we're re-wiring cognitively to cope with the rapid flow of information.
. (Read More)
Submitted by Nishan:
Translated article showing how, in a few years, the general use and intensive search engine has been able to change the habits of Internet users in research and reading results. Uses eye tracking data to show how the first three results get more eyeballs. (Read More)