Categories
- Accutane Lawsuit
- Ailments
- Auto Accident
- Business
- Email Advertising
- Email Marketing
- Home Based Business
- Internet Advertising
- Internet Marketing
- Legal
- Lionheart Assurance Solutions
- Online Advertising
- Pay-Per-Click
- Recyclable
- Redirected Traffic
- Scams
- Start A Travel Agency
- Web Directory Submissions
- Web Linking
- Web Marketing
- Web Site Promotion
- Website Advertising
Tag Archives: related
Google/NORAD Santa Tracking About to Begin Again
The North American Aerospace Defense Command, otherwise known as NORAD is tracking Santa Claus's rounds this year, keeping up a tradition that has been going on for 54 years. Norad has been working with Google for several years by way of Google Maps and Google Earth. Last year, they started using Google Analytics as well. Google is now sharing a video of last year's Santa tracking: On the YouTube blog, Jeff Martin writes : Oooh, it's almost Christmas! And that means that Santa is about to leave his digs at the North Pole to embark upon his '09 World Tour, placing presents under the trees of good little girls and boys all over the planet. Where will he be, and when will he make it to your house? You can find the answer at www.noradsanta.org . You see, every year, NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, tracks Santa's journey from the time he lifts off from his Arctic village to his final stop in Hawaii at the end of a looooooooong night. You can join the ride at Noradsanta.org or try m.noradsanta.org if you prefer to do your Santa tracking on a mobile phone. You'll also want to subscribe to the NORAD Tracks Santa YouTube channel , which will contain videos of many of his stops around the world, all captured by NORAD's Santa Cam network. Check out the related articles below for our coverage of Santa tracking from years past. If you go to NORAD's site , you can see a live countdown leading up to Santa's flight. Have You Read This? > Tracking Santa's Web Analytics > Google Teams With NORAD To Track Santa > Google To Track Santa With NORAD Continue reading →
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
|
Tagged digs, find-the-answer, google-maps, hawaii, norad, norad tracks santa, north pole, related, time, tracking santa claus, tracking-santa, under-the-trees, web analytics, youtube
|
Leave a comment
Google Adds DNS To its List of Services
Google has announced the launch of a free global Domain Name System (DNS) resolution service, simply called Google Public DNS. People can opt-in to use this as an alternative to their current DNS provider. You do not need a Google account to use it, and it is an independent service, meaning it does not depend on any other products. Google says the service is part of its ongoing effort to make the web faster. This is an initiative that the company stresses time and time again. In its announcement, the company says : Most of us aren't familiar with DNS because it's often handled automatically by our Internet Service Provider (ISP), but it provides an essential function for the web. You could think of it as the switchboard of the Internet, converting easy-to-remember domain names — e.g., www.google.com — into the unique Internet Protocol (IP) numbers — e.g., 74.125.45.100 — that computers use to communicate with one another. The average Internet user ends up performing hundreds of DNS lookups each day, and some complex pages require multiple DNS lookups before they start loading. This can slow down the browsing experience. Our research has shown that speed matters to Internet users, so over the past several months our engineers have been working to make improvements to our public DNS resolver to make users' web-surfing experiences faster, safer and more reliable. You can read about the specific technical improvements we've made in our product documentation and get installation instructions from our product website . Privacy Google says Google Public DNS complies with the company's main privacy policy. Google collects the IP address (temporarily), ISP, and location information (in permanent logs) to make the service "faster, better, and more secure." Continue reading →
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
|
Tagged dns resolver, google-provides, google-public, independent service, layer-protocol, meaning-it-does, product documentation, provider isp, related, switchboard, unique, user
|
Leave a comment
Google Makes it Easier to Tell Where Results Originate From
Google has begun including geographical region information on some search results. The information is used when supplied by webmasters, and appears in the green address line on the results that include it. "Country-code top-level domains (or ccTLDs) can provide people with a quick and valuable clue about the location of a website—for example, ".fr" for France or ".co.jp" for Japan," explains Google software engineer Piyush Prahladka. "However, for certain top level domains like .com, .info and .org, it's not as easy to figure out the location." "With the new display, you no longer need to refine your search or click through the results to figure out which page is the one you're looking for," says Prahladka. "In general, our hope is that these region tags will help searchers more quickly identify which results are most relevant to their queries." If you wish to provide Google with the information required for getting your site's region to show up in search results, you will need to log in to Webmaster Tools and go to Site configuration > Settings > Geographic Target . There you will be able to associate a country/region with your site. Webmasters have been able to utilize the feature that lets them associate their sites with regions for quite some time, but that information hasn't appeared in search results in the past. Right now, Google is only showing region tags in results for certain domains like .com and .net. They don't show them at all for sites that have location-specific ccTLDs (.br, .co.uk, etc.). The feature is designed to help users figure out where a site is based if that is not already clear. It is also worth noting that Google will only show the region tags when the region associated with the site is different than the region the searcher's query originates from . So if I search from here in the US, I will not see results that say "US", but I might see results that say "Canada". Related Articles: > Get More Links in Your Actual Google Results > Google Gives Forums More Links on SERPs > Google Improves Universal Results for Locations Continue reading →
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
|
Tagged amp, Business, google search results, google-improves, green, japan, location, related, results, review and story, search, search-results, webmaster-tools
|
Leave a comment
Beware Tiger Woods Accident Information Sources
The Tiger Woods car accident has had the web abuzz over the weekend. Like nearly anything else that creates such buzz, cyber-criminals will find a way to exploit it. This incident is no exception. According to security company Symantec , interest in Tiger's accident and rumors surrounding its cause has given scareware peddlers "ripe opportunity" to "poison web search engines." Because the story has generated such a swell in web traffic and searches, malicious entities surely couldn't resist. The story has appeared frequently in the top Google searches since the news broke. Symantec says it has observed that some search results redirect users to different malicious domains, such as: - vir-curemypc-now.com - egafuki.cn - online-scanner-free.net "From an IT security point of view, this unfortunate incident is just another fruit ripe for the picking as far as malware writers are concerned," says Symantec's Hon Lau. "It comes as no surprise that the creators of rogue antivirus or misleading application software have already jumped on the bandwagon and attempted to poison web search engine results to take advantage of this spike in web search activity." Naturally, the company is advising web searchers and those interested in the Tiger Woods story to be on guard. Symantec reminds us that when you search for info on the web, it is best to make sure your computer is secure. In addition, stay away from online sources that seem to "strong-arm" you into buying anti-virus software. On a related note, Tech Blorge notes that the Tiger Woods story was broken on Twitter, as opposed to traditional media. These cases always provide for an interesting look at how new media is changing in the era of social media. Related Articles: Continue reading →
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
|
Tagged amp nbsp, bandwagon, holiday, online, poison web, related, review and story, search-engine, security, security point, symantec, tiger-woods, top google searches, web search engine, web search engines
|
Leave a comment
Portuguese Internet Users Reached Nearly 4 Million in September
comScore released findings this week from a study of the online habits of Portuguese Internet users. Interestingly, they found that the Portuguese Internet audience grew to nearly 4 Million users in September. Over 3.8 million people age 15 and older accessed the Internet from a home or work location in Portugal in September, viewing an average 1,843 pages and spending an average 1.9 hours online per person during the month. "Portugal represents a dynamic and growing Internet market in Europe with users continuing to be more active and engaged online," said Mike Read, comScore managing director for Europe and Ibero America. "The average Internet user in Portugal is spending more time online engaging in different behaviors such as reading news and articles, search, conducting personal financial transactions and social networking. As these behaviors continue to take hold in the Portuguese market there will be an increasing number of opportunities to leverage the Internet for marketing and advertising purposes." Google sites are the most popular in Portugal, according to comScore's data. Here's a look at the top 15 online properties for Portugal: Naturally, social media plays a big role in Internet use in Portugal, but it is not Facebook that dominates there, according to comScore's numbers. Here are the top ten social networking sites: The figures for both charts exclude traffic from public computers, such as those from Internet cafes. They also exclude access from mobile phones and PDA's. I'm willing to bet that social networks and Google sites are pretty popular among mobile users in Portugal though. Related Articles: > Study: Most People Go Online to Socialize > Google, Bing Perform Well In Latest comScore Report > "Time Spent Online" Report Puts Microsoft Way Ahead Continue reading →
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
|
Tagged Business, comscore, microsoft, mobile users, online, public computers, related, social networking sites, spent-online, studies, such-as-reading, top-ten
|
Leave a comment
Google Ignoring Its Own Policy on Desktop AdSense?
It has been discovered that Google is now showing AdSense ads inside Google Earth. While it is not that surprising to see Google putting ads on another one of its properties, it has raised a few eyebrows, given that Google Earth is a desktop application. Google actually states in its policy that it doesn't allow developers to use AdSense ads in their desktop apps, but it appears that Google is bending the rules for its own product. The company is certainly free to do so, given that it owns the product, but some are beginning to wonder if this could lead to Google changing that policy. Currently that section of Google's policy reads: "Currently, we don't permit Google ads or AdSense for search boxes to be distributed through software applications including, but not limited to toolbars, browser extensions, and desktop applications. In order to comply with AdSense program policies, please note that Google AdSense code may only be implemented on web-based pages." Blogger Amit Agarwal at Digital Inspiration appears to be the first to point out the ads in Google Earth, and he provides a couple of screenshots here . In one, you can see AdSense ads when you search for a location or business, and the ads can be found in the search results. In the other screenshot, you can see the ad in the window that pops up when you click a placemark (the red pins on the maps). The interesting part of this find is not so much that Google is placing ads in Google Earth, but what it could mean if the company were to in fact change its policy. "If that policy changes, we could see more and more of Office 2010 Starter or FeedDemon like applications that are completely free to the end-user but supported by web advertising," says Agarwal. Joseph Tartakoff at PaidContent adds that "arch rival" Microsoft has already promised to introduce the ad-supported version of Office to come pre-loaded on PCs. It is possible that there is being too much read into Google's decision to include AdSense ads in Google Earth. It does make for an interesting conversation though. What do you think? Related Articles: > Google Familiarizes AdWords Users with New Interface > Blogger Gets AdSense For Feeds Integration > Google Friend Connect Gets an AdSense Feature Continue reading →
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
|
Tagged apps, Business, feeddemon, google-earth, google-search, placemark, related, search, sense-feature
|
Leave a comment
Ensuring Your Site is Indexed in Google’s Mobile Search
In this day and age, you pretty much can't ignore mobile users. The rate at which consumers are accessing the web via mobile devices is growing rapidly, largely thanks to the increasing popularity and production of smartphones. Just having a mobile site isn't even enough. Sure, it's a great start, but you have to start thinking about a mobile site just as you would a regular site. Can people find it? Just because you have a good ranking in Google does not mean that your mobile site has a good ranking in Google's mobile search engine, or is even indexed at all. Google recently shared a few important tips for making sure your mobile site is being indexed in Google's Mobile Search. 1. Create a mobile sitemap and submit it to Google so Google knows it exists. This can be done using Google Webmaster Tools , just like with a regular sitemap. 2. To make sure Googlebot-Mobile can access your site, allow any User-agent to access it. "You should also be aware that Google may change its User-agent information at any time without notice, so it is not recommended that you check if the User-agent exactly matches 'Googlebot-Mobile' (which is the string used at present)," says Jun Mukai, a software engineer on Google's mobile search team. "Instead, check whether the User-agent header contains the string 'Googlebot-Mobile'. You can also use DNS Lookups to verify Googlebot." 3. Check that your mobile-friendly URLs' DTD (Doc Type Definition) declaration is in an appropriate mobile format such as XHTML Mobile or Compact HTML. If you run both a regular site and a mobile version of it, there is a possibility that the wrong version will show up in the wrong search results. There are ways you can prevent this. "When a mobile user or crawler (like Googlebot-Mobile) accesses the desktop version of a URL, you can redirect them to the corresponding mobile version of the same page," explains Mukai. "Google notices the relationship between the two versions of the URL and displays the standard version for searches from desktops and the mobile version for mobile searches." If you do use a redirect, you should make sure content on the corresponding URL matches as closely as possible, because Google finds sites that abuse the practice in order to try and boost their rankings. Google says this should be avoided at all costs, so you can probably expect to be penalized for such an action. Another way you can make sure a user is pointed to the right version of your site is simply to provide a link. In fact, that is what Google itself does. If you access the mobile version of Google, you will find a link to the desktop version. Another way still, is to switch content based on the User-agent, so mobile users automatically see the mobile version and desktop users see the desktop version, even though both are accessing the same URL. Google warns, however, that if you use this method, there is a chance that if you fail to configure your site correctly, it could be mistaken for cloaking, which you can be penalized for. "To remain within our guidelines, you should serve the same content to Googlebot as a typical desktop user would see, and the same content to Googlebot-Mobile as you would to the browser on a typical mobile device," says Mukai. "It's fine if the contents for Googlebot are different from the one for Googlebot-Mobile." Have you taken the necessary steps to ensure you are being indexed in Google's mobile search engine? Have you been left out due to cloaking-related confusion? Discuss here . Related Articles: > Google Launches Custom Search For Smartphones > Google Gives Mobile Searchers More Options > Google Revamps Mobile Local Search Experience Continue reading →
Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click
|
Tagged accesses, compact html, crawler, definition, doc type, google-search, mobile, mobile devices, mobile user, mobile version, related, review and story, string, webmaster-tools
|
Leave a comment