|
|
||
|
Navigation Popular content Today's:All time:
|
Submitted by admin on Fri, 09/26/2008 - 20:53.
The term search engine has become the predominant term for search system or search site, but before reading any further, you need to understand the different types of search, um, thingies, you’re going to run across. Basically, you need to know about four things: Search indexes or search engines:These are the predominant type of search tools you’ll run across. Originally, the term search engine referred to some kind of search index, a huge database containing information from individual Web sites. Google’s vast index (www.google.com) contains over 3 billion pages, for instance. Large search-index companies own thousands of computers that use software known as spiders or robots(or just plain bots — Google’s software is known as Googlebot) to grab Web pages and read the information stored in them. These systems don’t always grab all the information on each page or all the pages in a Web site, but they grab a significant amount of information and use complex algorithms to index that information. Search directories:A directory is a categorized collection of information about Web sites. Rather than containing information from Web pages, it contains information about Web sites. The most significant search directories are owned by Yahoo! (dir.yahoo.com) and the Open Directory Project (www.dmoz.org). Directory companies don’t use spiders or bots to download and index pages on the Web sites in the directory; rather, for each Web site, the directory contains information such as a title and description. The two most important directories, Yahoo! and Open Directory, have staff members who examine all the sites in the directory to make sure they are placed into the correct categories and meet certain quality criteria. Smaller directories often allow people submitting sites to specify which category should be used. Here’s how to see the difference between Yahoo!’s search results and the Yahoo!directory. Go to www.yahoo.com, type a word into the Search box, and click the Search button. The list of Web sites that appears is what Yahoo! calls the Yahoo! Search results, which are currently provided by Google. But notice the Directory tab at the top of the page; or, underneath some of the search results, you see a line that says something like More Sites about: Arthritis. Click either the tab or link, and you end up in the Yahoo! Directory. (You can go directly to the directory by using dir.yahoo.com.) Non-spidered indexes:I wasn’t sure what to call these things, so I made up a name: non-spidered indexes. A number of small indexes, less important than the major indexes such as Google, don’t use spiders to examine the full contents of each page in the index. Rather, the index contains background information about each page, such as titles, descriptions, and keywords. In some cases, this information comes from the meta tags pulled off the pages in the index. In other cases, the person who enters the site into the index provides this information. Pay-per-click systems:Some systems provide pay-per-click listings. Advertisers place small ads into the systems, and when users perform their searches, the results contain some of these sponsored listings, typically above and to the right of the free listings. Thanks, SEO/SEM Expert - Pakistan
Recent comments
Advertise Here |
Recent blog posts
Search |
Thanks Ammar Khan
Submitted by admin on Sat, 09/27/2008 - 19:31.Thanks Ammar Khan for your continous anticipation. You can also write blog for freeseosemtraining.com any time you want. Just let me know your status and I'll get back to you shortly.
Thanks,
Bilal
Nice Info
Submitted by Anonymous on Sat, 09/27/2008 - 14:05.Hello,
I am the regular reader of your SEO Blog. MR. Bilal you are doing a nice job for spreading knowledge about SEO and SEM in regular basis. Your effort and research on the behaviour of search engines are amazing.You are simply the best. You ARE TRULY THE ONLY SEO GURU in PAKISTAN.
Ammar Khan