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Friday, August 8, 2008

How To Choose Primary Keyphrases

How To Choose Primary Keyphrases? When optimizing a page, the basic first step is to know what to optimize for – that is, what words or phrases you want to have a high ranking for.

It is usually a good idea for each individual page of your website to be primarily optimized around a single phrase. That’s certainly not to say that you shouldn’t use other keyphrases as well, but giving one of them priority is a wise strategy.

The main goal of this strategy, of course, is to be number the number one listing (or at least on the first page) in Google, Yahoo, and/or MSN when internet users type your phrase into the search box.

That’s why your primary phrase should be something that people are likely to type into a search engine, and it should also be descriptive of your page’s content.

Smaller websites will generally see better results when their pages are optimized for more specific “niche” terms, rather than highly competitive terms that lots of people are trying to rank for. That’s why it can be much more effective to choose a creative two to five word keyphrase rather than a single keyword with a lot of competition, such as “travel” or “finance”.

Finding a relevant, popular keyphrase that you will realistically be able to rank for certainly isn’t easy, but it’s definitely worth doing. After all, aside from blind luck, having a good idea of what you want is the only way to get it.

Friday, August 1, 2008

How To Make Firefox 3.0.1 Works Faster



How to make Firefox 3.0.2 works faster? It is very easy to make it. For making your Firefox Browser works faster, you've got to do some easy step bellow:

1. Open Mozilla Firefox 3.0.1 then type “about:config” (without quotation marks), in the address tab.

2. Then to the page of the configuration Firefox 3.0.1, just click yes to the poped up warning .

3. Look at the filter search bar in the configuration page:

- Type “network.http.pipelining”. Confirm value to “true”. If still “false”, double click to make it “true”.

- Type “network.http.pipelining.maxrequests”. Double click it and set the value = 8.

- Type “network.http.proxy.pipelining”, Double click it to change the value into ‘true’.

- Type “network.dns.disableIPv6" Double click it to change the value into ‘true’.

4. Click right in the empty place then choose:
- New --> Boolean. Type “content.interrupt.parsing” (without quotation marks)---> emerged popup windows click Ok. Then in prompt the choice that emerged, choose ‘true’.

- New --> integer. Type “content.max.tokenizing.time”. put the value 2250000.

- New --> integer. Type “content.notify.interval”. put the value 750000

- New --> boolean. Type “content.notify.ontimer”. Choose ‘true

- New --> integer. Type “content.notify.backoffcount”. put the value 5.

- New --> integer. Type “content.switch.threshold”. put the value 750000

- New --> integer. Type“nglayout.initialpaint.delay”. put the value 0.

Well done... Believe me.. your Firefox browser will run faster than before..

How Google Ranks The Page

This is the picture how google or other page rank site ranks the page.



From the picture we can see that:
Page C has a higher PageRank than Page E, even though it has fewer links to it: the link it has is much higher valued. A web surfer who chooses a random link on every page (but with 15% likelihood jumps to a random page on the whole web) is going to be on Page E for 8.1% of the time. (The 15% likelihood of jumping to an arbitrary page corresponds to a damping factor of 85%.) Without damping, all web surfers would eventually end up on Pages A, B, or C, and all other pages would have PageRank zero. Page A is assumed to link to all pages in the web, because it has no outgoing links.

Thats why our blogs has its page rank number.

Take from: Wikipedia

Search Engine

Search Engine, software program that helps users find information stored on a personal computer, or a network of computers, such as the Internet. A user enters search terms, typically by typing a keyword or phrase, and the search engine retrieves a list of World Wide Web (WWW) sites, personal computer files, or documents, either by scanning the content stored on the computers or computer networks being searched or by parsing (analyzing) an index of their stored data.

Search engines are most often used to find pages, files, news, images, and other data on the Web. Some of the most popular Web search engines include Google Inc., Microsoft Network (MSN) Search, and Yahoo! Inc. Each can be accessed from any Web browser, and each can be used for free. (Encarta Encyclopedia is published by the Microsoft Corporation.) These engines operate by building—and regularly updating—an enormous index of Web pages and files. This is done with the help of a Web crawler, or spider, a kind of automated browser that perpetually trolls the Web, retrieving each page it finds. Pages are then indexed according to the words they contain, with special treatment given to words in titles and other headers. When a user inputs a query, the search engine then scans the index and retrieves a list of pages that seem to best fit what the user is looking for. Search engines often return results in fractions of a second.

Generally, when an engine displays a list of results, pages are ranked according to how many other sites link to those pages. The assumption is that the more useful a site is, the more often other sites will send users to it. Google pioneered this technique in the late 1990s with a technology called PageRank. But this is not the only way of ranking results. Dozens of other criteria are used, and these will vary from engine to engine.

Many times, search results will also include what are called sponsored links, links that are ranked high in the search results or are prominently displayed because third-party companies pay a fee to the search engine. More often than not, sponsored links are labeled as such, but inexperienced Internet users often have trouble distinguishing between sponsored pages and unsponsored results. Sponsored links provide search engines with their primary source of revenue.

Take From: Microsoft ® Encarta ® 2008