Monday 18 May 2009

What is the Googleplex?

Googleplex is -like Wikipedia tells us- the headoffice of Googlein Mountainview, California (close to San Jose). Googleplex is also the powerful computer from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (42). These are a few definititions I could find on the Internet.

But it's more!
Googleplex is also Google's philosophy to beat Microsoft. Different Different kinds of patents are requested by Google make clear that Google is more than a search engine and marketing company (adwords, adsense). Last year the made the next step into expanding their business by launching Dhe Dream. A phone that operates on Android and should compete with the iPhone. Not an easy task, but it's been done right now! The Dream has the possibility to run all kinds of software. With one exception: software that makes it possible to do Voip. (like Skype). This would be against the marketing rules of the telcom companies.

Googleplex
Googleplex is also the environment where all these initiatives could be connected to. Audio/video (YouTube), Banking, Telephone but also OS en applications (databases, etc.) could be added to the Googleplex and make public to the world. A thought which is full of resistance, but Google is implementing this environment cleaverly.

Video inside the Googleplex

Tuesday 12 May 2009

What is a Metator?

A Content analyst creates a metatorial framework and a Metator applies it. Metators are quite equivalent to editors. An editor reviews an author’s work for style, usage, grammar, and so on, and makes changes to bring the work into compliance with the organization’s standards. A Metator does the same thing, but for Metadata rather than for editorial qualities. Metators are becoming more important when the mass of content grows. Retrieving the correct information in an ECM is done by metadata. Also on the web metadata can be crucial to be found by search engines and conclusively the visitor of your website. Also their quest for searching information on your website can be simplified with the use of metadata.

A Metators’ responsibilities include the following:
  • Review an author’s submission of a component to ensure the metadata fields were filled in correctly
  • Review the output of content conversion processes to ensure that they correctly identify, divide, and tag components
  • Fill in metadata fields that author’s don’t understand how to complete
  • Train and guide others on what metadata is, how it’s used by the CMS, and how to choose the right values for particular components
  • Distribute and update the metatorial guide

A good Metator is a Content analyst in training. Metators can serve as a CMS front-line support to the content contributors, so it’s a good ides to choose Metators who have the skill eventually to considered “power-users” of the CMS. A Content analyst can gain good insight into how well her system works by doing the job of the Metator every so often.

Monday 11 May 2009

Determine the value of your blog

Generally speaking you can state that the Dutch Weblog GeenStijl is the most valuable website in the Netherlands at this moment. At Hyped.nl you can see an overview of the 30 most valuable weblogs in the Netherlands.

In this overview you can see the parameters used to determine the worth of a weblog:
  • STIR
    Unknown parameter for me until now. Via Stir.nl you are able to submit a weblog for 700 euros. The weblog is evaluated for marketing value; simply said: how many ads can we put on this website and how much can we earn with it?
  • Alexa
    The Alexa-rating is being judged by people who use the Alexa toolbar. The more people with Alexa toolbar will visit your site, the lower the value.
  • T-rank
    With T-rank you can determine the value at technorati.com. The lower the score, the better.
  • T-authority
    Also from Technorati: the determination of the number of backlinks from one weblog to your weblog. The higher, the better.
  • PR
    Google's Pagerank.
Formula
The big question: how do you determine the final value of your weblog with this parameters?

Try for yourself
There are plenty of websites which pretend to be able to estimate the value of a weblog. I tried it with my Ducth weblog: Siggy Volgt.

Quite a difference...

Friday 8 May 2009

Avoiding SEO Mistakes

Following are the 9 Biggest SEO Mistakes which Web Designers & Web Developers should avoid.

Splash Page
I've seen this mistake many times where people put up just a big banner image and a link "Click here to enter" on their homepage. The worst case -- the "enter" link is embedded in the Flash object, which makes it impossible for the spiders to follow the link.

This is fine if you don't care about what a search engine knows about your site; otherwise, you're making a BIG mistake. Your homepage is probably your website's highest ranking page and gets crawled frequently by web spiders. Your internal pages will not appear in the search engine index without the proper linking structure to internal pages for the spider to follow.

Your homepage should include (at minimum) target keywords and links to important pages.

Non-spiderable Flash Menus
Many designers make this mistake by using Flash menus such as those fade-in and animated menus. They might look cool to you but they can't be seen by the search engines; and thus the links in the Flash menu will not be followed.

Image and Flash Content
Web spiders are like a text-based browser, they can't read the text embedded in the graphic image or Flash. Most designers make this mistake by embedding the important content (such as target keywords) in Flash and image.

Overuse of Ajax
A lot of developers are trying to impress their visitor by implementing massive Ajax features (particularly for navigation purposes), but did you know that it is a big SEO mistake? Because, ajax content is loaded dynamically, so it is not spiderable or indexable by search engines.

Another disadvantage of Ajax -- since the address URL doesn't reload, your visitor can not send the current page to their friends.

Versioning of Theme Design
For some reason, some designers love to version their theme design into sub level folders (i.e. domain.com/v2, v3, v4) and redirect to the new folder. Constantly changing the main root location may cause you to lose backlink counts and ranking.

"Click Here" Link Anchor Text
You probably see this a lot where people use "Click here" or "Learn more" as the linking text. This is great if you want to be ranked high for "Click Here". But, if you want to tell the search engine that your page is important for a topic, than use, that topic/keyword in your link anchor text. It's much more descriptive (and relevant) to say "learn more about {keyword topic}"

Warning: Don't use the EXACT same anchor text everywhere on your website. This can sometimes be seen as search engine spam too.

Common Title Tag Mistakes
  • Same or similar title text:
    Every page on your site should have a unique Title tag with the target keywords in it. Many developers make the mistake of having the same or similar title tags throughout the entire site. That's like telling the search engine that EVERY page on your site refers to the same topic and one isn't any more unique than the other.
    One good example of bad Title Tag use would be the default WordPress theme. In case you didn't know, the title tag of the default WordPress theme isn't that useful: Site Name > Blog Archive > Post Title. Why isn't this search engine friendly? Because, every single blog post will have the same text "Site Name > Blog Archive >" at the beginning of the Title Tag. If you really want to include the site name in the title tag, it should be at the end: Post Title Site Name.
  • Exceeding the 65 character limit:
    Many bloggers write very long post titles. So what? In search engine result pages, your title tag is used as the link heading. You have about 65 characters (including spaces) to get your message across or risk it getting cutoff.
  • Keyword stuffing the title:
    Another common mistake people tend to make is overfilling the title tag with keywords. Saying the same thing 3 times doesn't make you more relevant. Keyword stuffing in the Title Tag is looked at as search engine spam (not good). But it might be smart to repeat the same word in different ways:
    "Photo Tips & Photography Techniques for Great Pictures" "Photo" and "Photography" are the same word repeated twice but in different ways because your audience might use either one when performing a search query.
  • Empty Image Alt Attribute
    You should always describe your image in the alt attribute. The alt attribute is what describes your image to a blind web user. Guess what? Search engines can't see images so your alt attribute is a factor in illustrating what your page is relevant for.
    Hint: Properly describing your images can help your ranking in the image search results. For example, Google image search brings me hundreds of referrals everyday for the search terms "abstract" and "dj".
  • Unfriendly URLs
    Most blog or CMS platforms have a friendly URL feature built-in, however, not every blogger is taking advantage of this. Friendly URL's are good for both your human audience and the search engines. The URL is also an important spot where your keywords should appear.
    Example of Friendly URL: domain.com/page-title Example of Dynamic URL: domain.com/?p=12356

Friday 1 May 2009

Internet trends 2009

I bumped into a good webblog about the internet trends ahead of us. Some of these trends I totally agree upon. I don't get the idea of Virtual Worlds. Second Life was one of them and didn't succeed either. Also I think Virtual Worlds is a thing for youngsters.

3D
I can see another trend coming: with the use of a pair of 3D glasses we can walk around in a real live environment (museum, the moon, Amsterdam or New York). This technology will change the way we live. I don't expect this will happen the upcoming 5 years.

Here is list of trends for 2009 (according to this webpost):
  1. Semantic Web
  2. Artificial Intelligence
  3. Virtual Worlds
  4. Mobile
  5. Attention Economy
  6. Web Sites as Web Services
  7. Online Video / Internet TV
  8. Rich Internet Apps
  9. International Web
  10. Personalization

Read more about on 2008-2009 web trends.