Exciting news for you local SEO nuts out there that love watching videos – Google’s Google Places community manager. Vanessa Schneider is now producing weekly videos recapping the most exciting topics in the Google Places Help forum.She posted the firs…
Exciting news for you local SEO nuts out there that love watching videos – Google’s Google Places community manager. Vanessa Schneider is now producing weekly videos recapping the most exciting topics in the Google Places Help forum.
Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.Search Engine Roundtable Stories:
Google’s Algorithms Find Stuffed Title Attributes As Sneaky
I spotted a …
Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.
Googler, John Mueller took a look and noticed an unusually high amount of title attributes used on the page…
Free Directory Sites Dropping Out Of Google?
A WebmasterWorld thread has one SEO noticing that Google has started to purge their index of the free directory submission web sites.
He said that about 50% of the free directory submission web sites are no longer to be found in Google…
Bing Search Update? Crawl Changes?
There is a single post at WebmasterWorld where a senior member is complaining that Bing has reduced the number of pages they have indexed of his site.
He said he had about 500,000 URLs URLs indexed and now he only has about 350…
Video Parody: Google’s Cutts On Ranking #1
Sam Applegate put together this awesomely funny video mashup of Matt Cutts on how to rank number one in Google. As you can see…
Classy: Google Chrome Wrist Watch
Ade Oshineye, a Developer Advocate at Google in the Google+ Developer Relations team who is based in London, took a picture of his new watch. Yea, it is a Google Chrome watch in a blue band with a me
I spotted a thread at Google Webmaster Help where a site owner was upset his page was not ranking well.Googler, John Mueller took a look and noticed an unusually high amount of title attributes used on the page, many with tons and tons of keywords and …
I spotted a thread at Google Webmaster Help where a site owner was upset his page was not ranking well.
Googler, John Mueller took a look and noticed an unusually high amount of title attributes used on the page, many with tons and tons of keywords and words in the title attribute. John said that the way he is using the title attribute can be seen as “sneaky” to Google’s algorithms.
John wrote:
It looks like a lot of the content on that page (and others within your site) is “hidden” behind title-attributes. To our algorithms, that might look a bit sneaky — and in practice, it doesn’t make that much sense, so I’d recommend going through your pages and making sure that you’re using title-attributes as they would normally be used.
Would you disagree?
Here is one of many examples of the use of the title attribute on this page:
<a class=’rsswidget’ href=’http://androidcommunity.com/htc-desire-c-gets-official-with-pics-galore-20120515/’ title=’Yesterday we mentioned that the specifications and a couple pictures had leaked of the HTC Desire C entry-level smartphone. One of those leaked photographs was an official press shot that came from an errant early publication in a catalog. Iâm not sure if the launch was always planned for today, or if HTC figured it ⦠[…]‘ rel=’nofollow’>
Years ago, on the old RustyBrick web site, I used the title attribute as a way to provide definitions on mouse over of highly technical terms. It actually worked well for users and for Google definitions back in the day.
I removed that feature with the redesign because by now, most our users know what these terms mean.
In any event, this is Google going on the record about something obvious – do not spam the title attribute. Well, do not spam anything.
A WebmasterWorld thread has one SEO noticing that Google has started to purge their index of the free directory submission web sites.He said that about 50% of the free directory submission web sites are no longer to be found in Google. I searched for …
A WebmasterWorld thread has one SEO noticing that Google has started to purge their index of the free directory submission web sites.
He said that about 50% of the free directory submission web sites are no longer to be found in Google. I searched for a bunch and about 50% of my searches returned results and 50% did not.
Here is one example:
The big question to me is, is this new? Did Google just remove a bunch of these directories? Is Google going to remove more? What criteria did Google use to decide which ones to remove?
Update: David Harry is analyzing data and currently after testing 500 directories and says 16% are delisted from Google. So a lot less than 50% but David is researching more and maybe if that list of 500 was increased to 5,000 it would be higher?
There is a single post at WebmasterWorld where a senior member is complaining that Bing has reduced the number of pages they have indexed of his site. He said he had about 500,000 URLs URLs indexed and now he only has about 350,000 URLs indexed at Bin…
There is a single post at WebmasterWorld where a senior member is complaining that Bing has reduced the number of pages they have indexed of his site.
He said he had about 500,000 URLs URLs indexed and now he only has about 350,000 URLs indexed at Bing. This occurred around May 5th.
So I checked several of my sites at Bing Webmaster Tools and didn’t notice a change in the index rate at all for any of my sites. In fact, here is a screen shot of the index rate for this site, as you can see, there was a little increase one day on May 3rd or so.
But when I looked at my traffic, impressions and clicks, there was a huge change – for the better – on May 7th or 8th:
I also noticed fluctuations in the crawl rate chart, but that seems normal – to be all over the place:
Have you noticed any significant changes at Bing recently?
I am thinking maybe the increase I am seeing is related to the Bing social integration or maybe not?
The last possible Bing update was in late March 2012 according to my records.
The idea behind this project was to produce a consistent set of buttons that could be used for the range of social actions frequently taken in Web applications. These actions are often important goals for users, such as connecting third-party accounts or sharing content to third-party platforms, so their appearance has to be attractive and clear.
The standard buttons provided by third parties (such as Facebook, Twitter and SoundCloud) vary in size, style and interactivity. A consistent button set could reduce a lot of that visual noise and inconsistency. Furthermore, having it in CSS format means that changing the text for certain actions would be a breeze for developers, and it also allows administrators of non-English websites to translate labels into their native languages.
The idea behind this project was to produce a consistent set of buttons that could be used for the range of social actions frequently taken in Web applications. These actions are often important goals for users, such as connecting third-party accounts or sharing content to third-party platforms, so their appearance has to be attractive and clear.
The standard buttons provided by third parties (such as Facebook, Twitter and SoundCloud) vary in size, style and interactivity. A consistent button set could reduce a lot of that visual noise and inconsistency. Furthermore, having it in CSS format means that changing the text for certain actions would be a breeze for developers, and it also allows administrators of non-English websites to translate labels into their native languages.
The button set was designed from the beginning to require no extra markup, and the elements used are entirely the choice of the (semantically considerate) designer. All buttons are fully scalable and customizable, and they degrade gracefully on older browsers, although the aesthetics in IE 6 and 7 are admittedly inferior to image-based alternatives.
No raster images or sprites were used. Instead, vector icons were inserted using a custom font file, an @font-face rule and pseudo elements. For more information, John Hicks has an informative write-up on this technique.
Download The Button Set For Free
This button set is free to use and extend, personally or commercially. No attribution is required.
The button set was designed with simplicity and semantics in mind. No unnecessary or extra markup is required, and button types are called through class names. Call the zocial.css file on your page (make sure the font files and the zocial.css file are in the same directory). Buttons can be displayed with the following markup:
<button class="zocial facebook">Sign in with Facebook</button>
The parent element is agnostic, so you may use <a>, <div> or <button>, but it must contain a child <span> element. [Thanks, Lea!]
To choose buttons from the set, include the appropriate class name for the service, such as .dropbox, .linkedin or .twitter.
Icon versions can be displayed by including an extra .icon class, as follows:
<a class="zocial quora icon">Follow me on Quora</a>
More code samples are available on the Zocial page.
Sam Applegate put together this awesomely funny video mashup of Matt Cutts on how to rank number one in Google. As you can see, he took dozens of videos from the Google Webmaster YouTube Channel and pieced them together to make a hilarious video parod…
Sam Applegate put together this awesomely funny video mashup of Matt Cutts on how to rank number one in Google. As you can see, he took dozens of videos from the Google Webmaster YouTube Channel and pieced them together to make a hilarious video parody.
Here is the video parody:
I had to share this with everyone – it is just too funny.
Now, if you are new to SEO, none of the advice as it appears is real – it is a joke.
That being said, it is a really funny joke. I spotted it via Gareth Hoyle.
Editor’s Note: This post is the first in the new Smashing Daily series on Smashing Magazine, where we highlight items to help you stay on the top of what’s going on in the industry. Vasilis van Gemert will carefully pick the most interesting discussions, tools, techniques and articles that were published recently and present them in a nice compact overview. Smashing Daily #2 is now published, too.
Vasilis goes through dozens of RSS feeds and hundreds of tweets so that you don’t have to. Do you find the new series interesting? What would you like to have? And what wouldn’t you like to see? Let us know! We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments!
Editor’s Note: This post is the first in the new Smashing Daily series on Smashing Magazine, where we highlight items to help you stay on the top of what’s going on in the industry. Vasilis van Gemert will carefully pick the most interesting discussions, tools, techniques and articles that were published recently and present them in a nice compact overview. Smashing Daily #2 is now published, too.
Vasilis goes through dozens of RSS feeds and hundreds of tweets so that you don’t have to. Do you find the new series interesting? What would you like to have? And what wouldn’t you like to see? Let us know! We’d love to hear your feedback in the comments!
A couple of words from Vasilis himself:
“Years ago I started collecting links, and once a week I would write an email to my colleagues with a small introduction to every link. Later on I decided that more people than just my colleagues might benefit from this collection, so I decided to publish everything on The Daily Nerd.
“Last November, during the Fronteers conference in Amsterdam, Lea Verou convinced me to start writing in English; up until then, I wrote my comments in Dutch. More and more people started following me, and I think that’s a good thing; I believe more talented people than me should know the things I know. By more talented people, I of course mean you, the reader, so you can understand just how excited I was when Vitaly Friedman asked me if I wanted to start publishing the Daily Nerd on Smashing Magazine. So, here we are, the first episode of the Smashing Daily! I hope you like it!”
Smashing Daily #1: Mobile Device Lab, Browsers and Animated GIFs
Your local mobile device lab Jeremy Keith started an open local mobile device lab in Brighton, and he urges you to do the same in your home town.
Web font performance: Weighing @font-face options and alternatives
An important part of design and UX is performance, so when you decide to use a Web font, you should definitely know what the negative impact that choice might have on your users. Here’s an excellent in-depth article about font performance. Yes, you should definitely read it (and the comments, too, because they’re actually quite good).
Miscellany #7,” Shady Characters
Here’s a short post by Keith Houston, with news and thoughts about unusual characters. A pleasure to read, like everything else on his blog.
TypeStacks: Instant font stacks based on your font
Here’s a nice tool that suggests a font stack based on your chosen font. It knows the fonts served by TypeKit, although it doesn’t seem to know too many Google Fonts. Still, a very handy tool.
Let’s Get Physical (Units)
There are a few occasions when we’d love to use physical units (such as cm and in), but unfortunately these units don’t work as expected in CSS. Boris Smus has written an extensive article about these units, how they should work, why we want them and why they work the way they work.
Cutting the Mustard
The BBC is working on a responsive news website, and it is sharing everything it finds out, which is extremely useful. In this article Tom Maslen explains how the BBC manages browser support. An absolute must read for anybody who is struggling with the growing complexity of browser support. This solution (or something similar) should be implemented everywhere.
H5BP
Here’s an overview of projects related to the HTML5 Boilerplate. Some excellent stuff is in there, but before you start using everything in there, remember the excellent advice of Rachel Andrew: “Stop solving problems you don’t yet have.”
html5shiv and Serving Content From Code Repositories
Never just link to scripts hosted on other domains, because you won’t always get the advantages, such as caching and Gzip. This is explained in detail in this excellent article. Yes, you should definitely read it.
Thinking Async
Loading an external JavaScript file can block the rest of the page from loading, which of course is a major performance and usability problem. The solution is to load scripts asynchronously, and Chris Coyier shows us ways to do that, extensively as always.
Experience Design Is the Future of Mobile Payments
“Holistic” means something like “complete.” So, Perry Chan argues that a “complete” user experience is the future of mobile payments. I actually think that right now, in the short run, whatever the future, the things we have right now are just terrible. Anything would less painful (at least here in the Netherlands). (I also think the future of UX on the Web is bigger fonts — much bigger).
Learn CSS selectors interactively
CSS selectors can be pretty hard to understand, especially the difference between nth-child and nth-of-type. There are many tools to visualize the difference, and this is another one by Ben Howdle.
Allen Tan on highlighting and focus,” Readmill Blog
My father always scribbles annotations in the margins of his paper books. He’s probably been doing this for more than 50 years now, and if somehow we could assemble these annotations, it would be an incredibly interesting and useful database. But as it is, it’s pretty useless. Allen Tan writes about this and more in this article on modern digital reading.
Browser Support
If, for whatever reason, you don’t like any of the tools or websites out there that tell you what browsers support what CSS feature, then this tool might be the one you’re looking for. I still prefer When Can I Use… or Mozilla Developer Network Docs, though.
Stamen
Your app needs a map, but you want something other than boring old Google Maps? You could try OpenStreetMap with one of these beautiful map tiles.
Browser Support? Forget It!
What does “browser support” mean exactly? Some think it means pixel perfection for a predefined set of browsers. According to David Bushell, it means something else. This is a good read for people (or clients) who struggle with the ever-expanding browser landscape.
The id Attribute Got More classy in HTML5
One of the easy ways to get a somewhat unique ID is by using the UNIX epoch time, which generates a string like 1336984564. The problem is that in HTML, an ID had to begin with a letter. Mathias Bynens tells us if this is still the case in HTML5.
Autofill City and State From Zip Code With Ziptastic
Filling out forms is a pain in the butt, especially on devices without a traditional keyboard. You should be asking users for as little information as possible. If there were a way to make things easier, you should probably do it. For instance, you could prefill parts of an address when the user enters their ZIP code. Chris Coyier shows us what a flow like that could look like.
CSS Layout Gets Smarter With calc()
A thing we needed desperately before being able to use box-sizing: border-box was the ability to mix different CSS units. There are still some use cases for this, though, and luckily more and more browsers are supporting the calc() property. Here’s how it works.
Last Click
The Origin of the <blink> Tag
Here’s the true story behind the blink tag by the guy who came up with the idea, Louis J. Montulli II. A nice anecdote on early browser history.
mr. div
Of course, you could use a simple Web technology like canvas or WebGL to generate beautiful animations, but why do it the easy way when you could use the ever-amazing animated GIF? Here’s a great Tumblr blog to follow if you’re looking for some random fantastic 4-D inspiration.
What Do You Think?
Do you like this new series? What would you like to see in it? Please provide some feedback, and let us know what you think!
Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.Search Engine Roundtable Stories:
Google Penguin 1.1 Update Underway? Nope.
There are some reports of majo…
Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes of the Search Engine Roundtable and other search forums on the web.
Search Engine Roundtable Stories:
Google Penguin 1.1 Update Underway? Nope.
There are some reports of major shuffling going on in the Google search results as of yesterday. I believe from the reports that it may be a Penguin update – but I do not have confirmation from Google on this yet. There are WebmasterWorld threads and if you scan the Google Webmaster Help forums you will see tons of threads about ranking changes in the past 24 hours or so.
Google Places Bug: Videos Go Missing
Yet another Google Maps bug to report but to be fair, they might all be related – this one is of the videos not showing on Google Maps/Places landing pages for businesses.
A Google Places Help thread has confirmed reports from Google on the bug…
Ad Review Center Missing Google AdSense Ads To Review?
A WebmasterWorld thread has several reports from Google AdSense publishers that the Ad Review Center has some recent bugs disabling the ability to see new ads for review.
Both sources say that Bing powers just about 30% search market share (between Microsoft and Yahoo properties together). Hitwise says Google dropped in market share…
LinkedIn Bike Parked At Google
Erica Joy who works at Google posted on her Google+ page a picture of a LinkedIn bike parked at the Google offices. She said she saw the bike “stashed away in a very inconspicuous spot near my buildin
Happy Mother’s Day From The Search Industry
I wanted to wish all the mothers out there a very happy Mother’s Day! To celebrate the special day, the search industry has put together tons and tons of logos.