Wednesday, June 17, 2009

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Friday, January 30, 2009

Thank You Cuil, My Search Results Needed Random Pictures in a Framed Search Result Page

It was a big deal, a group of Google expats raise thirty million dollars to stick a group of servers together and suddenly call themselves a search engine. In earlier news releases, Cuil even talked about how their results were less dependant on links than that of Google. So, we ran a little test to see if this was true.

Does anybody remember the "miserable failure" Google bomb? A group of anti-Bush bloggers and webmasters linked the keyphrase "miserable failure" to U.S. President George Bush's official Whitehouse.gov web site. Regardless of the fact that the site doesn't use the phrase "miserable failure", the site ranked number one in Google. Google fixed the problem and resulting searches for "miserable failure" became content based.

When Cuil launched, I noticed a spike in traffic to the article resources on my company's web site generated from Cuil. People immediately searched for "miserable failure". Guess what is number four, Whitehouse.gov. Look one row below that and you will see my article titled "Google Repairs Miserable Failure". Next to it, 'The Onion' logo.

I was just thinking several months ago while doing a Google search how nice it would be if my search results were accompanied by completely random non-relevant images and icons. Thank you Cuil for making this a reality.

The "engineers" at new search engines like the now forgotten Accoona like to come up with new looks and logos while completely ignoring what makes Google so popular. Unlike the Ask.com post Interactive Media buyout commercials saying "Don't just use something out of habit [Google]", people use Google because its clean and gives relevant results.

Users are not demanding results be displayed in some mid-90's frame based design style. They want something fast, clean, and relevant. You want to do something useful with your undeserved $30 million of venture capital? How about you make something as fast, clean, and relevant as Google only with page rankings not changing ever 20 seconds.

I speak from experience. Several years ago I too developed a search engine which is now a huge online resource. We started a search engine then we quickly saw that only 2% of our users were actually doing web searches on it. So we spent a tiny amount of money integrating into Yahoo's API for the search results then built a network of individual interest channels. Because new content on the web is far more valuable than a new way to find it. Especially if that new way displays irrelevant picture eye-candy in a framed search result screen.

Yahoo actually figured it out a long time ago. According to Alexa, Yahoo gets the most traffic of any other web site in the world. Yet, Google is delivering more than 70% of online search queries. See, Yahoo figured out that Google's search was superior to theirs so they began investing heavily in their "channels of interest" sections.

When your product is inferior, know what you can be good at, excel in that, and don't reinvent a wheel that is not broken. Oh, and free up some venture capital funding for real technological innovations.

Jason Bland is with guaranteed search engine optimization company, Adviatech Corp. Adviatech is one of the leading SEO firms offering results based online marketing solutions. To learn more about guaranteed SEO services, visit Adviatech.com.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jason_Bland

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Targeted Search Engine Optimization - How to Excell at Search Engine Optimization

Search engine optimization is very important to the success of an online business. Whenever any internet surfer has to find something on the web, he or she goes directly to the search engines. The keywords are typed in the search bar and the search engine is requested to find the relevant web sites. If your web site is search engine optimized, the search engines will be able to place you on the top of the result page.

If you are not search engine optimized, you may not find a place on the first page. The chances of being visited by the surfers increase if you happen to be on the first page of results when a related research is conducted. This is something really important to understand by the internet marketers. If you want to get more web traffic, you need to search engine optimize the content of your web site. If you want to excell at search engine optimization, you can find a lot of ways to do so.

Search engine optimization means that you are trying to become a search engine favorite. For this purpose you must submit your web site to the search engines as well as to the web directories. You will also need to rearrange the content of your web site. Meta tags and keywords should be there in the content of your web site. You must make sure that first few sentences of the content are keyword rich. In this way whenever a related search will be conducted the search engine will find you and put you amongst the first ten web sites. In this way search engine optimization will result in high page ranking and as a result you will start getting more web traffic.

Do you want to learn more about how I do it? I have just completed my brand new guide to article writing success, 'Your Article Writing and Promotion Guide'

Download it free here: Secrets of Article Writing

Do you want to learn how to build a big online subscriber list fast? Click here: Secrets of List Building

-Sean Mize

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Cuil the Biggest Web Search Engine

A new search Engine is launched on 28 July, Yeah another one and its called Cuil. Cuil pronounced as 'cool' Cuil is an old Irish word whic means knowledge. But what so special about this? There is something about it which might make it a standout in the heap of other search engines.

1. Its developer (Its backbone):
Anna Patterson (President and Founder): Anna was the architect of Google's large search index, TeraGoogle, that launched in early 2006. While at Google, Anna was the technical lead of one of the two Web ranking groups at Google, in charge of GoogleBase, and the manager for the core piece of Google's ad-matching technology. She joined Google in 2004 after designing, writing and selling Recall-the largest search engine in existence at the time at 12 billion pages.

Tom Costell (CEO and Founder): Tom's pioneering work in search began in 1999 when he created Xift, a revolutionary search engine that introduced automatic clustering and page analysis. Tom later joined IBM where he developed the prototype of WebFountain. He was also a member of IBM's strategy team for Storage Systems Strategy worldwide and drove the development of the company's Homeland Security strategy.

2. Such a huge Database:
Yeah yeah its true Cuil boasts of indexing as much as 121,617,892,992 web pages which surely make it the world's biggest search engine. To be more effective how does it sound if I say that no of indexed pages are three times as many as Google and ten times as many as Microsoft.

3. No it does not watch you:
Cuil doesn't collect data about the surfer and his habits which will surely make some privacy watchdogs relax a bit.

4. In depth Search:
Rather than rely on superficial popularity metrics, Cuil searches for and ranks pages based on their content and relevance.When it find a page with desired keywords, it stay on that page and analyze the rest of its content, its concepts, their inter-relationships and the page's coherency now that's really cool (no pun intended.)

The source of this article is surely the website of Cuil (www.cuil.com) with some added information from my behalf so lets get out and search a little here and there and then see what the whole fuss is all about.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Sid_Dare

Monday, October 6, 2008

Cuil New Search Engine Launches



Cuil, pronounced "cool," has officially launched.

All the kool kids are talking about it. The question is whether anyone will use it.

As a new search engine, Cuil is a longshot. It's no Google Killer.

Check out Cuil.com. Google needs the competition. But don't expect a revolutionary search experience. The results page looks very much like Guy Kawasaki's Alltop.com.

Cuil was created by former Google engineers Anna Patterson, Russell Power and Louis Monier, who picked up $33 million in venture capital to launch the search engine.

So how is Cuil different than Google? They're claiming bragging rights for search index size: 120 billion Web pages. While Patterson says that's 3X the size of Google's index, most people acknowledge that size doesn't matter.

As Google's official blog notes, many pages not indexed either point to similar content or would diminish the quality of its search results in some other way. T

Of course, Cuil can't use PageRank to organize results. So Cuil apparently assesses the actual content of a page.

Cuil's results are most similar to universal search, displaying photos horizontally across the page. Sidebars can be clicked on to learn more about related topics.

In a nod to privacy, Cuil promises not to retain users' search histories or surfing patterns.

--Kevin Heisler