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  • Quicker Loading of Your Website Ensures Improved SE Rankings

    Now that Google has released news regarding the inclusion of website's speed as one of the factors responsible for website search engine ranking, it is obvious that most website owners would get want delve into matter, a bit more deep. According to the statement, it is clear that the websites having lower loading speed would have less probability of making their way to the search engine result pages than those that load up faster.

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  • SEO Tips For Bloggers

    You will learn how to optimize your blog for popular Search Engines like Google and Yahoo in this article. You will also pick up what are the important areas to look out for when optimizing your blog.

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  • Windows Phone 7 : des actionnaires de Nokia s'opposent à la décision de son PDG, ils réclament sa démission et un retour à MeeGo

    Windows Phone 7 : des actionnaires de Nokia s'opposent à la décision de son PDG Réclament sa démission et un retour à MeeGo, puis se rétractent faute de soutien Mise à jour du 16/02/2011 par Idelways Si la décision d'adopter Windows Phone 7 sur les futurs smartphones de Nokia a de quoi fâcher Google, on s'attendait moins à ce qu'elle déplaise autant à certains actionnaires et employés de Nokia. C'est pourtant ce qui arrive...

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  • SEO Expert Question

    - by CheatSEO
    I have worked with a website in the past freedomist.com This site gathers wordpress articles from multiple news source sites, and then republishes them. The company that runs this site has about 50 other sites that do the same thing. They post links to sites such as twitter and secondary wordpress sites. Is this a moral way of increasing page ranking? Is this against the terms of service with lets say Google?

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  • Apple driving Adobe into Android's arms?

    <b>Linux Devices:</b> "Earlier this month, an Adobe employee told Apple to go screw itself over its new restrictive developer policies for the iPhone 4.0. Now, Adobe says, it's moving on, officially focusing its Flash technology on Google's Android and other competing smartphone platforms."

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  • Android serait un cauchemar pour les designers, la haute flexibilité de la plateforme remise en cause par un expert

    Android serait un cauchemar pour les designers La haute flexibilité de la plateforme remise en cause par un expertÀ chacun son Android. Dave Feldman est un « Product Designer » avec un solide background dans le domaine de l'amélioration de l'expérience utilisateur. Pour cet expert, la haute flexibilité de la plateforme mobile de Google qui la rend attrayante est la pire des choses qui puisse être en termes de « Design ».Pour étayer son point de vue, l'expert articule sa démonstration sur trois...

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  • SEO Secrets an SEO Specialist Won't Want You to Know About

    The market place for self claimed 'SEO secrets' is littered with shoddy SEO specialists and cowboys trying to push the common information available to anyone with a computer, internet connection, and a search engine. Here's the breaking news people - there is no secret email that Google sends out to these SEO specialists, and they don't keep a stack of top secret documents back just for the lucky few. It just doesn't work like that.

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  • SEO and Article Writing

    As an online entrepreneur, it is very significant that you know how to work together with Google and other main search engines. You would wish to be in a position to get these engines to rank your articles and your site higher.

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  • Swift and predictable reactions to WebM

    <b>LWN.net: </b>"Google unveiled something that many in the open source community had been expecting (and which the Free Software Foundation asked for in March): it made the VP8 video codec available to the public under a royalty-free, open source BSD-style license."

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  • What is lightweight lock in distributed shared memory systems?

    - by Kutluhan Metin
    I started reading Tanenbaum's Distributed Systems book a while ago. I read about two phase locking and timestamp reordering in transactions chapter. While having a deeper look from google I heard of lightweight transactions/lightweight transactional memory. But I couldn't find any good explanation and implementation. So what is lightweight memory? What are the benefits of lightweight locks? And how can I implement them?

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  • How Do External Links Help SEO?

    Starting at the beginning because without search engines there would be no optimisation. Google was founded by two Stanford University students in 1996 as part of a doctoral research project by Larry Page and Sergey Brin.

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  • Upgraded from 10.04 to 12.04, how can I make Thunderbird marks the indicators envelope blue?

    - by josvazg
    Upgraded from 10.04 to 12.04 now I don't have notifications on incoming email to Thunderbird on the indicator bar, neither when thunderbird is running nor when it's not. None of the other similar questions answers have helped me. Still no blue envelope. I DO get a notification when the email comes as a temporary OSD, ut the envelope in the indicators menu does not get blue and there is no line for received email under "Mail" althougth it is working for Google Mail.

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  • Include latest searches in search engines index

    - by drcelus
    My websites generally include a page with the (user input) latest searches. I know it's not a good security practice to allow this since you can find undesired content. On the other hand it boosts the number of pages indexed since every new search can provide a link on google and people can find you with related keywords that you are not using on your web page. What is the rationale behinf including or excludingthis results in search engines index ?

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  • Off-Page SEO - Is Backlinking a Sensible Pursuit?

    To qualify what I mentioned in the last article about backlinking and why to me it seems rather a silly way to assess a website's popularity. For us in the know - us internet marketers, of which there are perhaps a million around the globe, who knows, maybe more for us, we know full well that to get our own sites to rank highly in Google and in Yahoo and Bing, we need to get backlinks and we need to get quite a few.

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  • The Job of SEO Spiders

    The World Wide Web, also known as the Internet, is a very complex world. Search engines like Google need a software program that can read what's on the web. The said software program is known as bot or spider or crawler.

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  • Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) officially released

    - by Bill Osuch
    Google today officially released their latest version of the Android OS - 2.3, Gingerbread. It won't hit a phone (the Nexus S) until 12/16, but developers can start working with it today. Some of the new features include: Enhancements for game development Rich multimedia New forms of communication Simplified debug builds Integrated ProGuard support HierarchyViewer improvements Preview of new UI Builder See the complete details at http://developer.android.com/sdk/android-2.3.html

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  • JSP Model 2 Architecture and Dependency Injection

    - by Robert
    If I'm writing a web application that uses the model 2 architecture, is it possible to use the Google Guice framework (or really any IoC container)? The reason I ask this question is because everything I've researched about DI, IoC, et cetera always uses Spring, Hibernate or some other framework/container in their examples. I'm just using Java classes, controllers, and JSP's to build this application and I can't find any good documentation about the subject.

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  • Why I lose my page rank after 301 redirect?

    - by rajesh.magar
    As we all know Google treats sub-domains as completely separate domains so we have to fight for both, to get ranked in search results. One of my client website was like they having example.com and blog.example.com. So in mind to keep all stuff in one place we redirect blog.example.com to example.com/blog/ But in this case we lost our pagerank and are still wondering where we went wrong or it just takes few more time to showoff. So what is the reason behind this?

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  • certificate for website login

    - by Mario
    Not sure if this belongs here or at serverfault... I've seen websites where, to login to the website, requires a digital certificate to be installed for the user logging in. As far as I can tell, this certificate is in addition to the website using an SSL certificate (https) I'm just looking to be pointed in the right direction on how to code for this (apache / php hopefully), who issues these certificates (must it be a trusted var or can I ?) or even what to search for via google. -Mario

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  • Protobuf design patterns

    - by Monster Truck
    I am evaluating Google Protocol Buffers for a Java based service (but am expecting language agnostic patterns). I have two questions: The first is a broad general question: What patterns are we seeing people use? Said patterns being related to class organization (e.g., messages per .proto file, packaging, and distribution) and message definition (e.g., repeated fields vs. repeated encapsulated fields*) etc. There is very little information of this sort on the Google Protobuf Help pages and public blogs while there is a ton of information for established protocols such as XML. I also have specific questions over the following two different patterns: Represent messages in .proto files, package them as a separate jar, and ship it to target consumers of the service --which is basically the default approach I guess. Do the same but also include hand crafted wrappers (not sub-classes!) around each message that implement a contract supporting at least these two methods (T is the wrapper class, V is the message class (using generics but simplified syntax for brevity): public V toProtobufMessage() { V.Builder builder = V.newBuilder(); for (Item item : getItemList()) { builder.addItem(item); } return builder.setAmountPayable(getAmountPayable()). setShippingAddress(getShippingAddress()). build(); } public static T fromProtobufMessage(V message_) { return new T(message_.getShippingAddress(), message_.getItemList(), message_.getAmountPayable()); } One advantage I see with (2) is that I can hide away the complexities introduced by V.newBuilder().addField().build() and add some meaningful methods such as isOpenForTrade() or isAddressInFreeDeliveryZone() etc. in my wrappers. The second advantage I see with (2) is that my clients deal with immutable objects (something I can enforce in the wrapper class). One disadvantage I see with (2) is that I duplicate code and have to sync up my wrapper classes with .proto files. Does anyone have better techniques or further critiques on any of the two approaches? *By encapsulating a repeated field I mean messages such as this one: message ItemList { repeated item = 1; } message CustomerInvoice { required ShippingAddress address = 1; required ItemList = 2; required double amountPayable = 3; } instead of messages such as this one: message CustomerInvoice { required ShippingAddress address = 1; repeated Item item = 2; required double amountPayable = 3; } I like the latter but am happy to hear arguments against it.

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