<b>PC Authority:</b> "From the Mars Climate Orbiter to overheating batteries and floating point errors, we look at the history of famous technical mistakes"
Let me explain. Let's say my keyword I want to optimize is "green giraffes". But the domain greengiraffes.com (singular, plural, no hyphen, hyphen, etc.) is not available. I know that the search results for "green giraffes" and "about green giraffes" are essentially the same because "about" is a "stop word". Does that therefore also mean that the domain name "aboutgreengiraffes.com" is as good as "greengiraffes.com" in terms of SEO value? Are all stop words equal in that regard, or a shorter one (such as "e" or "z") is better?
Tens of thousands of Arkansas National Guard soldiers became the latest victims of a security breach at a military base after an unencrypted external hard drive was discovered missing last month.
<b>Jamie's Random Musings:</b> "...Skype-to-Skype calls will "always be free". Well, it turns out that promise is worth exactly as much as any other promise Skype has ever made, or will ever make for that matter. A big, fat nothing."
<b>Groklaw:</b> "Today, SCO rested its case, such as it is. I can't believe they were eager to go to court with just this. I haven't seen any evidence that they own the copyrights. Just memories through the mists of time that some folks thought they were supposed to get them."
I used to test my site on www.exampleone.com and now I have moved to the real domain www.realdomain.com now and www.exampleone.com is now parked by 1and1 (default). Now when I test to see which requests are made by the www.realdomain.comI see domainpark.cgi and park.js from Sedo Parking also being requested as well as the js that serves the ads by adclicks. How do I get rid of this?
It's not on the index page at all, and it's causing a lot of strain and slowing my site down.
IT security organizations are spending too much on data protection for compliance but not enough on securing key trade secrets, the real crown jewels of corporate data.
<b>Yahoo News:</b> "Crashing machines, slow boot times, and agony dealing with technical support have Digital Age people suffering from Computer Stress Syndrome, a study available online Tuesday found."
<b>Linux Planet:</b> "The world of Linux applications continues to expand and improve, so check out Eric Geier's roundup of ten great Linux applications you might not have discovered yet: media players, Web page designer, video creation, run Linux on Windows, Windows apps on Linux, and more."
Possible Duplicate:
Does Google Analytics data affect SEO?
We have two subdomains, one for our blog and one for our ecommerce store. The blog serves to bring traffic and the store is how we monetize the site. We have them designed to appear as one large site, but I know google sees them as two sites. Here is how the subdomains look:
www.example.com (store)
blog.example.com (blog)
I believe I can configure analytics to use subdomain tracking as explained here:
http://support.google.com/googleanalytics/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=55524
But my question is whether this will cause google to see our 2 subdomains as one larger domain for SEO purposes. In other words, is there any relationship to how you configure google analytics and how google indexes and ranks your website(s) and pages? Is there anything I need to do in anaytics or webmaster tools to make google aware that these two subdomains work together as one website?
Thanks!
Sam
I have set up an Abyss web server as a little experiment, and I want to know if it is possible to assign subdomains to different ports on the machine the web server is running on.
I have a couple webUIs that I'd like to assign subdomains:
192.168.1.1:8000 becomes example.com/webui1/
192.168.1.1:8001 becomes example.com/webui2/
The webUIs are available by accessing their ports via example.com:8000.
I have tried using a reverse proxy, but it seems that this is only usable on one internal IP at a time.
What other options do I have?
Unified communications is an essential small business technology that tames the wide range of office and mobile devices we use to conduct business every day. Our UC expert explains how it all works.
Unified communications is an essential small business technology that tames the wide range of office and mobile devices we use to conduct business every day. Our UC expert explains how it all works.
With a distinguished pedigree and an open source foundation, RiverMuse is looking to bring your legacy NMS into the 21st century with advanced reporting and sophisticated alerts.
<b>The VAR Guy:</b> "While Red Hat, Novell, Canonical and other Linux distribution providers continue to gain momentum, most of the Linux chatter has very little to do with small business success. Consider the facts:"
Finding a good domain name isn’t easy, but Andrew Lock shares tips on how to do it. Plus, free video conversion software and small business marketing ideas from the Celebrity Apprentice.
Finding a good domain name isn’t easy, but Andrew Lock shares tips on how to do it. Plus, free video conversion software and small business marketing ideas from the Celebrity Apprentice.
<b>Serverwatch:</b> "A straightforward but very useful idea, Corntab is a dynamic visual crontab generator for Unix and Linux servers produced by David Knell."