February 12th, 2009
| Posted in
Google
If you have a web page on the internet/blog post etc and you delete it, it can still be found as a cached page in Google. Does this stay there forever, or is the cached page updated the next time the Google bot does a crawl? In other words, in a few months or so will you be unable to find the deleted post through a Google search? (also, is it the same with other search engines?)
Thanks in advance for your replies!
Paris
February 12th, 2009
| Posted in
Search Engine Optimization
What is the easiest way to get the word out about a new site that doesn’t involve search engines/bookmarking?
Rosalina
February 10th, 2009
| Posted in
Search Engine Optimization
How can a website land in the top ten of search engines like Yahoo Search or Google without having to advertise. Is there like a company who provides this kind of service placing a business website in the top ten when their main product is searched. Can someone help me please.
Kary
February 10th, 2009
| Posted in
Other - Advertising & Marketing
What do you like or dislike about the search engines of: Google, MSN, Yahoo, Answer.com, Alexa.com and Overture? This might include their sections of- Images, Directory, Video, News, Maps and so on. What one thing or more would you like to see added to a search engine? In other words what one thing would draw you to a new search engine and keep you as a visitor?
Lilli
February 9th, 2009
| Posted in
Google
How often will search engines take to update themselves with new products from my online store and how often do they update?
* How often will search engines update with new content from my website when I update my website such as adding new products after my website is allready added to the search engine? *
Temple
February 8th, 2009
| Posted in
Search Engine Optimization
I created a blog and I want to submit it into the search engines. I have the domain ready but how can I get it into the page rankings?
Coralee
February 7th, 2009
| Posted in
Google
My example was that I punched in the name of a book by an Armenian-American author who teaches at Colgate but instead of Amazon being the first in line to come up it was 3rd while a small Turkish sponsored website which refutes the genocide came up 1st. I am this question for no other reason than to understand how these search engines come up with their results as the results disturb me.
Jeffrey
February 7th, 2009
| Posted in
Other - Internet
How often do search engines scan the internet for information and update what they’ve got?
No, I meant that how often does the search engine catalogue and update what’s online. So if I search for something today - let’s say “hungry gorillas” and it turns up 10 results and 3 of those websites are then deleted today, they’ll still show up on my search in a few days - how long will it take the search engine to figure out that those 3 websites are no longer online?
Maura