• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

Microsoft Damned, AtW Praised

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #31
    Majestic 12(www.majestic12.co.uk/bot.php) appears in the stats for my website as one of the 'referrers'. Surprisingly my website gets more referals from thickmom.com though (DO NOT VISIT THAT SITE AT WORK, MILFS AND LARGE RACKS DISPLAYED), and have no idea why. I wonder if sites ping other sites for advertising reasons? I've looked on that site (well someone had to do it ) to see if a link to my website exists but it doesn't and see no reason why it would - just large racks are shown
    Last edited by SuperZ; 21 January 2010, 20:22.

    Comment


      #32
      Originally posted by Bunk View Post
      Originally posted by Sysman View Post
      Nick,

      What determines whether a site can be searched via the "site:sitename" construct? I ask because some sites don't give any results.
      I'm not the chimp, and he may be along soon to correct me, but as far as I know any site can be searched using site:sitename. If you're not getting any results then it's probably because Google haven't indexed the pages for some reason. Maybe they're hidden behind a form, maybe Google is blocked in the robots file (not sure why they would do that). Do the pages appear in normal search results without specifying the site?
      WHS

      At one place I worked they had a site they'd done for a client which simply didn't show up in Google. The site had a Flash intro (I hate those things, but the client loved it ). Upon investigation, I found that my illustrious predecessor hadn't included a "Skip this" link in the HTML - well, he had, but for some reason it was commented out. I enabled the link and, within a couple of days, the client started appearing as expected in relevant searches.

      So, if the site has a splash page, make sure there's a link to the actual content in the HTML. Otherwise the bots have nowhere to go when they hit that domain, and if there are no external links to the inner pages, they'll never find the rest of the site.

      Comment


        #33
        Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
        if there are no external links to the inner pages, they'll never find the rest of the site.
        WTCS

        Comment


          #34
          Originally posted by SuperZ View Post
          Majestic 12(www.majestic12.co.uk/bot.php) appears in the stats for my website as one of the 'referrers'. Surprisingly my website gets more referals from thickmom.com though (DO NOT VISIT THAT SITE AT WORK, MILFS AND LARGE RACKS DISPLAYED), and have no idea why. I wonder if sites ping other sites for advertising reasons? I've looked on that site (well someone had to do it ) to see if a link to my website exists but it doesn't and see no reason why it would - just large racks are shown
          Google Webmaster Tools will allow you to find inbound links. If you have a Google account for GMail or some such you can log in with that, associate the domain with your account, put a file with the provided name in the root of the site to verify your ownership, and then you'll have access to all kinds of useful information about how Google sees your site. (The file isn't a script or anything - there just has to be a file with the name provided to prove you have control of the content on that site.)

          Also, check to see if there's a specific file or files that the referring requests are hitting: referrer headers (strictly speaking "referer" because TBL can't spell) are sent for any request originating from a page, not just when somebody follows a link. It could be that somebody has deep-linked to an image file or a script file (even some people who should know better are too lazy to simply put a copy of a script on their own server). If so, you can prevent them wasting your bandwidth by renaming the relevant file and leaving it to 404 for the leecher.

          A friend of mine who runs a photography site often gets people deep-linking to images on his site from eBay listings. His usual practice is to change his site to use a renamed copy of the original, then replace the original with an image saying "Item withdrawn from sale" in big red letters

          Comment

          Working...
          X