Saturday, November 5, 2011

Use Blogger to clean up your google look.

Dynamic Views: seven new ways to share your blog with the world As we said a few weeks ago when we launched a completely rebuilt, streamlined authoring and editing experience, we’re in the process of bringing you a much improved and modernized Blogger. The next phase of these updates starts today with seven new ways to display your blog, called Dynamic Views.

Built with the latest in web technology (AJAX, HTML5 and CSS3), Dynamic Views is a unique browsing experience that will inspire your readers to explore your blog in new ways. The interactive layouts make it easier for readers to enjoy and discover your posts, loading 40 percent faster than traditional templates and bringing older entries to the surface so they seem fresh again.

From the desk of Edward E. Cambas.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Very interesting information from the desk of Eddie Cambas.



Check out this video offered through the desk of Eddie Cambas.

How Google Works from Edward E. Cambas.

Helping People Find the Best Answers
We believe users come first. Search is about giving people the answers they’re looking for – whether it’s a news article, sports score, stock quote, a video or a map.

We believe in choice. When it comes to search, competition is always just a click away. We innovate rapidly to make sure people keep choosing Google, and in the end that’s great for consumers.

We believe in transparency. We strive to be as open as possible – whether it’s clearly labeling advertisements, or sharing best practices to help websites succeed.

We believe there is always room to improve. We understand that with success comes scrutiny, and we welcome ideas and suggestions on how we can do better.

Info directly from the Google website brought to you by Edward E. Cambas.

Control access to your website.

The noindex meta standard is described at http://www.robotstxt.org/meta.html. This method is useful if you don't have root access to your server, as it allows you to control access to your site on a page-by-page basis.

To prevent all robots from indexing a page on your site, place the following meta tag into the section of your page:


To allow other robots to index the page on your site, preventing only Google's robots from indexing the page:

When we see the noindex meta tag on a page, Google will completely drop the page from our search results, even if other pages link to it. Other search engines, however, may interpret this directive differently. As a result, a link to the page can still appear in their search results.

Note that because we have to crawl your page in order to see the noindex meta tag, there's a small chance that Googlebot won't see and respect the noindex meta tag. If your page is still appearing in results, it's probably because we haven't crawled your site since you added the tag. (Also, if you've used your robots.txt file to block this page, we won't be able to see the tag either.)

If the content is currently in our index, we will remove it after the next time we crawl it. To expedite removal, use the URL removal request tool in Google Webmaster Tools.

Info from google. Offered by Edward E. Cambas - Miami Florida.

Reuptation Defender: To Remove a page or site from the Google Search.

Reuptation Defender: To Remove a page or site from the Google Search.: Remove a page or site from Google's search results We run into a lot of people who think that Google runs the web and controls all the sites...

To Remove a page or site from the Google Search.

Remove a page or site from Google's search results We run into a lot of people who think that Google runs the web and controls all the sites on it, but that's really not the case. The sites in Google's search results are controlled by those sites' webmasters.

To remove content (including a snippet, title, page content, or an entire URL or site) from search results, the site owner—whether it's you or somebody else—has a few options. The site owner can remove the concerning information from the page, take the page down from the web entirely, or indicate that Google shouldn't crawl or index the page. There are varying requirements depending on the type of content you want to remove, and these are described below. Want to remove an image from search results? Check this out first.

After these changes are made and Google has crawled the site again, the content should naturally drop out of the Google index.

However, if you need to urgently remove your site's content from search results, or if you need to remove Google's cached copy of a page that has already changed on the website or stop Google from showing results for a page that has been taken down completely, you can use Google's removal tool to expedite the process.

Important! The URL removal tool is intended for pages that urgently need to be removed—for example, if they contain confidential data that was accidentally exposed. Using the tool for other purposes may cause problems for your site. Read more about when not to use the URL removal tool.

To use the tool, you'll need to follow certain requirements, detailed below.

Information provided directly from google and offered by Reputation Defender, Edward E. Cambas.