Post Tagged with: "google algorithms"

Video: Major Updates to Curation Profits Elearning Course

Video: Major Updates to Curation Profits Elearning Course

0 / March 13, 2012 11:52 am

This Is Decidedly and Advanced Course! Still Interested? Join the Community. The Quora Extractor software is designed to help you more quickly understand the pains and problems within a given market in order to answer the pains with “interesting but incomplete” content that will create customers for life . . .

Update: Google Mayday Long Tail Algorithm Bomb

Update: Google Mayday Long Tail Algorithm Bomb

0 / June 11, 2010 8:58 pm

Some of you may recall in May when it was confirmed that Google was creating a “ranking change” (not a crawler change) in their algorithm that seemed to threaten one-hit-wonders and other low hanging fruit long tail keywords.

Google Caffeine is Live at the First Data Center

Google Caffeine is Live at the First Data Center

2 / November 15, 2009 8:25 am

The extreme examples of undesirable sites are the spammy, duplicate content, cheap bot created marketing nightmares. With any luck, Google will figure out a way to get these kinds of sites de-indexed entirely. However, the folks who run these kinds of sites are always inventing new ways to trick the search engines. It’s this, as much as anything, that causes Google to have to constantly tweak their algorithms to defeat the latest black hat tricks.

Missed Opportunity #11: Keeping Up With Unpredictable Algorithms and Changing Technology

Missed Opportunity #11: Keeping Up With Unpredictable Algorithms and Changing Technology

0 / April 27, 2009 9:40 pm

Larry Page: A lot of our systems already use learning techniques. The ultimate search engine would understand everything in the world. It would understand everything that you asked it and give you back the exact right thing instantly. You could ask ‘what should I ask Larry?’ and it would tell you. Technology has a tendency to change faster than expected, and I believe that AI could be a reality in just a few years. People always make the assumption that we’re done with search. That’s very far from the case. We’re probably only 5 percent of the way there. We want to create the ultimate search engine that can understand anything … some people could call that artificial intelligence.”