Tag Archives: google

我们要和google说再见?

大概2天前,在ljf和winzheng上就有不少人说他们google.com登录不了了,只能登录google.cn。
而有更多的人,反驳说没有问题。当时以为,可能是网络调整或者dns的问题。
然后今天,我也不能访问google.com了。。也是只能登录google.cn。。。
不久前在网上讨论的沸沸扬扬的google向zf屈服,现在难道是这个结果吗?
我们真的要向google说再见?

google备案居然是作弊?

前几天我写过一篇文章说google居然也备案了。昨天无聊的时候,随便点了下。。
google总是与众不同的。。。。。。。。
 
2006-02-05_10-39-39.jpg 2006-02-05_10-44-42.jpg
 
看了上面2张图片,就应该知道google使用的是别人的备案了:)
而下面的,第一张是国内模仿google而备的案。最下面一张,就是google.com的备案了。而cn的备案。似乎的确没有。。。
2006-02-05_10-40-20.jpg 2006-02-05_10-42-05.jpg 

Googlify your Movable Type Blog

With the recent release of the new version of Google’s toolbar for Internet Explorer on Windows, it’s now possible to make your own custom buttons for the popular browser extension. Once installed, the button gives you easy access to your most recent entries and provides you with a simple way to search your site for a word or phrase you highlight on any web page.
 
In addition to just being a cool feature for your own personal use, by providing it to your visitors, it’s also a great vehicle for promoting and increasing traffic to your Movable Type-powered blog.
 
Creating a Google Toolbar button for your site
So how do you do it? Easy. You can just make use of the template that Niall Kennedy created, which uses the power of Movable Type’s publishing engine to automatically generate the code for the button.
 
First, create a new index template. You might want to name it "Google Toolbar Button" and then set the Output File to toolbar_button.xml. Then, copy the following text and paste it in as the body of the template.
 
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<custombuttons xmlns="http://toolbar.google.com/custombuttons/">
  <button>
    <title><$MTBlogName remove_html="1" encode_xml="1"$></title>
    <description><$MTBlogDescription remove_html="1" encode_xml="1"$></description>
    <site><$MTBlogURL$></site>
    <search><$MTCGIPath$><$MTSearchScript$>?search={query}&IncludeBlogs=<$MTBlogID$></search>
    <send><$MTCGIPath$><$MTSearchScript$>?search={selection}&IncludeBlogs=<$MTBlogID$></send>
    <feed refresh-interval="3600"><$MTBlogURL$>atom.xml</feed>
     <icon mode="base64" type="image/x-icon">AAABAAEAEBAAAAAAAABoBQAAFgAAACgAAAAQAAAAIAAAAAEACAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA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</icon>
  </button>
</custombuttons>

Save the template, rebuild it (if necessary), and your new button code should be all set. By default, your output should look something like this. Then, your last step is to make a simple link to your new file. That should look like:

 <a href="http://toolbar.google.com/buttons/add?url=[your blog URL]toolbar_button.xml">Add to Google Toolbar</a>

The results will give you a link that says Add to Google Toolbar. So what are you waiting for? Click the button! Then you’ll have a new toolbar button updating you on the latest Movable Type news, along with a new search function that lets you have direct access to the Movable Type knowledge base and help documentation. Then be sure to post your own button link on your blog.

Still not appeased the Googlebot enough? Be sure to check out Niall’s Sitemap instructions, which let you simply and easily make a Google Sitemap XML file, which lets you instruct Google’s spiders on how to crawl your site, while letting you as the site owner have access to more statistics and information about your site.

If you want to make your site as reader-friendly (and Google-friendly) as possible, it’s easy to start with Movable Type today and you’ll be button-making, sitemapping and blogging in no time.

 

 

ubuntu居然是google的?

看到这么一条新闻,吃惊阿
 
Google is preparing its own distribution of Linux for the desktop, in a possible bid to take on Microsoft in its core business – desktop software.
 
A version of the increasingly popular Ubuntu desktop Linux distribution, based on Debian and the Gnome desktop, it is known internally as ‘Goobuntu’.
 
Google has confirmed it is working on a desktop linux project called Goobuntu, but declined to supply further details, including what the project is for.
 
It’s possible that it’s just one of the toys Googleplex engineers play with on Fridays, when they get time off from buffing the search engine code or filtering out entries about Tiananmen Square.
 
It could be for wider deployments on the company’s own desktops, as an alternative to Microsoft, but still for internal use only.
 
But it’s possible Google plans to distribute it to the general public, as a free alternative to Windows.
 
Google has already demonstrated an interest in building a presence on the desktop. At CES Las Vegas this month, it announced the Google Pack, a collection of desktop software bundled together for easy downloading.
 
The pack includes many apps which compete directly with the Windows bundle, such as Google Talk, Google Desktop, Mozilla Firefox, the Trillian instant messenger client, RealPlayer, and Picasa photo management.
 
Going the whole hog and distributing a complete desktop software suite would merely be another step down the same path.
 
However, entering the desktop software world would be a huge step. Making Goobuntu as easy to use as XP will require a lot more development. It’s unlikely to be ready for showtime any time soon, and it’s possible Google itself hasn’t finalised where the project should go.
 
Whatever Google’s intentions, the input of Google engineers and developers, writing new features and fixing bugs, will be a huge boost to the Ubuntu project.
 
Ubuntu, funded by the South African internet multimillionaire and occasional cosmonaut Mark Shuttleworth, is already emerging as a leader in the desktop Linux world.
 
It has built considerable momentum in the Linux community, and is starting to appear more widely. Shuttleworth is seeking to persuade white-box PC manufacturers to start shipping machines with Ubuntu preinstalled.
 
It is top of the Distrowatch download chart, is installed on up to six million computers, and doubling every eight months, according to estimates from Shuttleworth’s company, Canonical.
 
It has spawned a number of different offshoots, including Xubuntu, Kubuntu and Edubuntu (for schools).
 
The word Ubuntu means "humanity to others" in several African languages, including Zulu and Xhosa. It’s one of the founding principles of post-apartheid South Africa. The origin of the word ‘Goobuntu’ is not clear, though it does not appear in online Zulu dictionaries.
 
The Goobuntu.com domain has been registered in the past couple of days, though presumably not by Google. It now redirects to a Cuban portal. Perhaps Google will have to think of a new name for the system before they launch it to the wider public. ®

google与baidu搜索的分析

这个域名已经使用了大概3个月了。文章有了253篇了。
使用mt,也是为了生成静态,便于搜索引擎查找。现在看看效果:
 
google:可以搜索到384篇。平均1天扫描站点2-3次
baidu:可以搜索到8380篇,每小时扫描2次
但还有一个Inktomi Slurp的搜索引擎,扫描次数也是不低,仅仅次于baidu。但我不知道是从何而来
 
 
2006-01-31_11-27-15.jpg
 
 
再看看搜索后的结果:
对于google,搜索到的排名靠前的,都是分类或者日期的归档,几乎所有的单篇归档或者文章,都被忽略。
而对于baidu,几乎所有的归档都可以搜索到。且排序上不能很严格的看出是单篇归档,还是分类等。
 
然后对比车东的blog,却可以在google上得到比baidu多的多得结果。
 
再来看网站的来自于搜索引擎的页面:
可以看到,baidu对比google,已经是10倍的关系了。这个也是和收录的网页数目有关。

2006-01-31_11-38-37.jpg

 
所以分析来,主要有以下几点原因吧:
 
1、google的扫描似乎会判断文件日期。而对于mt,每次修改模版,都会重建所有页面,导致了google中认为你的网站不稳定,而google对于经常变动的文章不会收录。而baidu似乎则相对宽松。几乎我发布的文章,第二天就会出现。
 
2、google对于一个页面的判断,还是偏重于<h1></h1>标签。google认为,一个页面的标题,或者主要内容,主要是有<h1>中的内容决定,而不是考虑<title></title>。这样就导致对于mt的一个问题。mt所有页面在默认模版中,都是使用<h1>来标定blog的名字。也就是说,我所有的页面的这一部分信息,都是meteor’s blog。对于google来说,这就是类似页面,或者说是相同页面,也就会在搜索结果中忽略,不被收录。而baidu则要好得多,采用<title>来重点判断我的页面信息。以<title>来进行收录。
 
所以来说,mt对于google来说,优势主要在于,使用静态页面,便于搜索。而且目录结构合理,最多2级,符合google的习惯。而缺点也很明显,默认的<h1>内容不适合google的搜索,导致重复结果太多。
 
由此可见,如果想要得到更好的收录,需要重新来订制下网页结构。
下一步要做的,就是重新修改模版。使得blog的题目在<h1>中出现。并且减少模版修改次数,使得生成的页面可以保持长时间不用重建。
 

google终于也备案了

下面2张图,都是google的。不同的是,一个是.com,而另外一个是.cn。
可以看到,2个界面类似,但细节上差异很大。而新的google.cn下面,也出现了备案的标志。google终于对中国屈服了。
据说新版的google中国马上就上台了。是不是就是cn的样子?我们等着看吧
 
 
2006-01-28_07-54-40.jpg 2006-01-28_07-54-48.jpg