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Posted on 09.30.07 by Widge @ 5:52 am
Technically, it's correct: you don't need a robots.txt for good SEO. However, it's not that simple. Part of the problems I was having on my sites was that the search engine bots weren't just crawling my site, they were freaking pounding it into a fine powder. Oh sure, if you've got a big enough server, you can afford to let them run all over you–but I'm doing this crap on a budget. If you're on a budget hosting service, or to put it another way, if you're using the cheapest hosting you feel you can get away with–you have to make sure you're not throwing away bandwidth or CPU cycles. Look at your access logs. Are you getting hammered every couple of seconds by Googlebot? Or the Yahoo bot? Or any bot for that matter? If you have a robots.txt, are the bots reading it and heeding it? It's one thing if you've got flat HTML pages for your site, but even with wp-cache running, Wordpress can bog down if a bot is allowed to run rampant. And if your site is slow or can't be crawled properly because the bots have bogged it down, then yeah, that can affect your SEO. Now you know. And knowing is half the battle. Filed under: Fun With SEO
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Posted on 08.01.07 by Widge @ 2:12 am
Well, this is frustrating. For those who don't know (and probably don't care, if you're not a webmaster), there is a secondary set of search results you can get from Google. It's called Supplemental Results. It might as well be called "The Results That Aren't As Good As The Real Results." Nobody but nobody wants to be in them. A couple of months ago, I noticed that a goodly number of Needcoffee's entries had wound up in the Supplemental Results. At first, it appeared that this was because we had a lot of duplicate content: tag pages, category pages, date pages–all with the same posts. All right, fair enough–I setup a robots.txt that kept the Googlebot from indexing pages that I didn't want, and kept single entries as indexable. However, stuff continues to slide into Supplemental Results. Right now I was toying with internal links to try and get things under control, but basically Google has effectively blinded me to how well I'm doing. The name of the article should have been more properly called "Supplemental Goes Stealth." This doesn't fix anything. In fact, it makes my job as a webmaster even more difficult. It would be one thing if there was a webmaster tool that said, "Hey, Widge, here's what's wrong with your page and why it slid into Supplemental Hell." Then I would go and fix it. However, now I not only don't know why this is happening I can't even see it happening any longer. So the problem has just gotten a lot worse. Google's solution to the problem is simply to make it impossible to see the problem. But the problem hasn't gone away. This, frankly, sucks. And this is me, Google enthusiast and defender, talking here. Why is Google doing this? I run AdSense on Needcoffee. Why would they make it harder for people to find pages on my site and thus harder to get at the ad revenue that I could potentially bring in? And this is not just my site–AdSense is all over the place, and this affects everybody's sites. It would be in Google's best interests, I would think, to provide us with the tools so we can make our sites work better with their search engine, so everybody wins. Again, I'm not one of this whiny assholes who thinks Google owes me this–they owe me jack crap. It's just hard to understand why they would respond to a problem by, instead of using their vaunted resources to throw at it, to make it look like it's gone away and hope nobody bitches. Somebody help me understand how this is a good idea. Filed under: Fun With SEO
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John Robinson is a writer of prose, poetry and comics who also writes under
the pseudonym of Widgett Walls.
This is my latest book. Short stories written especially for you, or at least someone who reminded me a lot of you at the time.