Home » 2006 » Page 2

November 30, 2006

Search on the Go with Live Search for Mobile Beta

What?s on your wish list this holiday season? Wish you could find the closest toy store when you?re on the go? The nearest coffee shop on a cold winter day? Get news reports or traffic information on the move? Windows Live has granted those wishes and more: we?re proud to announce three new ways to search on the go:

Mobile Software ? Download an application to your phone for local search, maps, driving directions, and live traffic information in a faster, richer and more interactive user interface. It's the best way to search from your phone.

LSMb1LSMb2LSMb3LSMb4

 

Mobile Browsing - Access maps and directions directly on your phone?s browser. Simply enter mobile.live.com/search into your phone?s address bar and select Map. Choose from the scopes of Local, Web, Map, News and Spaces and get Live Search from your mobile device.

Text Messages (SMS) - If you don?t have a data plan, you can simply send a text message to 95483 (WLIVE) with a query like ?Toys Chicago, IL? or ?Coffee 90210? and you?ll immediately receive a text message reply with the nearest business listings with address and phone numbers.

We?d love to hear your thoughts on this beta so we can continue to improve. Just send them over to wlsmbeta@microsoft.com and, check out mobile.search.live.com for more information.

And just maybe these will help you find your way to everything on your wish list this season ;)

-Darwin and the Mobile Search Team

Filed under Live Search by msnsearch

Permalink Print

November 29, 2006

Search robots in disguise

There are plenty of bots out there and, as a result, some conventions have arisen.  Well-behaved bots identify themselves with a unique user-agent.  They also follow the robots.txt conventions, which allow webmasters to control how their sites are crawled.

 

Here at Live Search, our crawlers are identified by the user-agent ?MSNBot?.  This may seem a little non-intuitive, but many webmasters depend on this, and so we chosen not to change it.  In order to make things a little more transparent, we also identify our different types of crawlers.  The complete list is as follows:

 

                MSNBot                                        Main web crawler (www.live.com)

                MSNBot-Media                               Images & all other media (images.live.com)

                MSNBot-NewsBlogs                         News and blogs (search.live.com/news)

                MSNBot-Products                           Products & shopping (products.live.com)

                MSNBot-Academic                          Academic search (academic.live.com)

 

But what about crawlers that aren?t so well-behaved?  After all, anyone could call themselves ?MSNBot?, and proceed to be as rude and aggressive as they like.  Fortunately, there is a way you can catch these impersonators. Here is how it works:

 

  1. When you get a page view request, it specifies a user-agent and an IP address.  As I described above, all requests from Live Search use a user agent starting with the word ?MSNBot?.
  2. If you see the MSNBot user-agent, it?s time to check the identity of the bot.  Starting with the IP address (i.e. 207.46.98.149), you can use reverse DNS lookup to find out the registered name of the machine.
  3. Once you have the host name (in this case, livebot-207-46-98-149.search.live.com), you can check that it really is coming from Live Search.  The name of all live search crawlers will end with ?search.live.com?.  If the name doesn?t end with ?search.live.com?, you know it?s not really our crawler.
  4. Finally, you need to verify that the name is accurate.  In order to do this, you can use Forward DNS to see the IP address associated with the host name.  This should match the IP address you used in Step 2 ? if it doesn?t, it means the name was fake.

 

By verifying the crawler?s identity, you can catch masquerading crawlers.  When you do catch one, you can simply return an HTTP Error, thus blocking them from seeing your content.

 

We are constantly looking for your feedback to help improve our engine ? please send it our way using this link.

 

Brent Hands, Program Manager, Live Search

Filed under Live Search by msnsearch

Permalink Print

November 28, 2006

Find the very best keywords for your web site with new powerful SEO tools

Finding the right keywords is an important step that you should take seriously if you want to be successful with your web site. New SEO tools help you to find the best keywords for your site.

Filed under SEO by Free Weekly Search Engine Optimization SEO News

Permalink Print

November 21, 2006

Google, Yahoo and Microsoft team up for Sitemaps protocol

Last week, Google, Yahoo and Microsoft agreed to support the Sitemap 0.9 protocol. How can this new standard help you to improve the ranking of your web site in search engines?

Filed under SEO by Free Weekly Search Engine Optimization SEO News

Permalink Print

November 14, 2006

Official Google statement: Can links to other web sites hurt your rankings?

Linking to other web sites can hurt your rankings if you link to the wrong web sites. A Google official has recently commented on bad neighborhood links and how they affect your web site rankings on Google.

Filed under SEO by Free Weekly Search Engine Optimization SEO News

Permalink Print

November 7, 2006

Google’s new way to deal with dynamically created pages

Dynamically created web pages often cause problems with search engines. If your web pages are dynamically created, it's likely that many search engines have difficulty to index them. Google has a new way to deal with these pages.

Filed under SEO by Free Weekly Search Engine Optimization SEO News

Permalink Print
All trademarks and copyrights owned by their respective owners and are used for illustration only
Kokopelli Creative Web Design
SEOverboard | Site Marketing USA
Made with WordPress and an easy to use WordPress theme • Bankers Hours Plum skin by TC for Myrna