Browse: Home / Search results for "protocol"
By ArticleSnatch on November 4, 2008
While it is true that a few people can skip protocol and begin writing for large markets without writing credits, the ordinary person cannot. Be prepared, because every publication will want to know w… More: continued here why you should write for free
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By ArticleSnatch on December 27, 2007
| Tagged Fox Searchlight, google, Jamie Lynne Spears, John Lewis, laser, Public Sector Content Partnerships, Roman God, Rupert Murdoch, Search Engine, search engines, Senate, U.S. Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Co, youtube |
By ArticleSnatch on December 19, 2007
A few days ago SEW Blogger Deborah Richman wrote an article about how tough it was to find videos through the search engines. Yesterday Google announced it now offers Video Sitemaps. Coincidence maybe…. I tend to think they took our advice. The new product is “an extension of the Sitemap Protocol that helps make your [...]
| Tagged Deborah Richman, google, search engines, search options |
By ArticleSnatch on December 18, 2007
Google will make use of an extension to the Sitemaps protocol to do a better job of indexing the videos people publish. read more More: continued here google accepting video sitemaps
| Tagged google, Sitemaps protocol |
By ArticleSnatch on December 12, 2007
The numerous agencies of the federal government possess thousands of documents and pieces of information that can’t be found by Google’s crawlers.As the leading search engine, those who use Google in an attempt to find what they need probably won’t find it if it’s stuffed behind an online search form at an agency’s site. Today, [...]
| Tagged Administration for Children & Families, Center for Democracy & Technology, DHS, Federal Emergency Management Agency, federal government, google, main information portal, New York, online search form, search ad, search crawlers, Search Engine, search engines, search form, Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Commi, Sitemaps protocol, United States |
By ArticleSnatch on December 7, 2007
Publishers have come together to develop the Automated Content Access Protocol (ACAP), a technical standard intended to dictate to search engines what they can index and what they can’t. One problem, though, as more technical minds have noted, is that the standard isn’t quite technical enough. It’s technical deficiencies may stem from the protocol – [...]
| Tagged Associated Press, Association of American Publishers, computer technology, google, James Grimmelmann, New York Law School, online content, search engines, Tim Lee, universal permissions protocol |
By ArticleSnatch on December 4, 2007
Opening Keynote this afternoon: Don E. Schultz, Professor (Emeritus-in-Service), Integrated Marketing Communications, Northwestern University & President of Agora, Inc. Some quick hits from a conversation I had with the Don (not The Donald). If not yet the godfather of search marketing, he’s definitely our HL Mencken. Brilliant, funny, brutally honest. His quotes: audience food for [...]
| Tagged Agora Inc, audience food, cellular protocols, Don E. Schultz, five cellular protocols, Jack Welch, Janelle Landis, Northwestern University, Search destroyer, Search Engine, Search Engine Watch, search marketing, search model, social networks, United States |
By ArticleSnatch on December 4, 2007
Meet the Web Analytics Players: Vendors from major web analytics services each cover different metrics challenges plus answer questions about measuring success and their tools in general. Moderator: Frank Watson, Head Search Marketing, FXCM Speakers: Chris Knoch, Principal Consultant, Omniture, Inc, Thomas Grant, Director – Internet Marketing Solutions, Unica Corporation, Kristen Nomura, Sr. Account Manager, [...]
| Tagged AJAX, average retail, Chris Knoch, Director - Internet Marketing Solutions, Frank Watson, google, Internet applications, Kristen Nomura, Omniture Inc., online aspects, server protocol, similar media types, software version, Sr., Thomas Grant, Unica Corporation, USD, Web Analytics, Web Analytics Players, web analytics services |
By ArticleSnatch on October 31, 2007
Closing up parts of the BitTorrent protocol may have been a necessary business decision by Bram Cohen and company, but it’s motivated the people behind The Pirate Bay to start working on a new protocol to replace torrents.TorrentFreak frets that they would have to change their name should a new P2P protocol emerge, and supplant [...]
| Tagged BitTorrent protocol, file sharing, Microsoft, open protocol, P2P, P2P protocol, The Pirate Bay |
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