Question:

Writing for the Most Powerful Robot in the World

by Guest6280  |  12 years, 8 month(s) ago

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Google - Google is the most powerful information resource humans have ever constructed. The power of any major search tool boggles the mind but considering the vastness of Google's complex simplicity can truly hurt one's brain. With over 8-billion references in its rapidly growing, organically generated index, Google sets the standards other search engines follow. Benefiting from a three year reign as the undisputed leader of search, Google has had a very good year and looks poised to make 2005 an even better year.

In 2004, Google introduced more new and improved applications for its users than any other tech company, posted one of the most successful IPO's in business history in a most unorthodox Dutch-Auction format, and met or exceeded any challenges its rivals threw at.

 Tags: Powerful, robot, World, writing

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2 ANSWERS

  1. Brett
    Google is no longer just a search engine, it is an advertising machine. Drawing about 90% of its revenues from paid advertising and contextual ad-delivery, Google has had two major focuses this quarter. The first is increasing the number of places paid-advertising might show up. The second is to develop new products and features that will retain current user loyalty and win new users from the other search firms. Both initiatives rely heavily on Google's reputation for delivering fast, free and relevant search results. Google has the world's largest database of indexed websites and it acquires site information through its spider GoogleBot.

    GoogleBot is probably the most well-known spider working the web today. It is also likely among the most analyzed applications ever written. On one level, GoogleBot is quite simple and can be depended on to act in a very specific manner. GoogleBot lives to follow links. GoogleBot will often chase down a link-path until it can no longer work its way deeper into a site. It will also work its way through any site linked to from any other site. Google finds the majority of new sites in its index by following links from established sites. If a link exists, Google will (A) find it, (B) follow it, (C ) record every bit of information it can possibly record, and (D) weigh that information against a fairly rigid algorithm to determine the perceived topic or theme of a site for future reference. If a site in Google's index is modified or changes, Google will re-spider the site as quickly as it possibly can.

  2. Brett
    GoogleBot's mission is to create a snap-shot of the World Wide Web and store it across Google's network of data centers around the world. When you reference information from Google, the results you see reflect Google's most recent snap-shot of the web. Parts of that snap-shot might be hours or even weeks old but overall the index is updating itself every minute of every day, 24/7. The fastest way to see exactly what Google views as the most recent version of your site is to click on the "Cached" link generally below the main link-reference Google displays for your site.
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