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  • SEO Content - The On-Going Rates and the Amount That You Should Pay

    SEO content is a very important aspect of online marketing these days and while you can get it written from professional writers you must be careful of the price that you pay for them. There are various types and categories of SEO content written these days and hence the price classification should also differ. SEO articles: There are generally articles that are written to be a part of the article section on a website or for submission to article directories.

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  • Search Engine Optimisation - Content

    This is the text element on your web pages. It needs to be of good quality and of benefit to the reader. Just having any old content will not get you rewarded by Google et al - they do recognise good quality content - as they do not want to send searchers to sites that are under par.

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  • Online Content Distribution is a Valuable SEO Tool

    Online content distribution is quite possibly one of the best and easiest ways to boost your search engine rankings if done properly. It is quite common however to overlook the importance this strategy can play in our optimization efforts. Read on to see 5 ways in which using content can boost your SEO efforts leading to even more exposure and traffic.

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  • How long is the penalty for Duplicate ecommerce content after it has been ressurected

    - by will
    I am fixing all of the duplicate content on my ecommerce site with all orignal descriptions etc. How long does it take google to start ranking it again? I used to have a good ranking that converted quite a few sales, in the last week i have had next to nothing. Also would the disclaimer i created under each product be considered duplicate content because it is on most of my product pages & is the same.

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  • 5 Tips to Ensure That Your SEO Web Content Increases Conversions

    A lot of people treat SEO content as the means of driving traffic online which is absolutely true however that is not all that you want. An honest assessment would help you understand that the purpose of the web content is not only to attract traffic but also help you ensure that you can convert the prospects into customers.

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  • Announcing EBS R12 Application Specific Content for UPK and Tutor

    Listen to Stuart Dunsmore, Sr. Director of UPK and Tutor Development discuss the pre-built content available for E-Business Suite R12. Learn how this recently released content can help your customers throughout the Applications Lifecycle, from the start of an implementation or upgrade project, through go-live and beyond.

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  • SEO Content - A Major Part of Your SEO Strategy

    Search Engine Optimization is a dynamic process and it involves a lot of factors that can be broadly be divided into on page and off page factors. Among the on page factors the content that is presented on the web page plays a very significant role in the determination of the rank of that page. With the right kind of SEO content you can increase the relevance of the page for the search engine thus making it rank higher for that particular keyword.

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  • Using Keywords to Create SEO Friendly Content

    So you have your site up and running and now you are about to load it with content. So you figure its time to get writing, but before you do you should have to know that not all articles are created equal! If you want to maximize your chances of ranking well in search engines, the first step in creating SEO friendly content is through understanding how to use keywords!

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  • Generating Unique Content - How to Do it For Your Website

    Well, the first question is, why do you need to have unique content on your website? It's really all down to the search engines; they want original content which ends in unique results, thus making it a much better experience for the users and hopefully ensuring that they will return to the site again.

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  • Is Content Important For SEO - Yes Or No?

    Those of us that have been around search marketing any time at all, have heard this statement far more times than you can remember. I realize it seems repetitive, however until more businesses do a far better job at concentrating on their Web site content, it's worth repeating. Effectively composed content is essential.

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  • Forget the Hat - Just Write Compelling Content

    Search Engines and searchers are looking for one thing, relevant content that provides an answer to the searchers' query. This is exactly what we should be providing when we produce content for our blogs or websites. There is not a day goes by when my mailbox is not full of different emails promising top ranks in Google or Bing just by using this or that kind of technique or tool.

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  • The Website Content

    What is it in on your website? The content of your website speaks a great deal about your website traffic and ranking. This article briefly discusses website content and Meta tags.

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  • Creating Dynamic Web Content

    The most important part of your website is the quality of your content. Without good content you will not get the page ranking in the search engines that you need to get to be successful.

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  • Creating Dynamic Web Content

    The most important part of your website is the quality of your content. Without good content you will not get the page ranking in the search engines that you need to get to be successful.

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  • Cannot connect to a SQL Server 2005 Analysis Services cube after installing SQL Server 2008 SP1.

    - by Luc
    I've been developing an application that talks directly to an SSAS 2005 OLAP cube. Note that I also have SQL Server 2008 installed, so the other day I did a Windows Update and decided to include SQL Server 2008 SP1 in my update. After doing that, my SSAS 2005 cube is no longer accessible from my application. I'm able to browse the data just fine within SQL Server 2005 BI Studio Manager, but I'm not able to connect to the cube from my application. Here is my connection string that used to work: Data Source=localhost;Provider=msolap;Initial Catalog=Adventure Works DW Here is the error message I get: Either the user, [Server]/[User], does not have access to the Adventure Works DW database, or the database does not exist. Here is the beginning of my stack trace if it would help: Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.AdomdErrorResponseException was unhandled by user code HelpLink="" Message="Either the user, Luc-PC\\Luc, does not have access to the Adventure Works DW database, or the database does not exist." Source="Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Analysis Services" ErrorCode=-1055391743 StackTrace: at Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.AdomdConnection.XmlaClientProvider.Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.IDiscoverProvider.Discover(String requestType, IDictionary restrictions, DataTable table) at Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.ObjectMetadataCache.Discover(AdomdConnection connection, String requestType, ListDictionary restrictions, DataTable destinationTable, Boolean doCreate) at Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.ObjectMetadataCache.PopulateSelf() at Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.ObjectMetadataCache.Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.IObjectCache.Populate() at Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.CacheBasedNotFilteredCollection.PopulateCollection() at Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.CacheBasedNotFilteredCollection.get_Count() at Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.CubesEnumerator.MoveNext() at Microsoft.AnalysisServices.AdomdClient.CubeCollection.Enumerator.MoveNext() at blah blah... I've looked for a solution for the last 4+ hours and haven't had any success. Thanks in advance for any help. Luc

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  • How to calculate Content-Length for a file download within Kohana PHP?

    - by moritzd
    I'm trying to send a file from within a Kohana model to the browser, but as soon as I add a Content-Length header, the file doesn't start downloading right away. Now the problem seems to be that Kohana is already outputting buffers. An ob_clean at the begin of the script doesn't help this though. Also adding ob_get_length() to the Content-Length isn't helping since this just returns 0. The getFileSize() function returns the right number: if I run the script outside of Kohana, it works. I read that exit() still calls all destructors and it might be that something is outputted by Kohana afterwards, but I can't find out what exactly. Hope someone can help me out here... This is the piece of code I'm using: public function download() { header("Expires: ".gmdate("D, d M Y H:i:s",time()+(3600*7))." GMT\n"); header("Content-Type: ".$this->getFileType()."\n"); header("Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary\n"); header("Last-Modified: " . gmdate("D, d M Y H:i:s",$this->getCreateTime()) . " GMT\n"); header("Content-Length: ".($this->getFileSize()+ob_get_length().";\n"); header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="'.basename($this->getFileName())."\"\n\n"); ob_end_flush(); readfile($this->getFilePath()); exit(); }

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  • Plone site randomly serving wrong content

    - by Chris Miller
    I have a Plone site that has begun to randomly serve up the wrong content. Any given content suddenly shows something else. Sometimes a JPEG loads a stylesheet instead or a stylesheet loads as a page or a page as an image. The images move around, some times our site logo shows a bullet, or one of the other site images. Fiddler shows the wrong content in the response, the apache logs show the content type of the incorrect file (so if the an image loads in place of a style sheet, apache shows that). We thought mod_proxy was the source of our grief, but we get the problem hitting Zope directly. I never get the wrong content using the Medusa Monitor to repeatedly hit the content. I do see ConflictErrors in the instance.log file, and they seem to be correlated to the problem, but not 100%. ZPublisher.Conflict ConflictError at \path\to\object: database conflict error (oid 0x3586, class BTrees._OIBTree.OIBTree, serial this txn started with blah, serial currently committed blah) (X conflicts (0 unresolved) since startup blah) I pulled that off the web, it's not from our logs, but it's the same message. This may be a red herring, it sounds like those messages are normal. We've updated to the 3.3.5, same problems. I'm at a loss. I'm wondering if there a good way to intercept what is being served? Secondly, is there a way to increase the verbosity of the access log to included the content-type? I've even seen the problem manifest in ZMI. It happens more often when we're authenticated. Sometimes it can take a thousand reloads to see the problem, other times it happens in different ways every time we reload. I believe we've seen this problem for a couple years, but it was very intermittent, a page would show the content of a GIF, then a reload later wouldn't happen for a long time. Now it's a huge problem.

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  • Looking for an open source real-time network analysis program

    - by JrSysAdmin
    Can somebody recommend an open source real-time network analysis program? What I'm looking for the program to do is display a graph of bandwidth usage by IP within our internal network that can quickly be viewed any time we need to (typically when we want to quickly find out who is utilizing high amounts of bandwidth and slowing down the network). We ideally simply want to hook up a monitor on the wall of our server room to a system whose NIC will be in permissive mode to log all network activity in a visual manner which can easily be seen and running 24/7. Prefer open source as I do not have a budget for this project and prefer open source projects in general. I'd also prefer for this to be available for CentOS but any linux distro or Windows OS would be acceptable. Thanks!

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  • Supporting users if they're not on your site

    - by Roger Hart
    Have a look at this Read Write Web article, specifically the paragraph in bold and the comments. Have a wry chuckle, or maybe weep for the future of humanity - your call. Then pause, and worry about information architecture. The short story: Read Write Web bumps up the Google rankings for "Facebook login" at the same time as Facebook makes UI changes, and a few hundred users get confused and leave comments on Read Write Web complaining about not being able to log in to their Facebook accounts.* Blindly clicking the first Google result is not a navigation behaviour I'd anticipated for folks visiting big names sites like Facebook. But then, I use Launchy and don't know where any of my files are, depend on Firefox auto-complete, view Facebook through my IM client, and don't need a map to find my backside with both hands. Not all our users behave in the same way, which means not all of our architecture is within our control, and people can get to your content in all sorts of ways. Even if the Read Write Web episode is a prank of some kind (there are, after all, plenty of folks who enjoy orchestrated trolling) it's still a useful reminder. Your users may take paths through and to your content you cannot control, and they are unlikely to deconstruct their assumptions along the way. I guess the meaningful question is: can you still support those users? If they get to you from Google instead of your front door, does what they find still make sense? Does your information architecture still work if your guests come in through the bathroom window? Ok, so here they broke into the house next door - you can't be expected to deal with that. But the rest is well worth thinking about. Other off-site interaction It's rarely going to be as funny as the comments at Read Write Web, but your users are going to do, say, and read things they think of as being about you and your products, in places you don't control. That's good. If you pay attention to it, you get data. Your users get a better experience. There are easy wins, too. Blogs, forums, social media &c. People may look for and find help with your product on blogs and forums, on Twitter, and what have you. They may learn about your brand in the same way. That's fine, it's an interaction you can be part of. It's time-consuming, certainly, but you have the option. You won't get a blogger to incorporate your site navigation just in case your users end up there, but you can be there when they do. Again, Anne Gentle, Gordon McLean and others have covered this in more depth than I could. Direct contact Sales people, customer care, support, they all talk to people. Are they sending links to your content? if so, which bits? Do they know about all of it? Do they have the content they need to support them - messaging that funnels sales, FAQ that are realistically frequent, detailed examples of things people want to do, that kind of thing. Are they sending links because users can't find the good stuff? Are they sending précis of your content, or re-writes, or brand new stuff? If so, does that mean your content isn't up to scratch, or that you've got content missing? Direct sales/care/support interactions are enormously valuable, and can help you know what content your users find useful. You can't have a table of contents or a "See also" in a phonecall, but your content strategy can support more interactions than browsing. *Passing observation about Facebook. For plenty if folks, it is  the internet. Its services are simple versions of what a lot of people use the internet for, and they're aggregated into one stop. Flickr, Vimeo, Wordpress, Twitter, LinkedIn, and all sorts of games, have Facebook doppelgangers that are not only friendlier to entry-level users, they're right there, behind only one layer of authentication. As such, it could own a lot of interaction convention. Heavy users may well not be tech-savvy, and be quite change averse. That doesn't make this episode not dumb, but I'm happy to go easy on 'em.

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