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  • Are Search Trends Useful to Assist SEO?

    With SEO there are a variety of avenues to go down which can help to develop better ranking and assist traffic. Various tools such as Google Analytics can provide useful platforms from which to better understand your sites traffic and determine the best methods to use in order to boost the numbers visiting your site.

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  • The Evolution of Internet Marketing and Search Engine Optimization

    Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is a process of increasing the quality and volume of traffic to a website via a search engine result which is purely organic and not paid. The higher the website appears on a search result, the greater the chance of traffic going to the website. Therefore not only does it create a web presence for a website but has spawned a global industry of advertising and search engine optimization.

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  • SEO - The Most Important Aspect of Internet Marketing Strategy

    Your online visibility and trafficking can be improved by SEO which means Search Engine Optimization. It's a process of improving the quality or traffic to your website or web page. This active practice of changing and optimizing internal as well as external aspects in order to increase the traffic and hits on your website or web page is called optimizing your search result.

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  • YouTube Can Be Used to Improve Search Engine Ranking

    We all know that YouTube is one of the most well-liked websites. Did you know that YouTube can also help increase your site traffic and rankings like Facebook and Twitter? Listed below are some helpful tips to get site traffic for free using YouTube so grab the chance of utilizing those no charge services.

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  • How to Improve Google Search Engine Ranking

    There is no secret that every webmaster's dream is to increase traffic generation Google search engine ranking. However, with billions of websites out there competing for all kinds of high traffic keywords, accomplishing the feat is no easy task.

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  • SEO Work For Small Business - The Importance of Prioritising This

    Prioritising your search engine optimisation (SEO) work is a decisive factor that will lead to the success of your small business. Even if SEO is just part of your entire marketing plan, it still has enormous significance as it is the one that generates traffic to your website. This traffic is where you will be able to get prospects, who will eventually be converted into clients.

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  • How to Sabotage Your Search Engine Optimizing Efforts

    Search engine optimizing is a key and ongoing strategy anybody marketing on the internet needs to adopt as part of their daily routine. Properly optimizing any sites or content will serve to increase the amount of search engine traffic you receive. Read on to discover 3 search engine optimization tips to help you get the absolute most traffic out of your optimizing efforts.

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  • How to Sabotage Your Search Engine Optimizing Efforts

    Search engine optimizing is a key and ongoing strategy anybody marketing on the internet needs to adopt as part of their daily routine. Properly optimizing any sites or content will serve to increase the amount of search engine traffic you receive. Read on to discover 3 search engine optimization tips to help you get the absolute most traffic out of your optimizing efforts.

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  • The Difficult Task of Choosing an SEO Firm

    Search Engine Optimization service is must for online marketing. If you are thinking to start or already have some online business then you just cannot afford to ignore this special service aimed at providing greater traffic to your website. If you do not get high volume of website traffic then there is no possibility of making a sound business.

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  • How to Improve Page Rank With Minimal Effort

    These days, SEO - "search engine optimization" is a hugely important step to get more traffic to your website. By ensuring that you are using the most up=to-date techniques, and that you have a firm knowledge of factors such as "pagerank", you'll be even closer to realizing the traffic potential of your website.

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  • SEO Techniques Help in Getting Higher Ranks

    SEO plays a very important role in bringing adequate traffic to your website. And especially when you are in a web marketing business like selling products and services through internet, then the success of you company depends upon the traffic coming to your website.

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  • Choosing Right Landing Pages For Your Keywords Part 2

    You can easily find bounce rates for your PPC campaign, by using some Google Analytics indicators. For example, you can open the Traffic Source section in the Google Analytics and then can navigate to AdWords Traffic which makes it easy for you to get the data you want for your PPC campaign.

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  • SEO and Its Importance

    Search Engine optimization is a thing which is used to drive more traffic to your website. SEO plays an important role to drive traffic and to make your website higher rank in search engines such as Google and Yahoo.

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  • How an SEO Company Optimizes a Business

    Search engine optimization or SEO enhances a business by generating traffic on a web site. Increased traffic is generated when a website is displayed at the very beginning of search results when a keyword/s is entered into a search engine, like Google.

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  • Guaranteed SEO

    Search engine optimization is a method by which the traffic and number of hits on a particular website is increased. Most experts say that it is important not only to get a quantitative increase in the traffic to the website, but a qualitative increase as well.

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  • Parallelism in .NET – Part 8, PLINQ’s ForAll Method

    - by Reed
    Parallel LINQ extends LINQ to Objects, and is typically very similar.  However, as I previously discussed, there are some differences.  Although the standard way to handle simple Data Parellelism is via Parallel.ForEach, it’s possible to do the same thing via PLINQ. PLINQ adds a new method unavailable in standard LINQ which provides new functionality… LINQ is designed to provide a much simpler way of handling querying, including filtering, ordering, grouping, and many other benefits.  Reading the description in LINQ to Objects on MSDN, it becomes clear that the thinking behind LINQ deals with retrieval of data.  LINQ works by adding a functional programming style on top of .NET, allowing us to express filters in terms of predicate functions, for example. PLINQ is, generally, very similar.  Typically, when using PLINQ, we write declarative statements to filter a dataset or perform an aggregation.  However, PLINQ adds one new method, which provides a very different purpose: ForAll. The ForAll method is defined on ParallelEnumerable, and will work upon any ParallelQuery<T>.  Unlike the sequence operators in LINQ and PLINQ, ForAll is intended to cause side effects.  It does not filter a collection, but rather invokes an action on each element of the collection. At first glance, this seems like a bad idea.  For example, Eric Lippert clearly explained two philosophical objections to providing an IEnumerable<T>.ForEach extension method, one of which still applies when parallelized.  The sole purpose of this method is to cause side effects, and as such, I agree that the ForAll method “violates the functional programming principles that all the other sequence operators are based upon”, in exactly the same manner an IEnumerable<T>.ForEach extension method would violate these principles.  Eric Lippert’s second reason for disliking a ForEach extension method does not necessarily apply to ForAll – replacing ForAll with a call to Parallel.ForEach has the same closure semantics, so there is no loss there. Although ForAll may have philosophical issues, there is a pragmatic reason to include this method.  Without ForAll, we would take a fairly serious performance hit in many situations.  Often, we need to perform some filtering or grouping, then perform an action using the results of our filter.  Using a standard foreach statement to perform our action would avoid this philosophical issue: // Filter our collection var filteredItems = collection.AsParallel().Where( i => i.SomePredicate() ); // Now perform an action foreach (var item in filteredItems) { // These will now run serially item.DoSomething(); } .csharpcode, .csharpcode pre { font-size: small; color: black; font-family: consolas, "Courier New", courier, monospace; background-color: #ffffff; /*white-space: pre;*/ } .csharpcode pre { margin: 0em; } .csharpcode .rem { color: #008000; } .csharpcode .kwrd { color: #0000ff; } .csharpcode .str { color: #006080; } .csharpcode .op { color: #0000c0; } .csharpcode .preproc { color: #cc6633; } .csharpcode .asp { background-color: #ffff00; } .csharpcode .html { color: #800000; } .csharpcode .attr { color: #ff0000; } .csharpcode .alt { background-color: #f4f4f4; width: 100%; margin: 0em; } .csharpcode .lnum { color: #606060; } This would cause a loss in performance, since we lose any parallelism in place, and cause all of our actions to be run serially. We could easily use a Parallel.ForEach instead, which adds parallelism to the actions: // Filter our collection var filteredItems = collection.AsParallel().Where( i => i.SomePredicate() ); // Now perform an action once the filter completes Parallel.ForEach(filteredItems, item => { // These will now run in parallel item.DoSomething(); }); This is a noticeable improvement, since both our filtering and our actions run parallelized.  However, there is still a large bottleneck in place here.  The problem lies with my comment “perform an action once the filter completes”.  Here, we’re parallelizing the filter, then collecting all of the results, blocking until the filter completes.  Once the filtering of every element is completed, we then repartition the results of the filter, reschedule into multiple threads, and perform the action on each element.  By moving this into two separate statements, we potentially double our parallelization overhead, since we’re forcing the work to be partitioned and scheduled twice as many times. This is where the pragmatism comes into play.  By violating our functional principles, we gain the ability to avoid the overhead and cost of rescheduling the work: // Perform an action on the results of our filter collection .AsParallel() .Where( i => i.SomePredicate() ) .ForAll( i => i.DoSomething() ); The ability to avoid the scheduling overhead is a compelling reason to use ForAll.  This really goes back to one of the key points I discussed in data parallelism: Partition your problem in a way to place the most work possible into each task.  Here, this means leaving the statement attached to the expression, even though it causes side effects and is not standard usage for LINQ. This leads to my one guideline for using ForAll: The ForAll extension method should only be used to process the results of a parallel query, as returned by a PLINQ expression. Any other usage scenario should use Parallel.ForEach, instead.

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