Choosing keywords for a search engine [closed] - search-engine

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Given the fact that a search engine deals with a broad range of topics, to promote a new search engine with google adwords, how do you choose keywords?

Having some Search Exclusive Keywords is a good idea.
Suppose the search engine is "Findforme". A website like this can have the keywords Find, Findforme and so on. Also, having some keywords like "Search Faster" or "Find Faster" should be able to help. Now almost all the time, a user will not look for another search engine in google as they are already satisfied with what google is providing them. Having various popular Search Term Queries (STQ's) as keywords in advertising for their search Engine may help in the ad popping up, although it may not have relevance to the user and the advertiser will end up paying a large cpc.
I searched some of the above listed keywords on google and these were the following results.
Search Faster: https://www.google.co.in/search?q=Search+Faster&oq=Search+Faster&aqs=chrome.0.57j0l3j62l2.2701j0&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8
Hpoe this helps :)

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Nofollow all external links - yes or no? [closed]

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I am working with a company that is trying to build their online authority and they want to avoid any penalties from Google and other major search engines.
The site is a social network (adult related) and users can create public profile, post links, images, etc. It is an adult social network for people that want to make money talking on the phone.
So the question is, is it a good idea to nofollow all external links? Because it is hard to gauge the quality of sites that we may be linking out to and I don't want to have any issues with this..
Thanks!
This article on Google suggests you should nofollow untrusted user links.
If you can't or don't want to vouch for the content of pages you link
to from your site — for example, untrusted user comments or guestbook
entries — you should nofollow those links. This can discourage
spammers from targeting your site, and will help keep your site from
inadvertently passing PageRank to bad neighborhoods on the web.
I'd probably keep your own links as follow, and make some effort to seek out and remove dodgy links, though - nofollow does not protect your users.
The safe route would be, yes, to add nofollow to all of your outgoing links if you're going to allow users to be able to insert any link they wish.
A lot of large social networks and forums do this and have no issues.
I hope this helps some.

how to understand "what keyword had been searched to find a specific page of my website"? [closed]

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I wanna know what keyword was type in search engin textbox that leads the user to my website ...
it is pretty easy for google ... because it hold the search parameter in it's querystring and after redireting change it to destination ... (if u right clik on one of the items in google search list and 'Copy link address' you can see that keywords are in 'q' parameter).
but for other search engins like yahoo.com, bing.com, volunia.com (and the rest of sites mentioned in this link http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_search_engines ) the querystring don't contain the keywords and it directly refer to a site. How can I find the user keywrod in all search engins?
Have a Look on this (free to sign up)
http://www.google.co.in/webmasters/
and
http://www.bing.com/toolbox/webmaster
i assumes you want an API right ?
Google Analytics provides APIs to collect, configure, and report on user-interactions
The Clicky Analytics API can also help you
they provide you the right way to what else you want
Sign up for google analytics!! Very easy to install and use.

which SEO for page url extension is better [closed]

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i'm on a new website and wondering for a while which is better of these suggesions for a url?
http://medical-eg.com/dr/name OR
http://medical-eg.com/dr.name
i see the second one is simpler and more grammatical.
but i don't want it to be on the favor of SEO.
thanks all....
First one is far better then the second one.
There are few benefits of it
First : Two keywords get target dr and name
along with that third keyword dr name will also get targeted.
Second : It will give an feel of categorised page to google and pages which are well categorised rank high
and there are many other benefits..
The first one is better, it is currently being used by latest Microsoft's MVC 3 and MVC 4 framework as well. Apart from that it helps the crawler to get information about the page much easier as compared to used dr.name like structure.
The 1st is the best of the two.
I would go for a different approach
http://medical-eg.com/dr-name-surname
also adding geo location to the url could boost SEO
http://medical-eg.com/geo-location/dr-name-surname

Replacement for Google Code Search? [closed]

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Google Code Search has been incredibly valuable to me as a developer - I use it a couple times a week to see how other developers have used (usually poorly documented) APIs. It's also convenient to see the internals of some of those APIs, or to find which API corresponds to the functionality you want (it's a great resource for Android in particular -- give it some of the text you see on screen, and it'll usually find the implementing class).
Now that Google shutting down code search as of January 15, 2012, are there any good replacements?
I have reviewed the following sites
The good
Krugle
searchcode
The broken or unsuitable
Antepedia (site is only a "We'll be back soon" page because Antepedia has been acquired)
The dead
Koders (discontinued)
SymbolHound Code Search
GrepCode (only Java)
SymbolHound (generic search engine, not just code)
Codefetch (unreachable as of 2016-08-23)
Codase (discontinued)
When I originally did the review, Koders turned out to be the winner for my purposes, but I really liked the user interface and features of SymbolHound Code Search better. The only problem with SymbolHound was the small number of sites it has indexed. The search[code] engine was also promising at that time.
Many of the sites I've reviewed have since been discontinued completely or have disabled their code search functionality. Krugle and search[code] seem to be chugging along, and GrepCode is good if you live in the Java world.
Take a look at these:
searchcode
krugle
Another one to consider is http://searchcode.com/ It supports regex search as Google Code search does. For example,
http://searchco.de/?q=/[cb]at/
http://searchco.de/?q=/a{2,3}/
http://searchco.de/?q=/^import/
http://searchco.de/?q=/atoi/%20ext:c
http://searchco.de/?q=/dll$/
Are all valid searches.
There is http://opensearch.krugle.org

Google showing website inner search engine results, how does it work? [closed]

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Sometimes when I search in Google, appears a website and just below... several links from that website. Sometimes also (I don't know if it's related) I click on a result and the website shows me the page with the search terms highlighted.
How does that work? I mean, which technology or standard do I have to implement in my website in order to archieve those effects?
Thanks
Do you mean sitelinks?
Google's systems analyse the link structure of your site to find shortcuts that will save users time and allow them to quickly find the information they're looking for.
They only show sitelinks for results when they think they'll be useful to the user.
You can read more here http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=47334
EDIT
To answer your question, all you can do is make sure you have a well formed site with clear navigation which your users can use and find useful. If your site popular then Google will do the rest.
Google shows highlighted search terms on its cached pages
When you're viewing a cached result the page is stored on Google's servers - so they can modify as they wish (highlighting search terms).
If you're viewing them on actual websites this is due to either:
Google wrapper around the page (such as mobile viewing)
Google toolbar (or similar)

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