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Those are the kinds of algo changes we see from one update to the next. Which specific ones martinibuster had in mind, I'm not sure.
You can try your best, build a killer page and use all the tricks you come up with,
but if you don't have good linking to your site, your PR will be close to 0, and so your
'final' page rank - puting your page at the very bottom of SERP.
pawel,
At some level I suppose that I agree with you, BUT you seem to be taking an either/or approach. Yes, with zero links you are dead, and with far fewer links than the competition you will do badly. But with slightly fewer links than the competition you can do quite well by out-optimizing them.
In their basic paper on The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine [www7.scu.edu.au] Page and Brin write:
Combining all of this information into a rank is difficult. We designed our ranking function so that no particular factor can have too much influence.
We regularly get posts here complaining "Why does this PR5 site beat my PR7 site?" PR is important, but it is not everything.
<final_page_ranking> := <page score> * PR
I think the final_page_ranking is a more complex function of 'page score' and PR. PR isn't as important as it looks in your formula. Also, you neglected the probably most important factor: anchor text (which shouldn't be part of 'page score' since it is an off-page factor).
I didn't claim that I know more about Google's algorithms than their creators. (Although Google made a lot of changes in the ranking algorithm as well as in the PR calculation compared to the original papers.)
Please, don't post any well-known paper, exect you are one of the authors. I'm familar with these publications.
What I tried to say is that PR is a multiplier in the final ranking - meaning, it doesn't *add* to page's rank, but rather this rank is eventually *multiplied* by it. To check this, simply do a query on GG and see PRs of the very bottom pages of SERP. They're PR0.
You are probably right that PR not simply add to page score, but it doesn't seem to be simply multiplied. Also, you have to say if you are refering to the real PR or the logarithmic ToolbarPR.