Forum Moderators: open

Message Too Old, No Replies

Google vs design and speed

is google stopping the web from developing?

         

daamsie

6:12 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)



Here's my question, open for discussion: Is Google's (and other SEs) inability to spider frames, flash and other 'modern' web technologies properly stopping developers from progressing the internet?

I personally love a clean html-only site, so fit perfectly in Google's mould.. however I often create sites for clients who want something 'flashier'.. it takes a lot of convincing to talk them around to pulling it back to basic and maybe using only a few flash elements rather than the whole navigation system. I have seen some absolutely fantastic flash websites out there (using simple interfaces), which I seriously regret not seeing in Google results.. in fact, when I show people such sites they are surprised that it was even possible on the internet!

Another area is framesets: this surely is a tool for webmasters to cut down on bandwidth, loading times and increase speed and usability for the end user.. and yet it is futile creating something with framesets if no-one can find it on the internet!

I do see that Google is in front of many other SEs in pioneering new technologies (dynamic urls etc..), but I sometimes feel sad for those people who are trying to create more beautiful, userfriendly internet and just aren't being recognized in the search results.

Interested to see what people think..

mack

6:26 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I agree with what you are suggesting, And in a way you are right that google and other se's are almost certainly slowing down dvelopment of the multimedia web. Another way of looking at it is...

why build a complexed site that se's cant index. As their tech expands I think we will see the new technologies start to realy improve. I dont think se's deliberatly hold anything back. I think they are just limited in their ability. Once the search engines get to grips with now to index new medias then the time will be right to use them extensivly.

BigDave

6:33 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Or are the search engines helping to make the web more useable by helping to limit things like flash to areas of the sites where it is really worthwhile?

I don't hate flash, I just hate what a lot of sites do with it.

As to framesets, google seems to handle those fine right now. If they didn't, I would have a lot fewer backlinks.

pageoneresults

6:34 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I have seen some absolutely fantastic flash websites out there (using simple interfaces), which I seriously regret not seeing in Google results.

Give em' both. Most of the nicer Flashy sites offer an html alternative. Great for returning visitors and those on a 56k.

I think when all Flash sites do not offer an html alternative, they may lose a small percentage of their audience.

skibum

6:38 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Worldwide, Googlebot probably does a fantastic job of representing the "average web user" who does not have high speed net, is looking for info and not multimedia. I'd agree that Google does tend to hide some of the more multimedia sites without much text content, however, some Flash sites or the equivalent that have no text are able to top the charts if they are recognized by enough incoming links. Manufacuturers of guitars are one prime example of this.

qball0213

6:48 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The best example of a multimedia website is [homestarrunner.com...] that site is hilarious, I highly recommend everyone check it out.

thejavascripter

7:27 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I do a lot of javascript in my pages as you'd probably guess. To make sure that my links are indexed, I put the html at the bottom in the footer. Check out my homepage in my profile. The html is to compensate me for the Javascript at the top. This seems to work nicely. I tested it last month. I had crappy results just with the Javascript. Better results with the HTML in the footer.

Javascripter

europeforvisitors

8:24 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)



Here's my question, open for discussion: Is Google's (and other SEs) inability to spider frames, flash and other 'modern' web technologies properly stopping developers from progressing the internet?

I don't think so. If there's enough demand for a search engine that spiders Flash and other multimedia content, someone will come up with one, and word of mouth will take care of the rest. (I'm serious--the generation that goes in for multimedia is also the generation that uses instant messaging, and word of cool new sites gets around very fast.)

gsx

11:33 am on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Personally I do hate Flash. It consistently crashes my machine. Any site that relies on Flash for anything other than non-essentials sees my back button - otherwise I can't see anyhting since I've uninstalled it. I bet there are a lot more people similar to me than you imagine.

Ramzes

12:07 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)



I hate flash too.
The technology is uncontrolable, i do not want to hear music from stupid flash advertising, moving clips over pages. few month ago i started using Mozilla without flash component, it fast reliable, and not animated to defocus you.
I love it far better from IE.

John_Caius

1:40 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



For a frames site, put your sitemap in the no-frames content and Google will spider all your content. If you want the individual frames to pick up the surrounding frameset when retrieved from a Google search, there are plenty of tools to do that too.

jomaxx

1:54 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Frames are hardly a cutting-edge technology. Any designer who is stuck on using frames can use the NOFRAMES capability within the HTML standard, or simply design the individual framed pages so that they are not all orphans, and also use a snippet of Javascript to jump back inside the frame if a visitor arrives from a search engine. I doubt Google would penalize this even if they found it via a manual check.

As far as Flash is concerned, and Java as well, both have their place as niche technologies but that's all. I will never browse a site that isn't based on plain HTML unless I absolutely must. Anyone is free to build a Flash search engine, but I doubt a conventional indexing approach would be fruitful or that the world would beat a path to their door if they did.

c3oc3o

2:17 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



While I don't understand why no search engine has made any efforts to serve frame pages in their correct framesets (dynamically created with the same sizes as the site's original frameset, served from the SE servers), I'm not really sad their use is discouraged.
Flash AND frames have serious usability drawbacks (Nielsen: Why Frames suck [useit.com]).

In my opinion the web is not developing in the direction of multimedia (that word itself is sooo '96 ;)), video or even 3D (VRML died for good reasons), but towards XML, web services, seperation of style and content, compatibility with all kinds of devices and more interactivity.

XHTML2 will solve the non-indexable frames problem with XFrames, CSS2 has position:fixed as a visually (but not functionally) equivalent and usable replacement.. and with Nielsen working for Macromedia, I expect some usability enhancements there, which may also include SE more friendliness.

amznVibe

2:51 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I've enhanced two sites with frames and there was absolutely no penalty from Google for doing so. All the pages got indexed and freshbot'ed. However I only use the frames to keep the navagation menu available and even then its optional (user can escape the frame if they so desire).

Heck even Google uses a frame or two in their labs and language translation pages, etc. Frames are a controlable and mature technology (that Nielsen article was from 1997?) They can serve to reduce bandwidth nicely for modem users.

Flash however cannot be filtered or controled by the user and while entertaining for awhile, wait until the novices realize their ad filters will not work when they are in a 100% flash site with agressive ads.

John_Caius

5:15 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Agreed - I run a frames site with absolutely no problem. The typical page size for my content pages is 2-4k plus sometimes an image or two. Really quick to load, google indexing fine. Haven't yet played with the javascript stuff but will do soon.

peterdaly

5:33 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



As Seth Godin has said in "The Big Red Fez: How to Make Any Web Site Better" (ISBN: 0743227905) regarding flash based sites.

"It's not like TV. Really, it's not. Stop it."

(Or something similar, I don't have it in front of me.)

Flash is not well suited for content. Really it's not. If you want a TV commercial, then make one. You get all that comes with (or doesn't) with the medium.

It's bad enough for users, much less crawlers.

There are indeed good uses of it, like product customizers (like car sites) and such. In my mind, most good uses of flash should not contain content that is worth indexing.

-Pete

HarryM

5:40 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



frames ... and other 'modern' web technologies

Hardly modern. To me a frames site looks distinctly clunky and old-fashioned. There are other ways to save on bandwith, php for example.

bluecorr

5:51 pm on Jan 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I too have used frames in the beginning but now I've grown to hate them. Most people don't know how to use them properly and I get all sorts of nasty things - the horizontal scrollbar being the most common one.

I like to know where I'm going and be able to check the page I am on but usage of frames&javascript stop me from checking things like actual PR of the page. I also noticed that the PR fluctuates a lot from frameset to actual frame.

Frames are annoying.

daamsie

9:01 am on Jan 4, 2003 (gmt 0)



I do agree with you people that frames are annoying.. as stated I personally much prefer straight html pages. Frames are merely an example of ways that someone may attempt to speed up the experience for a viewer and be penalized (kind of) in the meantime.

Flash to me is the way of the future however. I believe that SEs hold it back a little, by not making it more easier to find flash based sites. While you say that there are many ugly flash sites out there, there are equally (or more) ugly html sites out there.. html sites trying to include fonts on their pages that won't work on other people's computers for example.. something that Flash copes with easily by embedding fonts. HTML sites that simply sprawl all their text out over the whole page, without caring about formatting or layout. For a designer, Flash is a godsend.. it makes layout (yes, even simple layouts) much more attractive and provides a far better visual communication tool. And like it or not.. computer screens are visual communications tools!

I am not trying to make a case for one technology or the other here though, merely suggesting that people trying to maximise technologies have a hard time.

I am not trying to suggest that webmasters have no ways of combatting this either.. what you say about html alternatives, etc.. is true.. but when you think about it.. isn't it a real drag to have to make two copies of the same site? Surely that will drive webmasters to just create the html version and not bother with the flash one (true for me).

I personally am scared and precautious of trying any new web technology that comes along.. I stay clear of javascript as much as possible, don't use flash on my site and use CSS with great caution.. the danger of isolating viewers by making my site impossible to find are too great!

Thanks for your continuing debate on this matter.. I like to hear what others think about such things!

mat_bastian

9:30 am on Jan 4, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



It seems that some of you folks are still living in FLash 3 land. Flash and it's usability and functionality and popularity has grown exponentially in the last year or two... it offers so much... I find it shameful the negative reaction it can inspire... Every client I have ever run across has asked for a flash site... at least they point out a flash site they want theirs to be like... The public is calling for it, we are inhibiting it. Google is inhibiting it. I really hope Flash Search Engine SDK is adopted by more engines and advanced and improved by Macromedia. I want to be able to give my clients what they want and it leaves a bad taste in everyones mouth not giving it to them due to the highway (google) not supporting sports cars (Flash). Very frustrating issue for me.

EVOLVE!

running scared

4:14 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yes, clients cry out for flash websites but those clients tend to be companies that see their site as an advert for their products.

Google has decided to "work" for the web community that is looking for information. The fact that Google sees (either intentionally or unintensionally) Flash websites as generally being information poor, is IMHO no bad thing. I don't want to surf adverts.

Having said that, if I do move into product searching mode, then sometimes it would be nice to be able to find some good Flash sites. Fortunately that only accounts for a minimal amount of my searching.

crosenblum

4:29 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree with BigDave.

Most people don't care for flashier stuff other than as entertainment.

For pure actual use in buying, research. We need usability a lot more than a long loading, weird user interface.

Screw this rich multimedia crap. It's only going to self-destruct or be used only for art or entertainment, no ecommerce site would dare stick to it.

crosenblum

4:32 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Google is not inhibiting the web technologies.

They are using common sense, and sticking to the core standards. It's their business and right to make their own mind up...

I like flash for fun or entertainment.

And I hate that my favorite company, Allaire sold out to crapola macromedia. But ce la vie.

I keep waiting for macromedia to fold, so allaire can become independent again, and get back to reality.

chiyo

4:41 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I agree very much with running scared. I also agree with mat bastion that flash has become far more usable of late.

But i wonder WHY clients are asking for "flash sites". Have they really worked out the ROI, and cost benefit of having a website, apart from wnting to "outflash" competitors. Do you REALLY need animation to sell on the web? My feeling is no, and those people who see a web site as primarly a promotion vehicle may be disappointed in future.

As for Google slowing down development, thats quite clearly ridiculous. Google is popular because it quickly sends people to the information they are looking for WITHOUT having to wait through a maze od advertising and spin to find it through endless reciprocal links and flashing ads.

Google is an information engine. Its service is to pinpoint answers to people's questions. From facts and opinions to where to buy this or that. That is what many people want obviously from user statistics I am seeing.

Now the advertising industry and makers of high tech software, computers and the like would LOVE you to think otherwise. But I dont see search engines out there that people use everyday to find the best aminated creations out there, do you? Once surfers vote by their feet that looking at animation is what they want to do on the web, there will be search engines to do it for them. (and I think there are, but they are specialist, not mainstream type)

The Web is not a TV, or a video game. There is not endless bandwidth as there are TV signals, and there are around 5 BILLION channels on the Web compared to around 3 to 50 channels on tv available for one person at the same time. People can turn off in an instant to something else.

It is a medium expressly designed for sharing and making information available whether it be commercial or not. I love innovation when i see it in smart database applications, searching applications and websites that get to know you and deliver what they think you would like to buy or see. That is the sort of innovation native to the web. Some Flash applications ive seen are great at providing highly useful guides or demos to those who want them and need them.

But Google IMHO, is doing a sterling job at delivering people as fast and as accurately as possible to the answers the are looking for. And other less known search engines are now making massive strides as well. The idea that the Web was ever going to be a multi-media extravaganza was at best a pipe dream of seriously deluded and non-net savvy entrepreneurs. Give me the facts straight away.. spare me the spin and animated fluff.

europeforvisitors

4:45 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)



Flash to me is the way of the future however.

Gee, I seem to recall MSN using Flash (and losing millions of dollars in the process) during its ill-fated experiment with TV-style entertainment back in 1996 or 1997.

To be sure, Flash is appropriate for some things (just as PDF files and streaming video are good for some things), but communicating text and still photos isn't one of them.

More to the point, it's hard to see how Google can be expected to index Flash content in a meaningful way. Maybe someone can determine how to identify what's in Flash animations for indexing purposes, but until somebody does, why bother to index such files?

elicious

6:16 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Wouldn't the burden be on Macromedia to make these proprietary file types indexable? Unlike pdfs & docs, I can't imagine how a bot would be able to extract text from a swf...

mat_bastian

6:20 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



You know... that's a good question. I wonder what macromedias capabilities to do so look like. I thought that MMSDK was the answer and the SE's needed to adopt, but you may have in that one statement changed my mind.

Anybody know if it's out of the realm of possibility for MM to do that?

Thanks for the wake up call!

I'll just crawl in a hole and hide my face in shame for allowing my mind to be so one tracked. :(

rfgdxm1

6:25 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Just one comment here. I just read a statistic that 80% of all Internet users are still on dial up. This should concern anyone using things like flash, etc. that take forever to load.

mat_bastian

6:26 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



well designed flash doesn't take forever to load. The streaming capabilities are awesome.

hutcheson

6:31 pm on Jan 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>>Flash to me is the way of the future however.

For ADVERTISING, maybe.
For INFORMATION, absolutely not.

Google's emphasis on non-proprietary, INFORMATION-based technology will benefit its users, and will penalize short-sighted, web-Luddite marketroids who still think of the web as just another venue for TV advertising cartoons.

It's easy to explain why marketroids are demanding Flash: it looks like a cool advertisement. They don't realize that people are not surfing the net looking for marketing brochures, animated or not. They don't see all the real users backing out of the site, or cursing them and all their relatives because they disabled the "back" button. They can't see the sales lost because people came into the site with a particular product in mind, and left because of the three-minute wait to download the stupid cartoon -- people who were already sold on the product!

From the viewpoint of the user, Google is right, standards are good, quick-loading pages are required, and twirling/fading/sliding/shrinking logos are just STUPID.

This 93 message thread spans 4 pages: 93