Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
My colleague Vanessa just posted a note which should hopefully make your weekend a less stressful one :).
Specifically, she's noted that we've had some issues with our "site:" operator [sitemaps.blogspot.com] not returning appropriate results when used with hyphenated domains... so it's quite likely that much of the falloff you've seen is thankfully illusory.
We've noted similar discrepancies with site: searches using domains with a trailing slash as well.
And yes, Googlers are working to correct this stuff as quickly as possible!
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>> This morning Google Sitemaps shows me a 404 HTTP-error for the page: domain.com/1.html calculated on May 22. <<
>> We do not have pages named 1.html, but there is a link to a page like “whatever-1.html” on a page cached on May 21. <<
>> I checked internal and external linking, no links to 1.html <<
Hmm, another problem with hyphens in URLs, on top of the problem with hyphenated domains already acknowledged earlier in the month.
Yeah unfortunately this is not progress. Losing a page is only slightly bad since it can come back. Getting "new" (from 2004 no less) supplementals is a terrible thing that Google now shows little signs of being able to truly fix.
What I just discovered that's weird is if I click the cached link of any of these newly indexed pages, they have no cache. I get:
Your search - cache:****:www.*****.com - did not match any documents
eta:
I get 75 with 66.102.7.99 and 216.239.37.104, back to 41 and supplemental 216.239.53.104 and only 2 with 64.233.161.99 and 64.233.161.104 .. and that's all I'm going to check.
differences i results even when I switch from 10 to 100 URLs per page.
Except for rare situations, that SHOULD give different results. Any domain that gets 2 urls on the same page of a SERP will see those two results clustered under the highest listing. If you switch to 100 results, the clustering will definitely change and the order of all the urls will shift to accomodate the change. For example, a domain with a #2 and a #99 when you use 10 results per page, now sees a #2 and a #3 when you use 100 results per page.
That being said, why don't you answer the question? When checking Google.com how do you know what DC you're hitting? And don't give the lame - I don't check Google.com I check by DC. Because you just said that can change too.
In fact according to your logic:
g1smd said "Sometimes all you need to do is hit Reload on the same IP and you see a different result."
steveb said "Seeing the dc of the cache link doesn't guarantee anything anymore."
Checking DCs is useless, right? Then why do you talk about them?
Accessing a specific IP will give almost the same results day in, day out, with minor fluctuations, and show major differences when compared to some other DC, at any time, with that other DC being quasi-static too.
For instance 72.14.207.99 and 72.14.207.104 showed completely different results to every other IP for several weeks before those results eventually started spreading to other DCs. There were changes on those two IPs from day to day, but they were always different to everything else.
There were other differences elsewhere, and eventually those results changed too.
When you have tracked a range of certain keyword SERPs for several years, even minor changes, and miniscule little "patterns" become very obvious.
All the Best
Col :-)
Looking at a single IP by the IP address, allows tracking of results from day to day.
For instance if I look at a certain IP, then a certain site has been #11 for many weeks. If I look at a different IP that same site is at #3 and has been at #3 for nearly 3 years.
If I look at google.com then I see the site randomly bouncing up and down between #3 and #11 - with the specific IP searches I can track the two sets of results independantly for a long time.
Well, I can see results change radically by the refresh or by clicking next etc. This has been going on for ages (since bug daddy).
Sooner or later the user will notice they can't find what they looked at previously (I often have customers ring me thinking I am "on google")
The huge difference in live results on google datacentres is a joke - we all know it, thats why there is so much interest in it.
At the end of the day though if your site has been marginalised and you see a few pages left in the index I don't think you are coming back soon.
Maybe if you want the Google traffic now you need to break the rules - or play by them and wait forever in line to be included?
That concept flew out the window the day after the ipo. The new motto is "Do what ya gotta do to make the stockholders happy".
Honestly all this stuff about site query and hyphenated domains is simply one "thing" they found that is messed up that they think they can fix. In my honest opinion there's many more of those "one things" out there which may or may not ever get fixed.
-phish