Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
Rank_1:1:6 Rank_1:1:5 Rank_1:1:4 Rank_1:1:4 Rank_1:1:5 Rank_1:1:6 Rank_1:1:5 Rank_1:1:0 Rank_1:1:1 Rank_1:1:5 Rank_1:1:2 Rank_1:1:3 Rank_1:1:0 Rank_1:1:0 Rank_1:1:3
These figures are for a site that has a current toolbar of PR4.
I searched the web for an explanation, but failed to get a good one.
Is there any idea as to what all these magical numbers mean?
The summary again shows top ten pages which contain the query.
eg. if you are searching on your domain "www.domain.com" then the summary shows the snippets as they appear on the top 10 on a normal serp page - probably with your site in number 1 (& maybe 2) position followed by other sites that mention your domain.
So - the info you may be seeing is someone else who has listed your site with that information and this appears in the snippet when searching for your domain?
On a different issue - I was thinking of the term used for <rk> in the Google xml documentation as "a general rating of the relevance of the search result", search result clearly means the page returned for the <rk> value - the relevance word stumps me a bit - it clearly does not mean relevant towards the search term - so relevant to what exactly? The rest of the web? - eg Page Rank?
So I wanted to see if this was true with other sites. The same thing happens with WebmasterWorld.
[google.com...]
S=Brett Tabke hosts professional webmaster and search engine promotion discussions.
[search.dmoz.org...]
The differnce is that when I search my site in Google, it does not use the summary listed in my current pagerank query. It uses my meta desc. WebmasterWorld on the other hand does show the DMOZ desc in Google serps.
Not really sure of the significance of this. Maybe the description they are using for my site in the serps is going to change soon.
I guess the most significant discovery here is that I actually have a link from DMOZ. I gave up checking for my link to be approved over a year ago. So there is some good news that comes from this. :)
Also as this <rk> figure does not change based on the search term we are left with the definition of:->>Text (Integer in the range 0-10)
>>"Provides a general rating of the relevance of the search result"
Which as we know is not dependent on the search term - if it is not PR it is something very close to it.
Why can't this be a combination of your Rank in the SERPs and Page Rank. Google records visits to a page/site via it's toolbar. If a page/site is ranking well in the SERPS maybe this has something to do with those numbers and they affect one's PR also.
Just one thing, because I haven't found it explicitly mentioned: You may put your suggestions on a broader emprirical basis by adding the get-variables 'start' and 'num' to your query. E.g.:
[66.249.93.99...]
[66.249.93.99...]
If someone here posts something very accurate and true and visionary someone else may post that the first person (visionary guy) is wrong. Why?
Cause if someone gets it finally (Something new and huge) once someone somewhere may figure out this is huge and try to convince everyone that it is all hot air to confuse you into not believing it so they can dominate from the finding when everyone else is not taking it for the truth.
Hope that made sense.
My question is when using the pagerank guessing tool why are two of my sites showing current PR of 4 and a predicted PR of 6 when hardly any work has been done to it as of late?
And what is this --> <R N="4" L="2">
Hollyweird