Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
Reseller,
Having looked at these dc's in some detail, I have to disagree with you (tho glad you're making a comback!).
Because of major changes to a site I have in the OCT-FEB period, I can pinpoint the vintage of the index quite easily (and confirm the site specific results with others I am familiar with). What I see on these dc's is an index made up of ancient results (circa AUG 2005) with some additions from FEB or so.
If this truly is the result of the carnage of the switch to BD then Google has accomplished nothing in the FEB-15 to current timeframe.
If as you say, Google knows exactly what they're doing, what they are apparently trying to achieve is to augment the AUG-05 index with a few new pages. If you mean Google intended to "break down" the entire index and rebuild it "live" - unlike in the past where more or less finished updates rolled onto all dc's over a 5-7 day period - then I might agree. What I can't see is the reseller frindly ® dc's being anything but yet another interim step. The difference is, I see the process as scambling to try and fix an unanticipated scru-up, you see it as an deliberate plan.
Either way, I'm counting the days until Microsoft rolls out their new product as Google is ripe for the taking ... takes awhile for the public to turn against a SE but there certianly is precedent (remember when you couldn't turn on your TV without seeing ads for Lycos?).
From a webmaster point of view, the ideal world is MSN, Google, Yahoo with 30% market share each.
[edited by: tedster at 10:32 pm (utc) on April 6, 2006]
This is too far past April Fool's Day to be funny.
This may not be amazing in itself but combined with the other craziness it makes me wonder what's up.
Someone posted that they saw the same search results across all datacentres. I posted to say that for me, that they were not all the same.
There were two main sets of results, about 50/50 split across the DCs: that is for some search query X, on half the DCs I get one particular set of results, and on the other half I get a different set, and then on one particular DC (URL IP posted several times in the last week already) I get something completely different again. This also occurs for a selection of other searches that were made.
<No "tool talk" please.
See Forum Charter [webmasterworld.com]>
[edited by: tedster at 5:34 am (utc) on April 12, 2006]
If I hit refresh on a static IP I often get a different set of results the second time.
Watch out for that!
Also try the effects of adding both &num=100 and &filter=0 on the end of the Google search URL, too.
SICK! In a few searches I did the first 50 results were dominated by a single domain...No indented MORE FROM THIS SITE. I believe this is showing me the importance of ALLINTEXT and how ALLINANCHOR importance is certainly being devalued.
And also, what is going on with internal pages having higher PR now on so many sites? Is Google devaluing links to homepages now? If I was only a Google techie that knew their algo! :>~
Apart from the differences in # of pages indexed, I am noticing that the DC with the lesser indexed page count almost always shows a pages' meta description as the result description. Whereas the DCs with higher indexed page counts almost always show on page text for the description.
Seems to me that the DCs are acting as an "assembly line" of sorts, all working together processing all of the inbound spider data.
I need to add that the aforementioned was noted using site:mydomain.com queries.
Good evening Folks
Easter Holidays is good time to do some tweaking, apply filters or even to deploy new algos. Not only to enjoy few Happy Meals in addition to generous portions of Organic Bacon Polenta as Matt Inigo Cutts has been practicing recent years :-)
In fact signs of serps pollution on the new infrastructure started exactly on 9th April 2006
msg #:68
[webmasterworld.com...]
However, I have noticed today on several "friendly" DCs that irrelevant sites have been removed of top 10 when run my testing search query. So I see today some Happy Serps on the following DCs, for example
[64.233.171.99...]
[64.233.171.104...]
[64.233.185.99...]
[64.233.185.104...]
[72.14.203.99...]
[72.14.203.104...]
[216.239.37.99...]
[216.239.37.104...]
Of course, you might see something quite different for your own search query ;-)
[edited by: reseller at 7:27 pm (utc) on April 12, 2006]
Try searching for an email address on any other datacentre, and then try it again there... wierd.
"What is going on at [72.14.207.99...] then?"
Business as usual, I guess. That DC is still behaving odd ;-)
I recall that it was you who noticed it first and reported it also on Matt's blog.
Do you mind me calling that DC from now on:
g1smd's DC :-)
Take a look at what I was saying in msg # 106 ...
I just took another look at my site, and am seeing strange results as well ... But then again, I noticed something else ... All of the indexed pages listed on 72.14.207.99 are using the the meta description tag from the page for the result description; no on page text ... While the other DCs utilize on page text for the description ...
Something I am starting to see (between DC watching, and reviewing my site logs) is a direct correlation between:
1. The # of pages that have already been spidered
2. The pages that are in the index (bringing in traffic)
3. The pages that have been spidered, but not yet in index.
What I mean by correlation is that if I take:
A. One of the DCs with the highest page count
B. 2 DCs with the lowest page counts
Add both DCs (B) together; that number equals the count on the DC with the highest page count (A). In other words, B1 + B2 = A
I have been watching this trend for the past few days. I also have been seeing several other things, which I will post when I have more concrete numbers.
Its funny as earlier today i used the search and thought the results were much cleaner. Then late afternoon i did a similar keyword search and the results were plain awfull. One extream to the other.
On seeing your six "Friendly" data centres i used the same search terms as i did this morning and found that it is indeed the data centres you have found that are delivering the quality cleaner serps.
As to if these end up being the Google serps is anyones guess. No idea what Google is currently doing but the results are all over the place - anyone who thinks this update is over needs help, its far from over, its just starting imo!
Whitey: The site has about 3,000 pages currently. But grows dynamically, depending on visitor reviews, etc.
I don't trust any page figures being given out *including my own* if the yare taken from the Google page no's - they don't seem to demonstrate anything.
None- 4 weeks ago all supps bar 1
280k - 1 week ago - 230k more pages than we have
58k - yesterday
28k - approx 22k less pages than we have
If I go to one of several DC's and type
site:mydomain/category1/category2/ i get something close to the no of pages
Therefore the total no of pages being displayed is not correct, and the page no's that are being provided are very much flying around all over the place.
Any calls of *real* stability in any area yet - anyone?
Just checked those two dc's and my site has been whacked again. Took another half of the pages out. Heck, it's a small site as it is.
Give it another couple of days and it will be gone completely. I will have no more worries. (sick)
Evidence: I have two sites for my particular keywords. Once has been abandoned for about a year, and simply points to my new site on every page. It is barely used by searchers, and hasn't received any new backlinks in at least 6 months. Nonethelss, as of last night its ranking top for a whole set of keywords, without any new changes in the site/backlinks.
Thats a bit genorous.
I would say probably closer to 60 weeks - but hey.
I wonder if Google are going to pull something out of the bag this long holiday weekend (although I dont think it is a hol in the states?)