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June 27 - changes Part 3

         

Scurramunga

12:09 am on Jul 5, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



< Continued from: [webmasterworld.com...] >

I reported a day or two ago that my index page had reappeared again after being lost on June 27- Well now it's disappeared again.

I use sitemaps and the sitemap.xml file seems to be downloaded every few days. When my page reappeared it was listed under "site:www.mydomain.com" but now it's gone once again.

[edited by: tedster at 7:34 am (utc) on July 5, 2006]

wileystudios

1:14 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



My sites seem to be doing better each day but it seems to take a long time to be reindexed. It is like Google is taking small steps in building their new index. Because they had so many issues I think they are taking baby steps so that if there is an issue they can catch it before we all start screaming again.

Hissingsid

1:33 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Hi,

Previously pages from my site showed the same cache date. Now they are all over the place with the most recent being the index page 28th June.

Could this be part of what Big Daddy is all about ie the cache rotation is dependant on the frequency of changes. In my case the index page changes more than inner pages in terms (minute and infrequent changes but still more than inner pages) of content and inbound links.

Sid

dazzlindonna

1:51 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Has anyone considered the possibility that from Dec 27 to June 27 is exactly 6 months, and that perhaps a lot of sites with 6 month penalties were released on June 27? Those sites then moved back into the rankings, which of course, means some sites have to move out. Just a thought...

Dayo_UK

1:56 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)



dazzlindonna

Possible of course.

But the reason sites have dropped and other sites risen seems to be connected to the position of the homepage on a site:domain.com check (with some exceptions of course)

Which indicates to me that they are testing/playing with a filter/tool/knob that is connected with how Google reads/treats the root and therefore the rest of the site.

Matt Cutts did mention at one stage the more intuitive site:domain.com results were a part of the Canonical url situation/problem/bug.....which we know Google can not fix.

dazzlindonna

2:36 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Dayo, there's certainly something to the site: issue, but there've been something weird with it for a while now, so it's also possible that it is not directly related to the June 27 changes. It just struck me this morning that the 6 month thing was staring me in the face. Perhaps, it's a combination of both.

Wibfision

3:06 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Donna, if your theory is correct, why would certain sites have to move out? Wouldn't they just move down a few places for certain search terms, like all the other sites "displaced" by the new entries. Why would they have to virtually disappear? Why are some sites affected and not others?

dazzlindonna

3:25 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Don't know wibfusion. I haven't thought it all out, just thought I'd bring it up as a possibility. :)

funandgames

3:34 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I have a pretty good idea why so many of your sites are taking hits with these updates. This same reason is probaly hurting your Yahoo! and MSN rankings too. Sticky me for the reason.

ontrack

3:37 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The site:mysite.com issue is really interesting.

Shortly after the 27th I checked, not only was my index not shown first in the site: results but it listed over 12,000 pages from my site when it should be more like 950, to reach 12,000 they would have had to included every file ever created over the last six years including deleted, orphaned and noindex meta tags.

Yesterday I noticed that the index and higher content pages are still not showing first rather it is the piddly ones that get very little traffic - But - they are back to showing the expected 950 pages.

At [64.233.189.107...] the site: results are what they should be including the index highest quality and most popular pages first - but - my rankings at this dc are still the lousy ones that kicked in after the 27th rather than the good ones I had before.

By the way, my site has a cache date of July 2

What is the popular opinion on [64.233.189.107...] - is it showing old data that hasn't been corrupted yet or is it showing new data that has been fixed?

tigger

3:39 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>This same reason is probaly hurting your Yahoo! and MSN rankings too. Sticky me for the reason.

my site ranks fine on Y & MSN its G that I'm having problems with

>At [64.233.189.107...] the site: results are what they should be

I'll agree with you there sweet results and I'm 10th for a single word & with site:command working fine too

[edited by: tigger at 3:42 pm (utc) on July 6, 2006]

Dayo_UK

3:41 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)



funandgames

Not something you can share with the forum rather than by Sticky?

ontrack

I think the view is that DC shows old results - who knows though.

My site:domain.com check works correctly in that dc sometimes - but not all the time - and I am the same was you - rankings are poor in that DC like all DCs eg - not pre 27th results.

Bluesplinter

3:52 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



That's a good DC for me, with both site: working and my most important page ranking very well.

As for the pagecount thing, mine has always been wrong by at least a factor of ten. However, I have noticed one odd thing as the days roll by since the 27th... that outrageous page count is slowly dropping down. First it was around 109K, then 101K, then 93K, 85K, 76K, 65K, and now 58K. My whole site only has around 6000 pages for the index.

Shrug.

ontrack

4:12 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Interesting Bluesplinter, they may be doing some kind of clean up on older sites.

ScottD

4:41 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



At [64.233.189.107...] the site: results are what they should be

Our site came back on the 27th as others disappeared, and I'm very relieved to say it's still listed properly on the DC you mention here, with the new improved SERPs still there.

So...that's not the old listing - those results are something new.

It's showing different results to the current results for the site: search though. We're showing much less pages, but listing more of them without hitting the "similar pages" link.

I'd be happy with that.

tigger

4:43 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



so its agreed Google move [64.233.189.107...] over pls :0)

donelson

4:56 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



so its agreed Google move [64.233.189.107...] over pls :0)

No, please. For us, that still gives the same, crappy listings for all of our sites, INCLUDING the bad site: listings...

donelson

5:17 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



How important is it to be W3C compliant in your code?

Adobe-arse Dreamweaver says the DOCTYPE is good and there are no errors in our HTML, but the W3C moans and groans --

[validator.w3.org...]

over things that work in every browser on every machine I've seen in the past six years.

If Google's going to complain about W3C compliance, then 99% of pages they crawl will be wrong.

camchoice

5:22 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yes yes, please move that dc asap!

FrostyMug

5:25 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



i'm too suffering from 27th - 10% of previous search volume, and i just found i have a canonical issue on my site. in fact, my homepage is listed twice. also, half the pages are with the prefix, half without. I just put in an .htaccess fix, so I'll see what happens next. I also deleted my google sitemaps file. I haven't touched any pages yet, only added new ones. I don't see any improvement since 27th. some people may see higher volume today, but it could be because a lot of people are back from vacation.

europeforvisitors

5:28 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)



If Google's going to complain about W3C compliance, then 99% of pages they crawl will be wrong.

Not an issue.

ScottD

5:30 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I also think we had a canonical issue with our site - we did a 301, but kept sitemaps. I cannot see why sitemaps should affect you badly.

I'm not sure that was the issue in the end, but it can't hurt to clarify which is your desired root.

Root? Beer?

Dayo_UK

5:38 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)



Yep,

What a surprise people are starting to find canonical issues for the effected sites. Remember even if you think it is fixed Google might come back with a split site cache from 25 million years ago.

Same old story.

FrostyMug

5:41 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



ScottD,

i feel sitemaps are the cause of the supplementals for me. for about 6 months, i've been suffering from missing about 1/3rd of files in the google search. i decided to add sitemaps about a month ago. This helped because all the missing pages now were in the index and search volume was highest ever.. but... soon lots of pages started turning supplemental, and i've NEVER had supplementals. now, that i see half the site is supplemental, I'm going to have to say that sitemaps are to blame.

I'd rather have 2/3rd of the pages in the index, than have half the site as supplem, plus on top of that, have 10% of search volume :(

funandgames

6:25 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Dayo,

I once attempeted to share some information and got flamed pretty bad. Ogletree comes to mind especially.

Pico_Train

6:53 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Dayo, your contempt, frustration and near abandonment are palpable.

Keep at it, in the end, "Everyting gonna be alright."

tiori

7:05 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Sounds like Google needs to "flush" the entire index and start over. They have apparently lost control of it.

ontrack

7:12 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>> I also think we had a canonical issue with our site

I hate to appear "stupid" but what is canonical?

I'm not sure I know what a "supplemental" is either?

Thanks :)

ontrack

7:15 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



>> Adobe-arse Dreamweaver says the DOCTYPE is good and there are no errors in our HTML, but the W3C moans and groans --

Same with me and my html checkers versus W3C, so I have wondered if this was a factor as well, but europeforvisitors says not to woory.

europeforvisitors

8:31 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)



Other members have said that Google's own pages aren't W3C-compliant. I haven't checked but will take their word for it.

Plus, it's easy to find top-ranked pages with sloppy or old-school code--mine included. :-)

Martin40

8:54 pm on Jul 6, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I hate to appear "stupid" but what is canonical?

Canonical: Google indexes both your www and non-www domain >> duplicate content >> penalty

I'm not sure I know what a "supplemental" is either?

Supplemental: separate index used for arcane search terms. I.e.: pages not good enough for the main index, but too good not to index at all.

Am I right?

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