Forum Moderators: open
People keep arguing back and forward, but having read almost every post, all I see are rehashes of the same old rumours, respun as truthes, until the origin of such belief is lost in the mist of forum threads past.
So, my questions are:
1. For thoise taht believe, what are you basing this assumption on, apart from the lack of an update? (REMEMBER: Lack of evidence is not evidence of a lack)
2. Has anyone seen a change in the number of backlinks for their site since the last update, or seen links updated on different sites on different days? (this would be a good indicator)
3. For those that do not believe, how long before no update does equal rolling update?
4. What effect will this have on Link Rep and PageRank, and how often will these elements be updated?
I am starting my own investigations, with the following being my basis for a conclusion:
1. Backlinks changing on different sites on different days.
2. PageRank changing on different sites on different days.
Any other suggestions?
Cheers.
Even though I have low PR rankings for these pages, I am beating out some pretty major players in the SERPS including Yahoo and other big sites that i don't want to mention or it will give away the industry. Now I am beginning to wonder about a fluke incident as the rankings are holding strong. This might prove incremental indexing....
EquityMind
I personally think another way round and believe that PR toolbar is working better than before and now displaying a more accurate PR of a given page in its last iteration cycle.
To give an example - Before Dominic and Esmeralda, PR toolbar can easily be decieved by unethical SEO and webmaster eg. the use of robots.txt file for the linked pages. If you got an index page of PR6 and put the linked page at the same root level of index page and then add robots.txt file to prevent Googlebot from crawling that linked page. The toolbar will be *DECEIVED* and show PR5 for that linked page though that page has never been crawled nor known by Google. Now toolbar is smarter and display the PR for what that page is worth for.
The only problem is that it does not display "real-time" PR.
>> Continuous Update - looking for evidence
Yes / no / Maybe? ARRRGGGHH!
I think it depends upon one's interpretation of the word "Update"!
If it means - new index, new backlinks, and new PR, then the answer is "NO".
If it means only for new index - then "YES".
The phenomenom that we are seeing now is like a "constant everflux" with higher frequency and more vibration.
All these processes seem to occur independently nowadays.
We could still call the recalculation of backlinks and algo changes 'updates', I don't think just adding and refreshing pages deserve the name anymore :)
The correct new name for DeepFreshBot is SmartDeepFreshBot. Here is what it is doing:
1. It crawls your site, if it finds new links it goes after those pages. PROOF: For some old pages, where I changed the title tag, I placed additional links on my site on level 2 pages: they were re-indexed
2. The BOT also determines if your page is actually fresh. It 1st crawls and works out a score for the page based on all the code. If it finds that score has changed as compared to the old score, it re-indexes the page. PROOF: Pages where I have dynamic content are being re-indexed very quickly.
Approximately two month ago I removed the incoming links of one of my pages. This page had no external incoming links thus it's now an orphan. Therefore, (if back links were updated) the page should be removed from the index or (at least) rank low. However, it is still #1 (of 20000). (I found similar behaviour for numerous other pages.)
Thus it seems that backlinks are not updated. (I would guess that PR is also not updated.) However, (as already mentioned) anchor text seems be continuously updated.
Proving ... GG isn't being 100% truthful when he says that all back links should be up to date.
Proving ... GG isn't being 100% truthful when he says that all back links should be up to date.
I have run (for about the last week) allinurl: and link: over the two big newspapewrs in Australia, as well as checking the PR of a few pages. The allinurl: count changes daily, but link has been completely static, as has PR. Given that most new urls will point to the home page, that would indicate that, at the very least, links aren't constantly updated.
Rolling update? Batch processing? Not really sure. More data needed.
That said, rolling update seems pretty likely, or at the very least a new form of Dance, split into a couple of discreet sections. I think HitProf's ideas sound pretty reasonable, and are a "best guess" IMHO.
Would be much easier to follow the discussion.
That'll be gv and cw I think.
Continued in: [webmasterworld.com...]