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What is going on? Jakob is right about PDF being unfit!
People do, at least I do! Not those files, but what's in them. NOT the files themselves, but the content that's in them. Big difference.
However, I really don't care to wait for dog-slow files to load and half the time crash my browser to boot. What I see as a plus is that Google will show an HTML version of those pages, which alleviates my suffering quite a bit but it's not exactly something we can link to if we'd like to.
No, PDF files are not fit for human consumption; and without Google they're more than useless a good part of the time. Just my experience and my two centavos. They're as bad as Javascript, if not worse, which crashes me at least a half dozen times a day and is permanently on my list of what I most love to hate.
[edited by: Marcia at 9:43 am (utc) on Aug. 11, 2003]
PDF are taking over!
Yes I am also observing this Alongwith the Amazon and other listings which are now dominating the SERPS. Wil be interesting to wait till GoogleGuy comes up with his answers in this thread More eBay, Amazon, Dealtime, Epinions, etc. in Results [webmasterworld.com]
I have some on my site to publish some math concepts a friend asked me for. They are more popular than the heavily indexed free software subsite.
The PDF is not for reading "on the spot" but is quite good for keeping on your machine and reading later.
[webmasterworld.com...]
Out of the first 100 results 58 are PDF or DOC
58% doc/pdfs in the first 100 results makes me think that PDFO (pdf optimization? ha) may be valuable...does anyone know pointers on this?
I am hoping they do add seperate tab on the google home page to handle docs/pdf's in the future. Personally I hate pdfs. I have never have had a machine that can handle them without some lag.
I do like the view as .html option but would prefer not to see them at all.
2 "Normal folks" have also noticed the ammount of pdf's and doc's in the serps and asked me about it. The major complaint is not the pdfs but the way their computers handle them.
Perhaps google should swap the view as .html with a view original .pdf, and make the title and url link to the .html version. I know this would take away some of the:
"this might be what I was looking for"
*click* ............
*10 seconds go by* .............
*click* *click* *click*
"random swearing"
*crtl + alt + del*
I have become a much more of a "cautious clicker" since the serps have been flooded with these pdf's. Also I add -.pdf to many of my queries now.
Ps. An interesting aside that we can learn from this situation is that the number of links on a page really has nothing to do with it's placement in the SERPS -- PDFs usually have no links.
Jordan
I like Google, but I honestly think it's results have deteriorated quite a bit. As a result, I'm having to jump more and more over the top five or 10 and going down three, four, or more pages to find the info I need. If PDF and doc files which contain relevant info float above all the spammy and mirror sites, I say more power to them.
Hopefully some day their PHD's will wake up and realize you cannot completely remove the human factor and depend solely on computer algorithms. Hopefully, it's before another SE has caught up and then bypassed them.
Wil be interesting to wait till GoogleGuy comes up with his answers in this thread More eBay, Amazon, Dealtime, Epinions, etc. in Results
Unfortunately the thread has been locked. I can see no reason given but I can guess :o)
Here is part of what GG said in his last post there:
We're going to take whatever actions need to happen to make sure that our search is where we want it to be
I fear that *may* well mean that nothing will change on both the PDF and Amazon problems. It very hard to tell with political type speak.
It would also appear that many threads are being locked or deleted simply for speaking ones mind. In particular, mention anything bad about DMOZ and the thread is history.
Dave
Hope that helps,
GoogleGuy
Great! How about all the mention of Amazon results?
I don't particularly like it when a thread is locked/deleted without any reason given. People will always assume the worst unless told otherwise (or is it just my suspicious mind :o))
Dave
Hmmm, Iffin only you had started the sentence with the qualifier "Some", I'd been a tad more inclined to have said yeppers. However, I can't. I know far too many peeps who take delight in making lemons into lemonade, no matter how many lemons they come across (and yeah, some of them probably actually invite the lemons, up to and including wearing signs that say "will squeeze for juice". ;^)
Most people......
Will that get a "yeppers" from you, or does it have to be "some"?
Dave
1 - doc
2 - pdf
3 - ppt
4 - pdf
5 - ppt
6 - html
7 - html (same company as 6)
8 - html
9 - pdf
10 - asp (does not mention key phrase)
In the mean time, Google keeps juggling new projects and experimenting with their algo.
Unfortunately, GoogleGuy has been a little too busy putting out other fires, rather than worry about poor user results.
How ridiculous can that be? Meanwhile the adwords are getting more attractive to click through.
1.Is this an intentional design to muddle the regular serp a little as to make the adwords 'stand out'?
2.Is there any behind the door agreement between Google and these Corporations(Amazon, Dealtime, etc.)?
3.Is this simply an engineering problem?
Whatever it is, we want to know.
Let's be hoenst, PDF is arguably the worst format to become 'popular' that was ever created. Most technically oriented people hate it, and most non-computer literate people don't know what the heck to do with it. IMHO it's wasting everybody's time to include it in the index.
If my grandma is searching from her AOL account for a special kind of sewing method is she better off receiving 10 PDF documents leading to instructions for sewing machines and DOC files for contracts with companies that do mass stitching and sewing or is she better off receiving 10 HTML pages showing various sewing methods and maybe pages from messageboards where people asked similar questions? I think it's obvious the latter is the more appropriate response. If somebody wants 50 page PDF files on how to operate some brand of sewing machine then I'm sure they're going to make their search string more specific to that. Or just go to their brand of sewing machine's website.
Anyway, that's just my two cents.
Basically, 'doc' files can possibly compromise some sensitive information according to the article.