Forum Moderators: open
<added> belated congratulations, Vitaplease</added>
I moved host 5 months ago.
For fear of googlebot missing the move, I was sweating it out.
Googlebot found it within a day.
We try to make it seamless and fast for people moving hosts. Glad it's worked well for folks. My rule of thumb is to bring both sites up on the two different IP addresses and then switch the DNS to the new IP address. After you see Googlebot visit the new IP address, you can probably take down the old site. Doesn't hurt to leave the old site up a bit longer, but you shouldn't need to worry about it.
GoogleGuy, Googlebot switched to the new site asap, but Mediapartners-Google/2.1 (+http://www.googlebot.com/bot.html) is still pounding my old site.
That's great :) one thing less to worry about.
How about changing domain names? That's a bit more complicated with backlinks pointing to the old domain and all that - i know the spider's pretty quick, but is it still around three-four weeks for everything to settle all the way to the SERPS?
Any recent experiences - within the last month or so?
/claus
I created links to a brand new site on the 20th (which contains 1500 subdomains which are not linked from the front page :-) ).
Googlebot looked at almost all of the subdomains on the 21st and has deep crawled on the 22nd.
A really strange phenominon (imo) is that it found the subdomains apparently without viewing the pages which link to them! How is this possible, any ideas?
Best regards
Shady
You can't really create an active subdomain or domain without telling the whole internet about it. Except for links(*), there's only one [google.com] way that googlebot can discover your new sub/domain ;)
If this is right, it's very cool. Only, it seems
robots.txt should be the first thing on a domain now, i'm glad Googlebot respects it. /claus