joi, 20 octombrie 2011

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


How the Economy is Killing Americans [Infographics]

Posted: 20 Oct 2011 02:47 PM PDT



With the current state of the economy, Americans are cutting back on basic necessities. Healthy nutrition and medical practices are declining; stress and anxiety are on the rise. See how the economy is really affecting our quality of life with this somber look at our mental, physical and financial health.

More Infographics.

Click on Image to Enlarge.

Source: creditloan


A Duet With Siri (iPhone 4S Song)

Posted: 19 Oct 2011 10:32 PM PDT



Siri can listen to you, talk to you, help you get things done, it understands you—but did you know Siri makes a great bandmate? Jonathan Mann proves it in this duet.


The 50 Best Breakfasts in the World

Posted: 19 Oct 2011 08:06 PM PDT

Many people consider breakfast their favorite meal of the day. This is especially true if they have a great breakfast to eat. These are some of the most delicious and scrumptious looking breakfasts that you have ever seen.

1. English breakfast


2. Breakfast in Iran


3. Cuban breakfast


4. Polish Breakfast


5. Spanish breakfast


6. Delicious Moroccan breakfast


7. A healthy Hawaiian breakfast


8. Swedish breakfast


9. Icelandic breakfast


10. Breakfast in Portugal


11. Breakfast in Australia


12. A Brazilian breakfast


13. An Italian breakfast


14. A Welsh breakfast


15. Breakfast in Denmark


16. A Philippines breakfast


17. An Alaskan breakfast


18. A traditional German breakfast


19. The famous American breakfast


20. The French breakfast


21. Breakfast in India


22. A hearty Scottish breakfast


23. Breakfast in Thailand


24. An Argentinian breakfast


25. An Irish breakfast


26. A Canadian breakfast


27. Breakfast in Mexico


28. A Russian breakfast


29. Breakfast in Vietnam


30. Breakfast in Peru


31. Breakfast in Bolivia


32. An Egyptian breakfast


33. Breakfast in Japan


34. Breakfast in China


35. Malaysian breakfast


36. Breakfast in Mongolia


37. Breakfast in Belize


38. A Hungarian breakfast


39. A Korean breakfast


40. Breakfast in Pakistan


41. An Estonian breakfast


42. Breakfast in Jordan


43. Breakfast in Venezuela


44. Breakfast in Colombia


45. Breakfast in Ghana


46. Breakfast in Uganda


47. A Bahamas breakfast


48. Breakfast in Costa Rica


49. Breakfast in the Dominican Republic


50. A Turkish breakfast

Source: hostelbookers


Crazy Celebrity Shoes

Posted: 19 Oct 2011 03:19 PM PDT

Crazy celebrity shoes are found on celebs of all ages. I don't know how they get their feet into some of these crazy shoes, but I guess being a celebrity means you sacrifice comfort for style.

Ranging from neat and interesting to ugly and frightening, take a look at some of these crazy celebrity shoes.

Beyonce


Marion Cotillard


Charlize Theron


Sharon Stone


Irina Lazaryanu


Lady Gaga


Lady Gaga


Cheryl Cole


Janet Jackson


Rihanna


Jennifer Connelly


Penelope Cruz


Eva Mendes


Mary Kate Olsen


Lily Allen


Tilda Swinton


Elizabeth Banks


Anne Hathaway


Jordin Sparks


Gwyneth Paltrow


Victoria Beckham


Solange Knowles


Lydia Hearst


Sarah Silverman


Gwyneth Paltrow


Michelle Monaghan


Becky Newton


Leighton Meester


Dita Von Teese


Zoe Soldana


Lake Bell


Taylor Momsen


Should I Change My URLs for SEO?

Should I Change My URLs for SEO?


Should I Change My URLs for SEO?

Posted: 19 Oct 2011 12:28 PM PDT

Posted by Dr. Pete

browser address barEvery SEO eventually gets fixated on a tactic. Maybe you read 100 blog posts about how to build the “perfectly” optimized URL, and you keep tweaking and tweaking until you get it just right. Fast-forward 2 months – you’re sitting on 17 layers of 301-redirects, you haven’t done any link-building, you haven’t written any content, you’re eating taco shells with mayonnaise for lunch, and your cat is dead.

Ok, maybe that’s a bit extreme. I do see a lot of questions about the "ideal" URL structure in Q&A, though. Most of them boil down to going from pretty good URLs to slightly more pretty good URLs.

All Change Is Risky

I know it’s not what the motivational speakers want you to hear, but in the real world, change carries risk. Even a perfectly executed site-wide URL change – with pristine 301-redirects – is going to take time for Google to process. During that time, your rankings may bounce. You may get some errors. If your new URL scheme isn’t universally better than the old one, some pages may permanently lose ranking. There’s no good way to A/B test a site-wide SEO change.

More often, it’s just a case of diminishing returns. Going from pretty good to pretty gooder probably isn’t worth the time and effort, let alone the risk. So, when should you change your URLs? I’m going to dive into 5 specific scenarios to help you answer that question…

(1) Dynamic URLs

A dynamic URL creates content from code and data and carries parameters, like this:

www.example.com/product.php?id=12345&color=4&size=3&session=67890

It’s a common SEO misconception that Google can’t read these URLs or gets cut off after 2 or 3 parameters. In 2011, that’s just not true – although there are reasonable limits on URL length. The real problems with dynamic URLs are usually more complex:

  • They don’t contain relevant keywords.
  • They’re more prone to creating duplicate content.
  • They tend to be less user-friendly (lower click-through).
  • They tend to be longer.

So, when are your URLs too dynamic? The example above definitely needs help. It’s long, it has no relevant keywords, the color and size parameters are likely creating tons of near-duplicates, and the session ID is creating virtually unlimited true duplicates. If you don’t want to be mauled by Panda, it’s time for a change.

In other cases, though, it’s not so simple. What if you have a blog post URL like this?

www.example.com/blog.php?topic=how-to-tame-a-panda

It’s technically a “dynamic” URL, so should you change it to something like:

www.example.com/blog/how-to-tame-a-panda

I doubt you’d see much SEO benefit, or that the rewards would outweigh the risks. In a perfect world, the second URL is better, and if I was starting a blog from scratch I’d choose that one, no question. On an established site with 1000s of pages, though, I’d probably sit tight.

(2) Unstructured URLs

Another common worry people have is that their URLs don’t match their site structure. For example, they have a URL like this one:

www.example.com/diamond-studded-ponies

...and they think they should add folders to represent their site architecture, like:

www.example.com/horses/bejeweled/diamond-studded-ponies

There’s a false belief in play here – people often think that URL structure signals site structure. Just because your URL is 3 levels deep doesn’t mean the crawlers will treat the page as being 3 levels deep. If the first URL is 6 steps from the home-page and the second URL is 1 step away, the second URL is going to get a lot more internal link-juice (all else being equal).

You could argue that the second URL carries more meaning for visitors, but, unfortunately, it’s also longer, and the most unique keywords are pushed to the end. In most cases, I’d lean toward the first version.

Of course, the reverse also applies. Just because a URL structure is “flat” and every page is one level deep, that doesn’t mean that you’ve created a flat site architecture. Google still has to crawl your pages through the paths you’ve built. The flatter URL may have some minor advantages, but it’s not going to change the way that link-juice flows through your site.

Structural URLs can also create duplicate content problems. Let’s say that you allow visitors to reach the same page via 3 different paths:

www.example.com/horses/bejeweled/diamond-studded-ponies
www.example.com/tags/ponies/diamond-studded-ponies
www.example.com/tags/shiny/diamond-studded-ponies

Now, you’ve created 2 pieces of duplicate content – Google is going to see 3 pages that look exactly the same. This is more of a crawl issue than a URL issue, and there are ways to control how these URLs get indexed, but an overly structured URL can exacerbate these problems.

(3) Long URLs

How long of a URL is too long? Technically, a URL should be able to be as long as it needs to be. Some browsers and servers may have limits, but those limits are well beyond anything we’d consider sane by SEO or usability standards. For example, IE8 can support a URL of up to 2,083 characters.

Practically speaking, though, long URLs can run into trouble. Very long URLs:

  • Dilute the ranking power of any given URL keyword
  • May hurt usability and click-through rates
  • May get cut off when people copy-and-paste
  • May get cut off by social media applications
  • Are a lot harder to remember

How long is too long is a bit more art than science. One of the key issues, in my mind, is redundancy. Good URLs are like good copy – if there’s something that adds no meaning, you should probably lose it. For example, here’s a URL with a lot of redundancy:

www.example.com/store/products/featured-products/product-tasty-tasty-waffles

If you have a “/store” subfolder, do you also need a “/products” layer? If we know you’re in the store/products layer, does your category have to be tagged as “featured-products” (why not just “featured”)? Is the “featured” layer necessary at all? Does each product have to also be tagged with “product-“? Are the waffles so tasty you need to say it twice?

In reality, I’ve seen much longer and even more redundant URLs, but that example represents some of the most common problems. Again, you have to consider the trade-offs. Fixing a URL like that one will probably have SEO benefits. Stripping “/blog” out of all your blog post URLs might be a nice-to-have, but it isn’t going to make much practical difference.

(4) Keyword Stuffing

Scenarios (3)-(5) have a bit of overlap. Keyword-stuffed URLs also tend to be long and may cannibalize other pages. Typically, though a keyword-stuffed URL has either a lot of repetition or tries to tackle every variant of the target phrase. For example:

www.example.com/ponies/diamond-studded-ponies-diamond-ponies-pony

It’s pretty rare to see a penalty based solely on keyword-stuffed URLs, but usually, if your URLs are spammy, it’s a telltale sign that your title tags, <h1>’s, copy, etc. are spammy. Even if Google doesn’t slap you around a little, it’s just a matter of focus. If you target the same phrase 14 different ways, you may get more coverage, but each phrase will also get less attention. Prioritize and focus – not just with URLs, but all keyword targeting. If you throw everything at the wall to see what sticks, you usually just end up with a dirty wall.

(5) Keyword Cannibalization

This is probably the toughest problem to spot, as it happens over an entire site – you can’t spot it in a single URL (and, practically speaking, it’s not just a URL problem). Keyword cannibalization results when you try to target the same keywords with too many URLs.

There’s no one right answer to this problem, as any site with a strong focus is naturally going to have pages and URLs with overlapping keywords. That’s perfectly reasonable. Where you get into trouble is splitting off pages into a lot of sub-pages just to sweep up every long-tail variant. Once you carry that too far, without the unique content to support it, you’re going to start to dilute your index and make your site look “thin”.

The URLs here are almost always just a symptom of a broader disease. Ultimately, if you’ve gotten too ambitious with your scope, you’re going to need to consolidate those pages, not just change a few URLs. This is even more important post-Panda. It used to be that thin content would only impact that content – at worst, it might get ignored. Now, thin content can jeopardize the rankings of your entire site.

Proceed With Caution

If you do decide a sitewide URL change is worth the risk, plan and execute it carefully. How to implement a sitewide URL change is beyond the scope of this post, but keep in mind a couple of high-level points:

  1. Use proper 301-redirects.
  2. Redirect URL-to-URL, for every page you want to keep.
  3. Update all on-page links.
  4. Don’t chain redirects, if you can avoid it.
  5. Add a new XML sitemap.
  6. Leave the old sitemap up temporarily.

Point (3) bears repeating. More than once, I’ve seen someone make a sitewide technical SEO change, implement perfect 301 redirects, but then not update all of their navigation. Your crawl paths are still the most important signal to the spiders – make sure you’re 100% internally consistent with the new URLs.

That last point (6) is a bit counterintuitive, but I know a number of SEOs who insist on it. The problem is simple – if crawlers stop seeing the old URLs, they might not crawl them to process the 301-redirects. Eventually, they’ll discover the new URLs, but it might take longer. By leaving the old sitemap up temporarily, you encourage crawlers to process the redirects. If those 301-redirects are working, this won’t create duplicate content. Usually, you can remove the old sitemap after a few weeks.

Even done properly and for the right reasons, measure carefully and expect some rankings bounce over the first couple of weeks. Sometimes, Google just needs time to evaluate the new structure.


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