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steve2470

(37,457 posts)
Thu Mar 27, 2014, 10:32 AM Mar 2014

Interesting Facts About Google Search Engine

http://someinterestingfacts.net/interesting-facts-about-google-search-engine/

But how does Google build this index- and how does it ‘populate’ it with accurate and meaningful results data that will be useful to users? Even Google has to start somewhere, so it uses software programs known as spiders, also commonly referred to as crawlers or Googlebots. These useful little crawlers are sent out initially to the most logical places on the web. If you search for ‘Marmite’, most likely the first site the spider will have compiled your search results by visiting will be www.marmite.com, so no rocket science as yet. This first stage of website search is known as the ‘seed’ level.

After we pass the seed level we start to branch out. The spiders will then crawl outwards further and follow links from the initial pages that it finds and start to weave a web of interconnected websites that share relevance in terms of content. The spider builds up a pattern of pages linked to pages, which must be recursively revisited in order to ensure they still contain content relating to the original search. Pages are revisited based on frequency ‘policies’ that are set by software that resides on Google’s servers. But what we need to remember is that the web is so vast and changeable that no spider will ever capture all the information out there.

So let’s start with a search. Say we want to look up ‘toasted cheese sandwiches’. We type in those three words and press Return. Google’s query processor software then gets to work filtering through its indexes to decide which links to present. But hang on – what’s to stop us getting results on cheese making, results on toaster-buying advice and results on the Earl of Sandwich? Well, Google asks questions. More than 200 questions in fact. You could say that Google’s software uses a little artificial intelligence fiere because it tries to apply human logic to the vast lumps of raw data that it has to wade through.

To decide which ‘toasted cheese sandwich’ website to present to us, Google asks whether the words appear in the website’s title or URL. Google asks how many times the words appear in the correct order on any given website. Does the page include synonyms for ‘toasted cheese sandwich’ such as ‘grilled Cheddar buttie’ or ‘hot cheesy panini’. Discussing the mechanics of how to describe a toasted cheese sandwich might sound silly, but it’s all logical to the guys who run Google’s data centre.


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Interesting Facts About Google Search Engine (Original Post) steve2470 Mar 2014 OP
In creating a website for a retailer, I used key words in the page titles and in the pages' URLs. John1956PA Mar 2014 #1

John1956PA

(2,654 posts)
1. In creating a website for a retailer, I used key words in the page titles and in the pages' URLs.
Thu Mar 27, 2014, 11:11 AM
Mar 2014

Also, I hid key words at the tops of the pages. After the pages were published, I submitted them to the Google page which accepts web page submissions. I then performed multiple Google searches using as search terms the key terms and the retailer's name. On the Google results page, the link to the site which I created came up at the top. Eventually, when used search terms consisting of only the key words (and omitting the retailer's name) the Google results page showed the link to the retailer's site in a prominent location, even though it was not at the top.

Bing, on the other hand, is a more challenging when it comes to seeding a particular website link into the Bing results page.


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