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salam every one, this is a topic from google web master centrale blog:
To web surfers, Google Chrome is a quick, exciting new browser. As webmasters, it's a good reminder that regardless of the browser your visitors use to access your site—Firefox, Internet Explorer, Google Chrome, Safari, etc.—browser compatibility is often a high priority. When your site renders poorly or is difficult to use on many browsers you risk losing your visitors' interest, and, if you're running a monetized site, perhaps their business. Here's a quick list to make sure you're covering the basics:

Step 1: Ensure browser compatibility by focusing on accessibility
The same techniques that make your site more accessible to search engines, such as static HTML versus fancy features like AJAX, often help your site's compatibility on various browsers and numerous browser versions. Simpler HTML is often more easily cross-compatible than the latest techniques.

Step 2: Consider validating your code
If your code passes validation, you've eliminated one potential issue in browser compatibility. With validated code, you won't need to rely on each browsers' error handling technique. There's a greater chance that your code will function across different browsers, and it's easier to debug potential problems.

Step 3: Check that it's usable (not just properly rendered)
It's important that your site displays well; but equally important, make sure that users can actually use your site's features in their browser. Rather than just looking at a snapshot of your site, try navigating through your site on various browsers or adding items to your shopping cart. It's possible that the clickable area of a linked image or button may change from browser to browser. Additionally, if you use JavaScript for components like your shopping cart, it may work in one browser but not another.

Step 4: Straighten out the kinks
This step requires some trial and error, but there are several good places to help reduce the "trials" as your make your site cross-browser compatible. Doctype is an open source reference with test cases for cross-browser compatibility, as well as CSS tips and tricks.

For example, let's say you're wondering how to find the offset for an element on your page. You notice that your code works in Internet Explorer, but not Firefox and Safari. It turns out that certain browsers are a bit finicky when it comes to finding the offset—thankfully contributors to Doctype provide the code to work around the issue.

Step 5: Share your browser compatibility tips and resources!
We'd love to hear the steps you're taking to ensure your site works for the most visitors. We've written a more in-depth Help Center article on the topic which discusses such things as specifying a character encoding. If you have additional tips, please share. And, if you have browser compatibility questions regarding search, please ask!

this is a topic published in 2013... to get contents for your blog or your forum, just contact me at: devnasser@gmail.com
Seo Master present to you:
How to Increase Blog Traffic With a Simple Logic- Let me pour my logic on this beloved Forum. Earlier I said the science of SEO are many and can also cause we could not understand and either a science where we should use. So many were plunged into the abyss.
How to Increase Blog Traffic With a Simple Logic

Before it's actually about the placement of the keywords, many argue, including me, that keyword in the content is important, whether it is bold, underline, italic. But is it as important as that? Here I answer based on my logic. If one of the best spicy-spicy criticized.

The placement of the actual Keyword is in the Title and description are not Content? And please laboured to create a unique description, because visitors other than reading the title they will read the description, and also don't take a description of the content if there is no containing keywords.

Remember this only as an opinion. Example: see the following image area with the keyword "AMD Turbo Dock Technology"


When people type in a keyword in the search engine, then it will automatically Google or search engines will thicken your related Keywords generated searches, and it was only done in a title and description rather than content.

Therefore I say put or do keywords in the titile and descriptions without having tired-tired of nge-bold, underline and italic keywords in content.

And from the pictures to note clearly and thoroughly, the keyword is in the title if there is the same in the description will automatically be bold by SEmesin search. Instead, as much as any description that exists but there is no word that is similar to the title and until the end there will be no thickening that occurs in the description. And thickening that is done automatically in search results that is a keyword (Keywords).

Addendum:
The description will appear in the search results just 160 words, so what if more? More than 160 said it's not a problem, because later there will be a (...), and keep the keywords you enter in the description is not in excess of 160 words.

Many Thanks –

Although this technique is very good (in my opinion) but don't forget tetetap note the SEO Onpage and Off Page SEO. For onpage SEO you can use Blogspot SEO Template (Blogspot users special)
2013, By: Seo Master
salam every one, this is a topic from google web master centrale blog:
Duplicate content has been a hot topic among webmasters and our blog for over three years. One of our first posts on the subject came out in December of '06, and our most recent post was last week. Over the past three years, we've been providing tools and tips to help webmasters control which URLs we crawl and index, including a) use of 301 redirects, b) www vs. non-www preferred domain setting, c) change of address option, and d) rel="canonical".

We're happy to announce another feature to assist with managing duplicate content: parameter handling. Parameter handling allows you to view which parameters Google believes should be ignored or not ignored at crawl time, and to overwrite our suggestions if necessary.


Let's take our old example of a site selling Swedish fish. Imagine that your preferred version of the URL and its content looks like this:
http://www.example.com/product.php?item=swedish-fish

However, you may also serve the same content on different URLs depending on how the user navigates around your site, or your content management system may embed parameters such as sessionid:
http://www.example.com/product.php?item=swedish-fish&category=gummy-candy
http://www.example.com/product.php?item=swedish-fish&trackingid=1234&sessionid=5678

With the "Parameter Handling" setting, you can now provide suggestions to our crawler to ignore the parameters category, trackingid, and sessionid. If we take your suggestion into account, the net result will be a more efficient crawl of your site, and fewer duplicate URLs.

Since we launched the feature, here are some popular questions that have come up:

Are the suggestions provided a hint or a directive?
Your suggestions are considered hints. We'll do our best to take them into account; however, there may be cases when the provided suggestions may do more harm than good for a site.

When do I use parameter handling vs rel="canonical"?
rel="canonical" is a great tool to manage duplicate content issues, and has had huge adoption. The differences between the two options are:
  • rel="canonical" has to be put on each page, whereas parameter handling is set at the host level
  • rel="canonical" is respected by many search engines, whereas parameter handling suggestions are only provided to Google
Use which option works best for you; it's fine to use both if you want to be very thorough.

As always, your feedback on our new feature is appreciated.

this is a topic published in 2013... to get contents for your blog or your forum, just contact me at: devnasser@gmail.com
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