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salam every one, this is a topic from google web master centrale blog: Based on your input, we've recently made a few changes to the preferred domain feature of webmaster tools. And since you've had some questions about this feature, we'd like to answer them.

The preferred domain feature enables you to tell us if you'd like URLs from your site crawled and indexed using the www version of the domain (http://www.example.com) or the non-www version of the domain (http://example.com). When we initially launched this, we added the non-preferred version to your account when you specified a preference so that you could see any information associated with the non-preferred version. But many of you found that confusing, so we've made the following changes:
  • When you set the preferred domain, we no longer will add the non-preferred version to your account.
  • If you had previously added the non-preferred version to your account, you'll still see it listed there, but you won't be able to add a Sitemap for the non-preferred version.
  • If you have already set the preferred domain and we had added the non-preferred version to your account, we'll be removing that non-preferred version from your account over the next few days.
Note that if you would like to see any information we have about the non-preferred version, you can always add it to your account.

Here are some questions we've had about this preferred domain feature, and our replies.

Once I've set my preferred domain, how long will it take before I see changes?
The time frame depends on many factors (such as how often your site is crawled and how many pages are indexed with the non-preferred version). You should start to see changes in the few weeks after you set your preferred domain.

Is the preferred domain feature a filter or a redirect? Does it simply cause the search results to display on the URLs that are in the version I prefer?
The preferred domain feature is not a filter. When you set a preference, we:
  • Consider all links that point to the site (whether those links use the www version or the non-www version) to be pointing at the version you prefer. This helps us more accurately determine PageRank for your pages.
  • Once we know that both versions of a URL point to the same page, we try to select the preferred version for future crawls.
  • Index pages of your site using the version you prefer. If some pages of your site are indexed using the www version and other pages are indexed using the non-www version, then over time, you should see a shift to the preference you've set.
If I use a 301 redirect on my site to point the www and non-www versions to the same version, do I still need to use this feature?
You don't have to use it, as we can follow the redirects. However, you still can benefit from using this feature in two ways: we can more easily consolidate links to your site and over time, we'll direct our crawl to the preferred version of your pages.

If I use this feature, should I still use a 301 redirect on my site?
You don't need to use it for Googlebot, but you should still use the 301 redirect, if it's available. This will help visitors and other search engines. Of course, make sure that you point to the same URL with the preferred domain feature and the 301 redirect.

You can find more about this in our webmaster help center.this is a topic published in 2013... to get contents for your blog or your forum, just contact me at: devnasser@gmail.com
salam every one, this is a topic from google web master centrale blog:

Page titles are an important part of our search results: they’re the first line of each result and they’re the actual links our searchers click to reach websites. Our advice to webmasters has always been to write unique, descriptive page titles (and meta descriptions for the snippets) to describe to searchers what the page is about.

We use many signals to decide which title to show to users, primarily the <title> tag if the webmaster specified one. But for some pages, a single title might not be the best one to show for all queries, and so we have algorithms that generate alternative titles to make it easier for our users to recognize relevant pages. Our testing has shown that these alternative titles are generally more relevant to the query and can substantially improve the clickthrough rate to the result, helping both our searchers and webmasters. About half of the time, this is the reason we show an alternative title.

Other times, alternative titles are displayed for pages that have no title or a non-descriptive title specified by the webmaster in the HTML. For example, a title using simply the word "Home" is not really indicative of what the page is about. Another common issue we see is when a webmaster uses the same title on almost all of a website’s pages, sometimes exactly duplicating it and sometimes using only minor variations. Lastly, we also try to replace unnecessarily long or hard-to-read titles with more concise and descriptive alternatives.

For more information about how you can write better titles and meta descriptions, and to learn more about the signals we use to generate alternative titles, we've recently updated the Help Center article on this topic. Also, we try to notify webmasters when we discover titles that can be improved on their websites through the HTML Suggestions feature in Webmaster Tools; you can find this feature in the Diagnostics section of the menu on the left hand side.

As always, if you have any questions or feedback, please tell us in the Webmaster Help Forum.

this is a topic published in 2013... to get contents for your blog or your forum, just contact me at: devnasser@gmail.com
salam every one, this is a topic from google web master centrale blog: (Cross-posted on the Inside Search blog)

Webmaster level: All

For many months, we’ve been focused on trying to return high-quality sites to users. Earlier this year, we rolled out our “Panda” change for searches in English around the world. Today we’re continuing that effort by rolling out our algorithmic search improvements in different languages. Our scientific evaluation data show that this change improves our search quality across the board and the response to Panda from users has been very positive.

For most languages, this change impacts typically 6-9% of queries to a degree that a user might notice. This is distinctly lower than the initial launch of Panda, which affected almost 12% of English queries to a noticeable amount. We are launching this change for all languages except Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, where we continue to test improvements.

For sites that are affected by this algorithmic change, we have a post providing guidance on how Google searches for high-quality sites. We also have webmaster forums in many languages for publishers who wish to give additional feedback and get advice. We’ll continue working to do the right thing for our users and serve them the best results we can.

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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