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A Classified way to drive business to your web site
0 Comments | Posted by admin in Web Design
There are more than 105 million of them in the United States. Worldwide, there could be at least 250 million of them. Them, according to statistics from the Nielsen/Net Ratings service, is the number of active Web surfers. 250 million in the whole world? The figure is more than the populations of Canada, Australia, Great Britain, and a few non-English speaking countries combined. Thatâs a lot of them!
With so many active surfers around, you would think Webmasters and site owners have an easy time attracting them. Actually, they face an uphill battle to bring visitors and, more importantly, consumers to their Web sites. And a Web site without traffic is like a store built in the middle of the desert. You could have the greatest products and most attractive Web design around, but theyâre worthless if no one visits them.
There is one way, however, to turn your Web site into an oasis of business, a way to drive as much traffic to your site as your server can handle: a classified ad.
Although it may sound like a technical progression, the term Web 2.0 actually refers to a change in thinking rather than any structural evolution. Web 2.0 refers to the revolution of creativity and connectivity that has been seen all across the internet in the past few years. In the past, or with Web 1.0, the internet was a great web of lone websites each existing ignorant of each other.
The amazing new trend with Web 2.0 is the tendency for the web to pull together, with services and features becoming interconnected. A few key examples of this revolution can be seen with sites such as Digg, Delicious, and other internet news aggregators. Bringing the users into the process, a Web 2.0 site such as Digg relies on the creativity of the average user to fuel the ever burning content engine.
The power of users to pull together, analyze, and dispense information is a pillar of the Web 2.0 age. Instead of relying on webmasters to provide static content, the process has become massively open, with the content becoming a dynamic resource that is shaped by the community itself. This can be seen elsewhere, in other Web 2.0 technologies such as blogging software. The community itself promotes the content it finds most valuable. One technique that has become extremely popular has been the use of meta-tags, where popular searches and content bubble to the top of an interface.
Critical Analysis of Web Crawlers’ Algorithms
Minou Parhizkar 0527553
Abstract- A web crawler is a program or automated script which browses the World Wide Web in a methodical, automated manner. The objective of the paper is to make a make a critical analysis of the algorithms used by Web Crawlers. It intends to review and evaluate the different and various approaches to the methods used by the different web search engines to catalog the information.
Web Crawler, Search Engines, WWW, SEO
•I. INTRODUCTION
The software that searches for information and returns sites which provide that information is referred to as a search engine or web crawler. Everyone uses web crawlers-indirectly, at least! Every time you search the Internet using a service such as Alta Vista, Excite, or Lycos, you’re making use of an index that’s based on the output of a web crawler. Web crawlers-also known as spiders, robots, or wanderers-are software programs that automatically traverse the Web. Search engines use crawlers to find what’s on the Web; then they construct an index of the pages that were found.
