- Key word as subset?
- Posted by Ed Jay on January 17th, 2006
Striving for space for more keywords, I'm wondering if search engines key
on subsets of key words. For example, if one were searching for the word
Japan, would the word Japanese trigger a hit?
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Ed Jay (remove M to respond by email)
- Posted by Mark Goodge on January 17th, 2006
On Mon, 16 Jan 2006 22:47:48 -0800, Ed Jay put finger to keyboard and
typed:
Dunno about the others, but Google won't - it matches at word
boundaries only.
Mark
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"Would you save my soul, tonight?"
- Posted by John Bokma on January 17th, 2006
Mark Goodge <usenet@listmail.good-stuff.co.uk> wrote:
http://www.google.com/search?q=perl%20programmer
have a close peek at that SERP.
--
John Experienced (web) developer: http://castleamber.com/
Perl SEO tools: http://johnbokma.com/perl/
NEW ----> Textpad reference card (pdf): http://johnbokma.com/textpad/
- Posted by Duende on January 17th, 2006
On 16 Jan 2006 John Bokma wrote in alt.www.webmaster
Showoff
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D?
- Posted by John Bokma on January 17th, 2006
Duende <myusenet@sify.com> wrote:
It's the one I know from the top of my head (somehow ;-) which shows that
Google somehow is aware that a perl programmer does perl programming :-D
Maybe it's also aware that someone in Japan likes Japanese food.
--
John Experienced (web) developer: http://castleamber.com/
Perl SEO tools: http://johnbokma.com/perl/
NEW ----> Textpad reference card (pdf): http://johnbokma.com/textpad/
- Posted by William Tasso on January 17th, 2006
Fleeing from the madness of the Posted via Supernews,
http://www.supernews.com jungle
Ed Jay <edMbj@aes-intl.com> stumbled into news:alt.www.webmaster
and said:
What you're looking for is called "word stemming"
<q src: http://www.google.com/help/basics.html >Google now uses stemming
technology. Thus, when appropriate, it will search not only for your
search terms, but also for words that are similar to some or all of those
terms. If you search for pet lemur dietary needs, Google will also search
for pet lemur diet needs, and other related variations of your terms. Any
variants of your terms that were searched for will be highlighted in the
snippet of text accompanying each result.</q>
Other S/Es will be using different algo-thingies - if at all.
--
William Tasso
Save the drama
for your Mama.
- Posted by Duende on January 17th, 2006
On 17 Jan 2006 John Bokma wrote in alt.www.webmaster
Google just thinks you are quite a stud. Has nothing to do with your perls.
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D?
- Posted by John Bokma on January 17th, 2006
Duende <myusenet@sify.com> wrote:
So it's basically perls for the swines :-(
--
John Experienced (web) developer: http://castleamber.com/
Perl SEO tools: http://johnbokma.com/perl/
NEW ----> Textpad reference card (pdf): http://johnbokma.com/textpad/
- Posted by hug on January 17th, 2006
Ed Jay <edMbj@aes-intl.com> wrote:
If your seo is tied to the specifics of search-engine algorithms,
every time they tweak a search engine to improve the results according
to their criteria, you get jerked around. Personally that's not
something I want to sign up for, ymmv.
--
http://www.ren-prod-inc.com/hug_soft...action=contact


