
Google has landed a deal with the CIA for its enterprise search solution, Government Computer News reports via IESDB. I hope this doesn’t meant the CIA will next set its sights on Google’s version of the Database of Intentions….
Google has landed a deal with the CIA for its enterprise search solution, Government Computer News reports via IESDB. I hope this doesn't meant the CIA will next set its sights on Google's version of the Database of Intentions…….

. EWeek reports that a new software application is now available that blocks paid search ads on most popular search engines. I wonder if this will take off, or is ephemeral? It depends on how consumers react to the next wave of search engines – how Yahoo and MSN do…
.…and with his conclusions, I must say I agree…….
A recent Blog Search Engine survey written up in Marketing Wonk shows that 13% of bloggers run ads, 9% have been "approached by companies to blog about their products" and 7% blog for money. While Marketing Wonk spun these as low numbers, I disagree, I think they are quite…

I spent much of yesterday morning talking with Brewster Kahle, of WAIS, Alexa, and Internet Archive fame. Brewster is a very fun mind, and he's working on about ten Really Interesting Things at once. First, it's easy to forget how important the Internet Archive's work truly is. The public…

Type "miserable failure" into Google. Out pops Google's top pick: George W. Bush. This comes to me via Farber's IP list, but many others have crossed my desk over the past year, including one on "weapons of mass destruction" which – if you hit "I'm Feeling Lucky" – still…

UPDATE: This was a case of Googlebombing, see here….
Today I bounced around a bit, from a very stimulating two hours with Louis Monier, founder of Alta Vista and current head of R&D/Search at eBay, to attending a CMO roundtable discussion at Yahoo where co-founder David Filo spoke, to a Churchill Club dinner in SF where Walt, Kara, Greg…
So I am offline today (down in the valley meeting Louis Monier and various folks at Yahoo) and I checked into a local Starbucks, and hey, I'm the feed of the day on Feedster! Welcome all of you who might stop by thanks to the pointer. For a tour of…
Thanks Scott!
I've been thinking lately about the role of blogs and RSS in search, and that, of course, has led me to both the Semantic Web and to Technorati, Feedster, and many others. Along those lines, I recently finished a column for 2.0 on blogs and business information. I can't reveal…
For those of you who don't follow the vagaries of search engine index updates, the past few weeks may have been pretty uneventful. But for the businesses and marketers who make their living by ranking well in Google's listings, it's been a pretty tumultuous month. That's because once again…
For those of you who don’t follow the vagaries of search engine index updates, the past few weeks may have been pretty uneventful. But for the businesses and marketers who make their living by ranking well in Google’s listings, it’s been a pretty tumultuous month. That’s because once again the Google Dance has swept through the search engine markets, and this last one was unique.
“Google Dance” refers to the process by which Google updates its index – the master code that determines which listings you see as a result of your queries. Because it is a massive index, and because Google often wants or needs to incorporate various tweaks and refinements to its site-ranking secret sauce (in particular to fight spam), it can take days or even weeks for a new index to settle across the web. The folks over at WebmasterWorld track this stuff quite closely, and have taken to naming each update alphabetically, following the nomenclature usually reserved for hurricanes. This past one happens to be F, and has been dubbed (dub-ya’d?) Florida.
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