Let us show you how your current site is doing and if your competitors are being favored by the search engines.
Let us show you how your current site is doing and if your competitors are being favored by the search engines.
Yahoo! is updating its webmail capabilities, and a new feature is going to make connecting with contacts even easier than ever. According to the Search Engine Journal:
We've all heard the hype. It's been anxiously awaited. People are camping out to be the first to check out the new Apple iPhone. But according to Crave, the Gadget Blog, there may be good reason to hold out for the next generation.
We all know that Google has become a flourishing internet giant, but Yahoo! may have a few tricks up its sleeve. Click here to find out how Yahoo plans to compete in the future.
Intel, Google, Microsoft, HP, IBM, Lenovo, Microsoft and Dell have joined the World Wildlife Fund and the US Environmental Protection Agency to launch the "Climate Savers Computing Initiative."
The initiative asks consumers and businesses to purchase new, energy efficient computers equipped with new technology and power-saving software.
According to the EPA's new guidelines, computer PSUs will be required to be at least 80% more efficient by 2007 and 90% efficient by 2010.
For more information on "Computer Greening," click here.
Soon a Google search will not only turn up a list of websites, but you'll also find video, images, local searches, books, etc. fully integrated into the search results.
For example, a search for "skiing" may offer up a YouTube video of Olympic skiing embedded in the Top 10 results. This symbolizes the next step in search engine services and will allow users to explore new avenues of retrieving information online.
For details on this revolution in online search capabilities, click here.
With the recent $3.1 billion deal between Google and DoubleClick, an online advertising firm, some are questioning the future of Google’s integrity. Performics, a division of DoubleClick, provides SEO in order to help clients get better rankings on search engines like Google, Yahoo!, and AOL. Will Google cave in to the pressures of internal conflict?