Brrreeeport: Scoble’s Keyword Experiment

February 17th, 2006 at 5:44 am (Net Buzz)

What started out as an apparent debunking of an A-list blogger conspiracy has evolved into a made-up word shedding light on the search world. Microsoft’s controversial employee blogger, Robert Scoble, invited readers to use the word ‘brrreeeport” on their blogs as a way to get “Z-list” blogs noticed, while testing the reach of the various search engines.

Scoble’s snarky experiment was in response to the notion of the supposed Blog Club, where A-list bloggers only link to each other and thereby keeping lesser-known bloggers out of the loop of recognition in typical Critical Theory style.

The invention of the word “brrreeeport” and the invitation to put on a person’s blog created a vacuum to Technorati’s blog listings and popular tags. Very soon, the term was listed at the top of Technorati’s most searched word. Two days later, “brrreeeport” is out ranking searches for information on the Dick Cheney hunting accident, and is third on the list of tags.

The original purpose of the experiment worked. Technorati returns some 487 results for the word, leading searchers to blogs they may have never encountered. But the memetic results led to another exploration of the efficacy of various search engines.

At the time this article was written, a search on Technorati returns 487 results; Google’s Blog Search: 452; Feedster: 569. On that information alone, it would appear that Google Blog search is missing an element the other blog engines aren’t. But the more interesting question Scoble brings up on Wednesday, when he compares results of Google, MSN, and Yahoo!

Google’s main page (as of present) says it found 22,400 results for the word. Scrolling through, however, there are only 353 results after similar entries are omitted. Re-searching with omitted results included returns only 979 results, as the other 21,000 are apparently inaccessible.

Scoble calls this an example of “lies that are going on on search engines.” Scoble reports that MSN returns over 1, 369 entries (though my results continue to say 221), and Yahoo! returns over 1,010. The varying numbers does bring up an interesting question as to the veracity of any given search engine’s reach.

One thing’s for certain, many are taking advantage of the memetic appeal of the word, “brrreeeport.” Bloggers have committed to throwing the word onto their blog posts. Even the famous New York City gay and lesbian publication The Village Voice has thrown it into a headline for an unrelated music review.

There are even sponsored links for the word on Google and Yahoo!’s SERPs. On Yahoo!’s system though, it’s not the exact word, but ads served up based on similar keywords.

Whatever the deeper implications, the immediate benefit was for Z-list bloggers who otherwise may have never been found. Someone’s even reserved the brrreeeport domain.

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Domain Extensions & Meaning

February 13th, 2006 at 1:43 am (Domain Names)

The domain name suffix is known as a generic top-level domain (gTLD) and it describes the type of organization. However in the last few years, the lines have blurred somewhat between these categories. Currently in use of these gTLDs:

.aero–For the air-transport industry

.biz–Reserved for businesses

.com–For businesses, commercial enterprises, or online services like America Online. Most companies use this extension.

.coop–Reserved for cooperatives

.edu–For educational institutions and universities

.gov–Reserved for United States government agencies

.info–For all uses

.int–For organizations established by international treaties

.mil–For the United States military

.museum–For use by museums

.name–For use by individuals

.net–For networks; usually reserved for organizations such as Internet service providers

.org–For non-commercial organizations

.pro–For use by professionals, such as attorneys and physicians

A domain name from Sg Web Designer only costs $35 per year, with a FREE Privacy. This means that you can hide the domain registrant details from the eyes of the public.

Most companies charges $30 or more to provide you with this service. But with us, it is complimentary.

Register Your Domain Name

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Google Is Updating

February 9th, 2006 at 1:25 pm (Net Buzz)

The Net scence have been buzzed lately, by super-charged individual site owners. Reason being, you may ask, well here is why:

GOOGLE, the Kahuna, is updating their datacentres, their pagerank.

The much awaited update in the world is happening now, the update that can make or break your company.

It has been quietly speculated last week by some marketing well-knowns but have yet to be confirmed. Google themselves have kept mum at the time of writing.

The only evident they are now updating is that their cache have been changing every few hours. Evidently, our website, www.sgwebdesigner.com cache on Google have been going from 81 links, 84 links, 140 links.

The change have been continous. Be very sure that your website, which is highly valuable to your business does not use any blackhat tactics. Else, the update will break you. Google have been known to really crackdown on blackhat tactics; the latest being German car-making giant, BMW. More on that in the next post.

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