Posts tagged words

How To Google Your Exact Words

google_logo_150x150.jpgGoogle has been making lots of tweaks to search lately. Search is why we all came to Google in the first place, but these days it’s taking the product we knew and loved in a different direction. It’s changing the way queries work, turning “+” into a social search instead of an “and,” and it’s taking away chronological features in favor of what’s hot right now.

In response to user feedback about the changes, Google gave us a new feature this week called “verbatim search.” In its blog post, the Google search team warns that verbatim mode will take away all kinds of helpful things they’ve built for us. But users wanted a way to search for exactly what they want, and Google has built it. Here’s what it does and how to use it.

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To understand how different verbatim search is, it’s important to know what features of Google search it turns off:

  • You won’t get spelling corrections.
  • It won’t personalize your results with Web history or social stuff.
  • It won’t include synonyms or related terms (like “automobile” if you search for “car”).
  • It won’t search for words with the same stem (like “dancer” if you search “dance”).
  • And it won’t be able to understand clarifying optional terms like “circa” in “Roosevelt speeches circa 1939.”

In other words, Google’s serious when they say verbatim search looks for your exact words. If you have a specific query you’d like to search for verbatim, here’s how you do it:

Get to a search results page:

Note the corrected “RWW” acronym

googleverbatim1.jpg

On the bottom of the left sidebar, click ‘Show search tools:’
googleverbatim2.jpg

Then scroll way, way down and click ‘Verbatim:’

Note that the incorrect “RRW” acronym gets used all the time ;^)

googleverbatim3.jpg

Do you like this new verbatim feature? Let us know in the comments.

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Patent Absurdity? Google, Microsoft in War of Words Over Android ‘Patent Attacks’

Google brazenly released a blog post condemning the patent strategies of Microsoft, Apple, and Oracle. Unfortunately for them, Microsoft quickly rebutted by showing that they’d attempted to work jointly with Google.

Google’s Anti-Microsoft (and …

View full post on Search Engine Watch – Latest

Words You Want Releases Vital Information about How SEO Writing Can Help Grow … – Benzinga

Words You Want Releases Vital Information about How SEO Writing Can Help Grow
Benzinga
Words You Want, a leading national provider of professional SEO writing, has today released essential information and help for those struggling to build a profitable online business. Words You Want, one of the nation's foremost providers of SEO writing

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How To Get Free Unique Content With Product Reviews: 15,000+ Words In 12 Hours

With the recent Google update of Panda attacks, now more than ever retailers need to focus on creating unique content that’s also high-quality. An easy way to get this content is to ask for help! Today, I’m going to cover how you can optimize customer product reviews to make more with your online…



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View full post on Search Engine Land: News & Info About SEO, PPC, SEM, Search Engines & Search Marketing

15 Enterprise Products in 30 Words

As part of the Enterprise Startup Spotlight I’ve asked each submitter to provide a one sentence explanation of the company and an explanation of how it’s different from the competition. I’m beginning to think I should have collapsed both of those fields to two words.

Why? Because so many of the strongest enterprise 2.0 companies can be summed up in just two words. Here are 15 products explained in two words each.

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This is by no means an exhaustive list of companies that have a strong, clear position. But these companies practically own these market positions, and standing out against them them is tough – even if they’re not the best products in their category.

Yes, some might fit more than one description. For example, Huddle is also a freemium service. But its external collaboration that it has staked its business on, and it’s done a good job of owning that position. Likewise, it’s hard to compete with Yammer for the freemium position. Mindtouch has an open source product, but it’s the focus on documentation that sets it apart.

Many are trying to compete with one or more of these positions. There are other everything suites besides Jive – but today it’s difficult to set oneself apart from Jive based only on a feature list. tibbr managed to differentiate itself from Jive not by stuffing every conceivable social feature under the sun, but by making it easy to add activity streams from other enterprise applications. In so doing, it made itself standout from Jive and other established players like Socialtext.

As the enterprise 2.0 market matures I hope to see more products with clear, distinct value propositions that can be defined in only two or three words.

Photo by Kioan

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Web Words That Lure the Readers – New York Times

On the Web, Using Words to Lure the Readers – New York Times

On the Web, Using Words to Lure the Readers
New York Times
It was an example of an art and science at which The Huffington Post excels: search engine optimization, or SEO The term covers a wide range of

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Why Using 2 or 3 Simple Words May Be the Best Password Protection of All

30 day challenge: learn 30 new words

For the record, here’s the words I ended up learning this month:

ana: the collection of memorable sayings, writings, or other information of an interesting person.
brumous: misty, foggy
capax: legally competent
daggle: to soil by dragging in the mud
deosculate: to kiss affectionately
dorty: bad-tempered
ensky: to make immortal
eoan: related to the dawn or the east
foss: ditch or canal; an artificial stream
gurry: diarrhea
hwyl: an emotional outburst of eloquence (Welsh)
incondite: crude, unfinished
jehu: someone who loves to drive. a fast driver
kalon: the kind of beauty that is more than skin deep
leal: faithful, loyal, true. Correct, accurate, real. Legal, lawful, just.
lusk: a lazy person
milpita: a little cornfield
nixie: a letter so badly addressed it can’t be delivered
ort: a leftover tidbit
pukka: real, authentic. Superior.
queme: pleasant, agreeable, suitable
rudas: an ugly foul-mouthed old hag
sipid: tasty, flavorful
tiffin: a snack or light lunch
udometer: a rain gauge
vega: a fertile meadow
verbophobia: fear and dislike of words
wanion: a plague. A vengeance
xenium: a present given to a guest
yex: hiccup, cough
zimme: a gem

Also: Happy New Year, everyone!

View full post on Matt Cutts: Gadgets, Google, and SEO

Global Language Monitor predicts top words for 2011, list may have SEO … – Brafton

Global Language Monitor predicts top words for 2011, list may have SEO
Brafton
Marketers who want to get a head start on search engine optimization (SEO) campaigns may want to consider the organization's predictions as suggested search

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