Not sure why Inktomi hangs in there. Their explanation is:
"The meta keywords value is just one of many factors in our ranking equation, and we've never given too much weight to it. That said, we will continue to use it as long as our relevance modeling shows that it adds value," Ken Norton, director of product marketing for Inktomi's web search division.
So if by 1994 we already had contextual based search engines, why in 1999 did we need metadata?
Well, that's just the point. We didn't really need them for search engine inclusion. As a matter of fact, the W3 explains the main reason would be to notify search engines that your site contains pages in another language, and where those pages are located. But as far as using metadata to get included in search engines, W3 simply touches on the Keyword and Description meta tags. Their focus is on better structure of the web page, content, and improved use of the robots.txt file.
Okay, so we learned that we don't need Meta Tags for the search engines to find us. And that since the early '90's the "bots" have been spidering the web, including pages into various collections. But we do know that a higher ranking in the search engines will improve our AdSense performance. In other words, more people visiting your site, the greater the probability they will click your AdSense ads and make you some money.
The fallacy is that souping your pages up with (stuffing) keywords will increase your search engine rank. Guess what? Nobody uses Inktomi.
Founder of one of the first web hosting companies on the Internet, World Wide Mart, Dave Jackson has been teaching others how to monetize their web sites for over ten years. Currently he teaches others to create a solid residual income by creating quality web sites of great benefit to visitors and monetizing them using contextual ads. His blog is Making Money with Contextual Ads.
[Nota Bene:] Tunneled Connections [-- Possibly? --WDB]
SSH can act as a bridge through a firewall whether the firewall is protecting your computer, a remote server or both. All you need is an SSH server exposed to the other side of the firewall. For example, many DSL and cable-modem companies forbid sending e-mail from your own machine over port 25 (SMTP).
Our next example is sending mail to your company's SMTP server through your cable-modem connection. In this example, we use a shell account on the SMTP server, which is named mail.example.net. The SSH command is:
ssh -L 9025:mail.example.net:25 mail.example.net
Then, tell your mail transport agent to connect to port 9025 on localhost to send mail. This exercise should look quite similar to the last example; we are tunneling from local port 9025 to mail.example.net port 25 over mail.example.net. As far as the firewall sees, it is passing normal SSH data on the normal SSH port, 22, between you and mail.example.net.
A final example is connecting through an ISP firewall to a mail or news server inside a restricted network. What would this look like? In fact, it would be the same as the first example; mail.example.net can be walled away inside the network, inaccessible to the outside world. All you need is an SSH connection to a server that can see it, such as shell.example.net. Is that neat or what?
Read this all shell people and then, kindly, please, COMMENT! see,
I need to find a couple of those "dusty old i386 s" referenced in
that thread. Uh, hey now: possible long-sought solution -- notice: I Have a
'Both Desktop & Laptop Down Emergency' a/o 30 April 2007 ! Yes~Really~Do!**
Comment =*here [not (only) there]:(*here is 'here' here)
> www.gobi-igloo.com/cellars_swan_climbed.
Or email adminATTgobi-iglooDAHTcom
Among a great many other things, I need to play trivia at this trivia server
- channel - room -- and public access firewalls are driving me starkly
odd like the main character in Henry Kuttner's "The Twonky" short story.
W.S. Burroughs interview remimded me of Henry Kuttner (he liked HK's
Venus tableau in a novel named (is it?)Fury...) Enough information?
"dusty old i386" s !!
1 2 3
4
...[more...->] Your thoughts, Hobson?... Wintergreen Desktop PC?
Thanks!
THE IGLOO HOME |: )
backroomstuff.html
http://www.ericom.com/pdl.asp
http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6602
*.*
Yes, of course I intend to improve this information re-
source for my use or yours. If you add some useful links
or actually enroll a few of your minutes identifying those
issues represented within the small caption texts below, and
can present a compelling accounting of your own expertise
now and again at this back room, I'll carefully place and tend
to your small ad (some choice icon) up by the asterisks (*.*)
Must See Links From Chapter 13 Of The Joy of Linux
- The Cathedral and the Bazaar
- Free Software Foundation
- www.linuxdoc.org
- www.tuxedo.org/~esr/jargon
- GNOME
- KDE
- www.plig.net/xwinman
- Slashdot
- Linux Today
- LinuxApps.com
- linux.org
- vi editor tips
- www.gnu.org/software/gcc/gcc.html
www.OkCupid.com
www.DateHookUp.com
Ruby on Rails Toot
2Solve Pub ssh Prob L1
2Solve Pub ssh Prob L2
2Solve Pub ssh Prob L3
2Solve Pub ssh Prob L4
MySQL/phpMyAdmin
MySQL & C, C++ |: )
Oracle Resources
Free Python Tutorials
Real - Friendly Math
Learn All of English
Fulltext Sources Online
www.eContentMag.com
www.softcomplex.com
Self-Hypnosis: Relax
work
work work
work
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- s92818844.onlinehome.us/eqcity/comp-u.htm
- sdf.lonestar.org The Super Dimension Fortress is a networked
community of free software authors, teachers, students, researchers, hobbyists, enthusiasts, and the blind.
- rootshell.be For students, professors: all education purposes, demos,
trainings; For system/network administrators to have an "external" view on their job; UNIX server availed
without re-installing a box; For open-source developers who want to test and propose their applications.
- m-net.arbornet.org Arbornet, Inc. is a 501(C)(3) non-profit
organization located in Ann Arbor, Michigan, since 1985. Their UNIX system, M-Net, has active bulletin
board conf, program where you can interact with literate learners live, free email, home page, valuable
learning resources: UNIX shells, compilers; all the other beauties, Eddie, that come with any UNIX
server. Most importantly, M-Net provides an online community, from around the world.
- Metawire.org is meant to provide universal IT freedom, but as we
all know, our society is not perfect, thus certain rules must be imposed so that everything runs smoothly.
[quod vide "open minded, open source, open future,
open hosting, open solutions"]
- Grex Electronic Town Hall Grex is a public-access conferencing (discussion
forum) system. It is run by its users. Anybody can get a free account. [ You can telnet to cyberspace.org ]
- Silence is Defeat "MISSION � To enrich our culture,
advance scientific research and recreation, we seek to introduce the general public to Open Source software
by providing remotely accessible computing facilities for easier access to very useful Open Source software
applications, used for daily tasks such as email, web browsing, newsgroups, web servers, compilers, bulletin
boards, and file storage. As the Open Source community is powered by it's users, introducing new users will
[check this copy point: 'inadvertently'? 'overtly'?] allow for growth within the Open Source community, and
therefore allow for its progression."
- www.nyx.net seems as if it's all there; so no on-demand accounts, natch.
Must use notary public to establish ID, but the shell, once you get it, is free.
- www.copaseticnet.com/shells.asp
- www.pgroup.com/products/workindex.htm
- If you run a free or virtually free shell account server you would like mentioned here, please contact
admin@Gobi-Igloo.com with a brief summary of your offer, to whom,
with the details you find important; and info relating how a person applies for an account. (WDB)
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Online Graphics Utilities
myimager.com/
www.gifworks.com
www.jpegwizard.com
www.ambographics.com/graphics-index.htm (buttons and bars)
www.zefrank.com
(collage maker [wild site, Jerr! Wild!] found 12/APR/05)
usera.imagecave.com/neolinux/
community-2.webtv.net/TYBICKENS/ILinks/
Suggestions? Additions? Explanatory note: Temporarily, I
can't download or install anything public terminals'
I.E. browser abides as my sole access to the internet - ftp
including ssh telnet - why I love I.E. access applet on-site telnet.
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Math, Physics, Computer Science, E.E., _______
www.hyper-ad.com/tutoring
3D Java Mouse Movable (Rotate and Zoom)
View Control & Mathematica, Animated Math
Help Sites, et alia. Your suggested link
additions are appreciated :) WDB
www.ima.umn.edu/~arnold/graphics.html
www.xahlee.org/surface/gallery_o.html
www.xahlee.org/surface/a/sidju.html
www.xahlee.org/surface/gallery_m.html
Road Runner System Requirements _I think
a/o June '05_ I'll check; or pop me an 'e':
|=0=| Operating System Windows 98, 2000/ME/XP;
|=0=| Pentium-class 400 MHz processor;
|=0=| 64 MB RAM; 110MB of free hard drive space;


Tech Certification Exam Service
Servlets & JavaServer Pages
Tomcat & the web.xml file
java.sun.com/j2ee/faq.html
jakarta.apache.org/tomcat/faq/
jakarta.apache.org
wiki.apache.org/jakarta-tomcat
www.reumann.net/struts/lessons/sitemesh/rr_sitemesh_example.jsp
The Java Sevlets and JSP related links
below came from -this- other link.
Customizing Tomcat Site: PCQuest / In this article,
we�ll see how to customize Tomcat. We�ll use the JPSs
that we wrote in Write Your Own JSP Script, page 144
in this issue, place them under a directory and make
Tomcat aware of this new location, called context in
Tomcat lingo
/ Author: Shekhar Govindarajan Code: JSP 1.2
Server-Side Caching Site: The Java Boutique The
other time we may be interested in caches is when we
have some content of our own that is expensive to
generate but which remains valid for a period of time,
and which we therefore want to cache within the server.
/ Author: unknown Code: JSP 1.2
Building Dynamic Taglets Site: Allaire This article
presents a simple approach on how a JSP document makes
use of Live Software's dynamic taglets to perform dis-
tributed transactions in Microsoft Transaction Server.
/ Author: Clement Wong Code: JSP 1.1
Apache Tomcat JSP Development Site: IBM alphaWorks This
"hands-on" article shows you how to set up the no-
charge VisualAge for Java Entry Edition, Version 3.0
with the Tomcat reference implementation.
/ Author: Sheldon Wosnick, IBM Code: JSP 1.1
Configuring Apache Tomcat 3.1 Site: Core Servlets and
JavaServer Pages Quick setup and configuration guide
for using Apache Tomcat 3.1 as a standalone servlet/JSP
engine. Aimed at people using Tomcat on their desktop
for development, not those using Tomcat integrated with
the regular Apache server for deployment.
/ Author: Marty Hall Code: JSP 1.1
Connection Pooling & App Servers Site: The Java Boutique
With every user trying to log in, our login Servlet will
issue a call to this validateUser method. Every call to
validateUser method will result in establishing a separate
connection with the database. This is definitely not the
best approach.
/ Author: Harshal Deo Code: JSP 1.2
Getting Familiar w/ JSP server Site: JSP Tutorial If you do
not have a JSP capable web-server, the first step is to
download one. There are many such servers available, most
of which can be downloaded for free evaluation and/or
development.
/ Author: JSP Tutorial Code: JSP 1.2
www.ddj.comOutput & Session Management Site: webreview:
At a high level, the basis of the HTTP protocol is requests
and responses. Web browsers submit requests to Web servers,
which return documents or other Web content in response...
/ Author: Duane K. Fields Code: JSP 1.2
Savor success with Java Site: Java World In this
article, Alex Kalinovsky shares his experiences with these
three technologies, and provides criteria and tips for
choosing among them in your Java development.
/ Author: Alex Kalinovsky Code: JSP 1.2
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Vintage Brindle Tests Your Knee Jerk Reflex Pro Bono
\|/ Some Thoughts: Different Hats Languages Wear
\|/ Start Here
\|/ Moving Foreword
\|/ Homeless, Hungry, Hated
\|/ A Very Nice Reading Room
\|/ Real History Archives
\|/ New York Times Online [Register Free]
\|/ Loading Doc [(Home) if your entry was this page]
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"Click Start" Liking Math: Aim at "Discrete" Math; help available here, not crucial right now to begin; fear not!
"The important thing for you to realize is that learning a computer programming language is a long-term process and not an
isolated event. You have to work at it regularly and you have to challenge yourself if you are to advance your knowledge and
skill level. There are no free lunches and no pills that will make you into a brilliant programmer overnight."
CVG7
"...and you, Marcus, you have given me
many things; now I shall give you this good
advice. Be many people. Give up the game
of being always Marcus Cocoza. You have
worried too much about Marcus Cocoza, so
that you have been really his slave and prisoner.
You have not done anything without first
considering how it would affect Marcus
Cocoza's happiness and prestige. You were
always much afraid that Marcus might do a
stupid thing, or be bored. What would it really
have mattered? All over the world people are
doing stupid things... I should like you to be
easy, your little heart to be light again. You
must from now, be more than one, many
people, as many as you can think of..."
-- Karen Blixen ("The Dreamers")
About 2/3rds of the
Introduction to Bjarne Stroustrup's
(the creator of C++)
C++ Programming Language, 3rd Ed., 1997,
Addison-Wesley; Reading, MA
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