Advanced Search Operator Tactics

on Thursday, December 6, 2012

Site:

Where Else You Can Use It: Google, Bing, Blekko [/site], Yandex, Baidu
*note:site:may behave slightly differently in those engines
Definition: Adding site: to your query will restrict the search results to the domain you've specified. [site:example.com]
How to Be Awesome With It: You can scan indexed URLs to get an idea of information architecture, potential duplicate content issues, and get an idea of overall number of pages indexed.
Pro Tip: Combine Site: with inurl: or allinurl: [may not work in all search engines] to analyze specific sections of a site. How big is the blog of a competitor site relative to the approximate total pages indexed? How many of those sort pages without are indexed? How many paginated pages are indexed? How many session ID pages are getting indexed? [site:example.com inurl:sort=price]. Are those pesky non-www. versions of pages getting indexed. Any time you want to analyze content within a site, the site: command is a very robust tool to have in your toolkit.

Related:

Where Else You Can Use It: Blekko [/similar]
Definition: When you use the related command, Google will return webpages that are similar to the webpage you've specified. [related:example.com]
How to Be Awesome With It: The related command has been used to find out the "neighborhood" of backlinks. However, keep in mind that there has been debate over the years on how accurate this command is for Google specifically.

Intitle: and Allintitle:

Where Else You Can Use Them: Bing, Yandex, Baidu, DuckDuckGo
Definition intitle: When you use the query in title:, Google restricts the documents it returns to those containing the term you included in the title. [intitle:keyword]
allintitle: When you use allintitle:, Google restricts results to those that contain the keyword that you specified in the title. So if you search [internet marketing] google will only fetch documents that contain the keywords ”internet” and “marketing” in the title. Notice the addition of the conjunction. [allintitle:keyword phrase]
How to Be Awesome With It: This command can be combined with a site: command to help identify templated, thin or duplicate pages by just identifying a part of the title that appears across the thin pages and searching for it. You will see about how many of those types of pages Google has indexed.

wildcard(*)

Definition: wildcard(*) to search for terms separated by 1-5 words
[internet * marketing] or [“internet * marketing”]
How to Be Awesome With It: The commands mentioned above are a great way to find articles about specific topics to build a potential list of prospects to market to. Keep in mind, though, that although these are powerful commands, they're only as good as the searcher who is performing them is clever.

Honorable Mentions

Google Reverse Image Search
While this isn't an advanced search command, it is so cool! Just click the little camera in the Google image search bar and you can query an image link or a local file and it tells you all the places where your image has been found. If you're an image heavy site, you can easily reach out to websites that have snagged your images and ask them for a citation back to your site. It's also fun to see just how image content travels.
Google Verbatim
Again, this isn't a search command, but Google Verbatim allows you to search using the exact keyword you typed, so no spelling corrections, no replacing words with synonyms, and no words with the same stem, or personalization. Verbatim gives you search rankings without the preservatives. To get to verbatim from a Google SERP, click on Search tools, then you'll find it in the All Results sub-menu.

New And Shiny: Bing Search Commands

Linkfromdomain:

Definition: Returns the pages that are linked-to from a domain.
How To Be Awesome With It: This command can be used to explore check the link neighborhood for a site or for finding prospective sites to connect to for promotional purposes.

IP:

Definition: This command returns originating results from websites or subdomains for the provided IP address. Another thing to note about this command is that prefix-matching is also possible with it, so ip:89 returns the site IP:89.356.567.76 if it's in Bing's index.
How To Be Awesome With It: This command can be used when you’re trying to map out a possible link network that may live on the same IP for competitor research or backlink removal projects.

url:

Definition: url: command tells you if a given URL is in Bing's index.
How To Be Awesome with It: This command is similar to the Google cache: command. The url: command is a useful one to run to identify if a particular page is indexed in bing or not. This is helpful for diagnosing if you’re having a crawling issue in Bing beyond just using Bing Webmaster Tools.

Domain:

Definition: The Domain: command limits results to the domain that is specified. This command also returns any suffix matches. The big difference between the domain command and the site: command is that site: searches up to two levels only. Also, keep in mind that IP cannot be used with this command.

Tips For Bing Advanced Search Commands

Bing Meta Operators

Definition: A meta operator is an operator that is used with other operators. Takes a simple list as a parameter and returns results based on that. One example of this in Bing is keyword:(intitle inbody)software. The output of this command would translate roughly as intitle:software orinbody:software.
How To Be Awesome With It: When you’re trying to find a type of content with great precision, this is very helpful.

Other Fun Bing Commands for Geeks

Subtle Differences contains: and filetype: in Bing
The contains: operator returns pages that link to other documents and multimedia like music, video, PDF, and so on. Conversely, “filetype:” returns pages that created in the format that is specified, returning .pdf documents, if you specific filetype:pdf.
Understanding words surrounding a given keyword using near:
The near: operator searches for a specific keyword that is within range of another word. Bing documentation gives the example of foo near:10 bar explaining it as, “Ordering is considered in ranking. Thus, in this example, pages that contain bar ten words or less after foo would receive a greater boost in rank than pages in which foo appears ten words or less after bar. However, depending on the rest of the query, this does not necessarily mean that the former would be ranked higher than the latter.”

Blekko Fun SEO Slashtags

Although Blekko SEO data is no longer free to the masses, here are a couple cool slashtags that I have had fun playing with.

/links

Definition: Lets you see the links to a site.

/sitepages

Definition: Lets you check the popularity of internal pages of a site.

/domanduptext./duptext

Definitions: These commands displays URLs that have content that is the same as that of the website you are looking at. This lets you quickly check for content theft.

How to find and report Stolen and Copied Content from your Website or Blog Online

on Friday, November 30, 2012

Online Content theft has become very common these days. For easy content, thousands of blog, copy content from other blogs everyday. And there is probably no direct way to stop this offense. But here today we will put some light on how to find and report Plagiarism. So protect your valuable content from illegal copying, posting and sharing.

There are many such cases when we see the copied content being rated higher by Google,  just because of some nicely done SEO, and the original post doesn't receive the deserved appreciation.

SEE ALSO : 25 Best tools for step by step SEO of Website

To find copied sites, you can do advanced search on your original text enclosing it in double quotes ("your text...") using Google search or simply use the below mentioned tools.

1. Copyscape 

Search for copies of your page on the web using this amazing and best Duplicate Content Detection Software. This Plagiarism checker is the best available online.

2. TinEye

This is a tool to find your copyright images that are being used on other websites or blogs. TinEye is a reverse image search engine. It finds out where an image came from, how it is being used, if modified versions of image exists, or if there is any higher resolution version.

3. PlagiarismDetect

Professional Online Plagiarism Detection Application to help you maintain the uniqueness of your Blog or website's content. It has both free and premium versions.

4. Similar Page Checker

This service helps you confirm whether the content on any webpage is copied from your blog or not. It compares the content on the 2 URLs posted and shows similarity if found.

5. The Plagiarism Checker

Its a free service to check for plagiarism for student's work, personal blogs etc. Just copy your content and click on check to find where its reused without your knowledge.

Few more services to check Plagiarism

Plagium - Track copy content by pasting or typing your original content.
ScanMyEssay - Scan for copy content.
Duplichecker - Upload original content and find its copy on web.
Doccop - File and web copy content checker.

Reporting Online Content Theft

First way, and the one which every one opts, is to ask the respective authority who copied and posted your content to remove it and to not to repeat it in future. But most of the time this approach doesn't work, because the one who copied rarely replies to your appeal.

So here is another way to deal with this plague. Follow the following steps and you will surely win back your authority and ownership of your content.

  • Find the host name along with IP address of the website or Blog that has your content. Use services for DNS lookup and host service finder.
  • Once you have the Host name write in to the Hosting service that certain website (name of the website with copied content) hosted on their server is not complying by the DMCA rule. In most of the cases the host either removes the blog from its server or issue a warning to the owner.
  • You can also report the same, to the Advertising service which that particular website is using to further tighten your stranglehold.

We hope these all steps and information help you protect your original content from being stolen online. Do share your personal experience with us through your comments.

82 useful Keyboard Shortcuts for Firefox 6

on Tuesday, November 6, 2012


Firefox 6 Shortcuts  

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Uploaded by bernd, updated on 11/10/2011 by 
Platform: Windows/ English

Table of Contents:

  1. Address Bar
  2. Search Bar
  3. Navigation
  4. Inside Webpages
  5. Search
  6. Bookmarks
  7. Firefox Features
  8. Firefox Windows
  9. Forms
  10. The Rest
minus1. Address Bar
alt+d or ctrl+lJump to address bar
ctrl+enterComplete a .com address in address bar: adds "http" prefix and ".com" suffix to entry, then loads the page. Add alt to combination to load page in background tab.
shift+enterComplete a .net address in address bar: adds "http" prefix and ".net" suffix to entry, then loads the page. Add alt to combination to load page in background tab.
ctrl+shift+enterComplete a .org address in address bar: adds "http" prefix and ".org" suffix to entry, then loads the page. Add alt to combination to load page in background tab.
arrow up/arrow down in address barOpen URL history in address bar and navigate. Press enter to launch selected webpage
delete in address bar historyDelete current entry from address bar history
▲ up
minus2. Search Bar
ctrl+kJumps to search bar if installed (ctrl+e used to do so as well, but seems to be discontinued)
alt+arrow up/arrow down 
in search bar
Toggle search engines
arrow down/arrow up 
in search bar
Choose from previous searches. Press enter to choose selected search term
delete in previous searchesDelete previous search entry
▲ up
minus3. Navigation
alt+homeJump to homepage
alt+arrow left/arrow rightOne page backward / one page forward
ctrl+tOpen new tab in same window
ctrl+tab orctrl+page downJump to next browser tab
ctrl+shift+tab orctrl+page upJump to previous browser tab
ctrl+1...8Jump to browser tab 1 - 8
ctrl+9Jump to the rightmost tab regardless on how many tabs are open
ctrl+w or ctrl+qClose current browser tab
ctrl+shift+tUndo close browser tab
▲ up
minus4. Inside Webpages
alt+d, then press tab twice (or three times)Get "focus" on webpage for in-page keyboard navigation. Note the dotted frame around the page
arrow down/arrow upScroll webpages up or down one line
page down/page upScroll webpages up or down one page. space/shift+space does the same.
home/endJump to beginning / end of webpage
tab/shift+tabJump to next / jump to previous link
enterOpen selected link in current tab
shift+ctrl+enterOpen selected link in new foreground tab
ctrl+enterOpen selected link in new background tab
shift+enterOpen selected link in new window
alt+enterDownload selected link
ctrl++/ctrl+-Increase or decrease text size
ctrl+0Default text size
f5 or ctrl+rReload page
ctrl+f5 or ctrl+rReload page with cache override
escapeStop loading page
f6/shift+f6Jump forwards / jump backwards between tab bar and page. To reach addressbar, press f6 until reaching the tab (see dotted line around tab) and press tab
shift+f10Open context menu of a hyperlink. Press arrow up or down or initial letter to select command
f7Turn caret mode on or off (navigation with keyboard)
ctrl+aSelect all, useful to copy and paste text out of webpages
ctrl+cCopy selected text
ctrl+pPrint
alt+f, then vPrint preview
ctrl+uShow page source
ctrl+sSave page as
▲ up
minus5. Search
ctrl+f or /Open "quick find" window and searches phrase as you type
' (apostrophe)Open "quick find" (links only) window
ctrl+g or enter or f3Find next occurrence of search term.
ctrl+shift+g or shift+f3Find previous occurrence of search term.
escapeClose search window
▲ up
minus6. Bookmarks
ctrl+b or ctrl+iShow or hide bookmark sidebar
ctrl+shift+bOrganize bookmarks
ctrl+dAdd bookmark
ctrl+shift+dBookmark all tabs. In the "create in" menu, use alt+down to choose bookmark destination
alt+b, then press a-z or numberOpen bookmark menu and press first letter of a bookmark name to load them. More than one entry with the same letter, requires to repeatedly pressing the letter and hit enter
▲ up
minus7. Firefox Features
ctrl+jOpen or close download window
ctrl+hShow or hide browsing history
ctrl+shift+delClear private data (menu)
ctrl+oOpen file
ctrl+lOpen Location
alt+fOpen file menu
alt+eOpen edit menu
alt+vOpen view menu
alt+sOpen history menu
alt+bOpen bookmark menu
alt+tOpen tools menu
alt+hOpen help menu
ctrl+/Show / hide Add-On Bar (holding add-ons)
▲ up
minus8. Firefox Windows
ctrl+n or alt+f+nOpens new browser window
ctrl+shift+w or alt+f4Close browser window
alt+spaceOpens the title bar menu (default Windows feature)
alt+space+enterRestore Window (default Windows feature)
alt+space+xMaximize Window (default Windows feature)
alt+space+nMinimize Window (default Windows feature)
f11Turn full page view on or off (default Windows feature)
▲ up
minus9. Forms
tab/shift+tabJump to next or previous form element
spaceActivate or deactivate radio buttons and check boxes
alt+arrow downSelect from a drop-down menu
ctrl+cctrl+x and ctrl+vCopy, cut or paste selected text (when working in forms)
arrow up/arrow downSelect previously used form entries
shift+deleteDelete previously used form entries
▲ up
minus10. The Rest
ctrl+shift+iOpen or close webpage Inspector
ctrl+shift+jOpen Java Error Console. Press escape to close
f1Firefox (online) help
▲ up