In 2011, Google’s Amit Singhal and Matt Cutts revealed that Google Panda was the true name of the update that was informally referred to as Farmer when it launched Feb. 24.
“Well, we named it internally after an engineer, and his name is Panda. So internally we called a big Panda,” Singhal said in a Wired interview with Steven Levy.” He was one of the key guys. He basically came up with the breakthrough a few months back that made it possible.”
Google said the launch of the “Caffeine” indexing infrastructure inadvertently helped increase the visibility of “shallow content.
“Our index grew so quickly, and we were just crawling at a much faster speed. When that happened, we basically got a lot of good fresh content, and some not so good. The problem had shifted from random gibberish, which the spam team had nicely taken care of, into somewhat more like written prose. But the content was shallow,” Singhal added.
Read all about it in Google Speaks More About The Farmer Update, AKA Panda Update. And dig deeper in
2022: The rollout was completed after nine days.
2022: Google was testing displaying a “confirmed by phone” label to the local listing, followed by when it was last confirmed
2022: Microsoft planned to add support for more Audience Network capabilities within the ads editor.
2022: An SEO entrepreneur has created two resources: one for job seekers and another for employers with vacancies willing to hire Ukrainians.
2021: Google reiterated that its products would use Federated Learning of Cohorts to enable advertisers to target audiences.
2020: Also, Dark mode.
2020: Roughly 90% of adult internet users relied on reviews, but with growing awareness of fraud and manipulation.
2017: The latest images culled from the web, showing what people eat at the search engine companies, how they play, who they meet, where they speak, what toys they have and more.
2016: The new format showed up on desktop image results for some and used different colored backgrounds to enhance the filter options for the searcher.
2016: Bing Ads rolled out an update for Bing Ads Editor that included editing support for native ad bidding.
2016: Bing and the NCAA teamed up again to help fans fill out their NCAA brackets and follow all 67 games
2015: Could Google someday rank web pages based on how accurate they are? A new paper suggested they might.
2015: The company pulled together more than 3,400 people to set the Guinness World Record for the largest simultaneous yodel.
2014: Cutts answers: “What is a ‘paid link’?”
2014: Google had been testing several layouts that made the search results look a bit easier to read by increasing the font size and removing some of the underlines for the hyperlinked content.
2014: There was. aweird issue where Google showed Lorem Ipsum boilerplate text in the search results snippets.
2014: When you searched for a math answer, not only did you get the answer, but you also got an interactive calculator in Bing’s search results.
2013: Interflora was ranking again on searches for its company name, and its Google+ brand box was appearing again on the right side of the search results.
2011: The profiles looked slicker and more “social,” as you would expect from a Facebook or Twitter.
2011: The mobile-friendly site let you check earnings, get alerts, and view non-Flash-based reports.
2011: The travel search engine didn’t fear Google’s entrance into the travel search market, according to Paul English, Kayak.com’s co-founder and Chief Technology Officer.
2011: TED attendees were allowed to travel inside the self-driving cars, on a closed course.
2011: The source of deals was The Dealmap.
2011: Microsoft was considering taking legal action against Facebook for allegedly poaching their employees.
2011: Ask launched a new app focused on local conversations called Ask Around.
2010: Rather than having to upload multiple verification files or create multiple meta tags, there was a new “Add a User” tool on the site verification page.
2010: Google’s Director of Research Peter Norvig said the public’s focus on PageRank was misguided and it probably needed a new name.
2010: Google had a mixed bag of good SEO tactics and missed opportunities on the homepages of 100 different products.
2010: The ability to re-order, remove, and comment on search results was replaced by a scaled-down version that Google was simply calling “stars” or “starred results.”
2010: Google’s Maile Ohye confirmed that Google was now crawling AJAX pages.
2009: An eMarketer report said SEO budgets would increase in the next five years, while paid search budgets would decline relative to the overall marketing budgets for companies.
2009: Twitter, in conjunction with Google Maps, helped locate a couple of lost skiers.
2009: A scrolling vertical bar appeared on the upper right of every map allowing advertisers to populate any map quickly with specific brand locations.
2009: Cuil, the search engine that launched to great hype in 2008 and then pretty much disappeared, announced changes to its design, content, and backend.
2008: Yahoo made changes to their crawling, indexing and ranking algorithms.
2008: “Bottom line: they are just flat-out not true. Our Teoma technology will continue to power search engine results on Ask.com.”
2008: A drop in paid clicks was not due to advertisers holding back on spending but rather Google’s “quality initiatives.”
2008: A survey found the most common usage frequency for mobile directory assistance was “once every three months” (61 percent).
2008: The site offered a metasearch engine (like Kayak or Farechase) for airfares.
2008: Compete.com’s 2007 revenue was $14.9 million, over 50% higher than in the previous year.
These columns are a snapshot in time and have not been updated since publishing, unless noted. Opinions expressed in these articles are those of the author and not necessarily Search Engine Land.
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