On Wed, 16 Jan 2002, Richard Keeves wrote: > > You people *just don't get it*; do you ? People don't *randomly guess > at names*. That's akin to randomly stabbing in the last 4 digits of a phone > number, secure in the knowledge that your Aunty Beryl lives in town 'foo' > and you know the first four digits that belong to 'foo'. > > > Firstly, typing in a a generic name is NOT randomly guessing at it. Many > users think of a topic and type in the word (a generic word) to see what > they find. It is *randomly guessing at a URL*. Yes, many users *do* think of a topic, and type in a word: where they do this is in a search engine. Demonstrably. (although it would be illegal of me to show you the proof). > > They use search engines. Search engines do not rely on domain names for > ranking. > > > > Actually, many search engines do give extra rating to websites whose domain > also matches the word being searched for. As such, generic domain names > can make up a valuable part of a marketing strategy. What search engine(s) would that be ? Please quote name and the URL where you found this information about the search engine: none of the search engines I looked at (google, altavista, anzwers, amongst others) listed the *domain name* as a search criterion (waves to David :) I'm always happy to be educated: with evidence please. Evidence would constitute a URL by the search engine owners, stating that the domain name is a search criterion used by that search engine. Regards, SaliyaReceived on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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