On Sep 9, 9:01 pm, chrisv <chr...@nospam.invalid> wrote: Subway steel wrote: "Rex Ballard" <rex.ball...@gmail.com> wrote:> Gotta hand it to George Bush. When he gets bought, he stays bought. I see. No now Microsoft is sooo powerful that they have total control over a president in his last term in office. Bill could walk into a fund-raiser and drop two pockets full of Ben
OK, now I understand what you are asking. Your web page has the correct code: <meta name="description" content="Wyoming D.A.R.E. Officer's Association, Information about what D.A.R.E. is doing in Wyoming "> <meta name="keywords" content="Wyoming D.A.R.E. "> <title>Wyoming D.A.R.E.Officer's Association </title> <style> The problem is timing I believe. Google indexed your page before you
=-= [摘要] -=- You can enter any subject into Addictomatic -- like "google" or "comic book" or everything else -- to view a customizable instant news overview page on it. The news bits are presented as little widget boxes and pulled from all over the web; some by APIs, but most by RSS, as creator Dave Pell says. (Addictomatic -- or Addict-o-matic, as the logo says -- was programmed by Crowd
Google indexes 1 trillion URLs: We knew the web was big... July 25, 2008 "We've known it for a long time: the web is big. The first Google index in 1998 already had 26 million pages, and by 2000 the Google index reached the one billion mark. Over the last eight years, we've seen a lot of big numbers about how much content is really out there. Recently, even our search engineers stopped
In addition to what Rob said, if you put a description of that page in the Web Page Options, then that will appear in the Google listing. Seems to me that will tell people who you are. And as Rob suggests, your changes in the Title will show up after Google re-indexes the page. Relax...the sun is shining and life is good. DavidF "SLH" <SLH@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message