Slashdot Mirror


Dealing with Google's 'Mobilegeddon' Algorithm Changes (Video)

'Mobilegeddon is here,' said one article I saw about SEO. Others have been similarly doom and gloom about Google's new emphasis on how well a site functions on mobile devices as a factor in search rankings. Brian Sutter, director of marketing for Wasp Barcode Technologies, lives and breathes this stuff -- and doesn't consider Google's algorithm change to be any sort of 'geddon.' He thinks you should be making a better mobile website because a growing percentage of your customers (and his) are viewing the WWW on mobile devices, not because of Google.

Brian's not interested in site design and visibility because his company does SEO or designs websites. Rather, it's because he, as Wasp's marketing guy, wants their site to sit high in Google's rankings if someone is looking for bar code printers or scanners, and he's happy to share what he's learned with Wasp's customers and anybody else who's interested as a goodwill thing. Maybe you aren't directly interested in operating a website or trying to make one popular, but knowing what's going on in the SEO world (for real, as opposed to the flummery often associated with the letters 'SEO') may help you deal with your company's marketing people -- and could be valuable knowledge if you ever decide to start your own business.

88 comments

  1. I thought by weilawei · · Score: 1

    I thought we were putting videos down in that little bar thing. Also, which domain(s) do I enable to make Video Bytes work?

    1. Re:I thought by bruce_the_loon · · Score: 1

      The domain is player.ooyala.com. And it doesn't start playing by itself.

      --
      Trying to become famous by taking photos. Visit my homepage please.
    2. Re:I thought by countSudoku() · · Score: 1

      Thank The Maker! I support the videos taking up screen space and NOT auto starting. Still, this is one I may take the plunge (into my desk for !Beats Headphones) because of the subject matter. Nice they always have the trannys, well that didn't sound right. Nice of them to include a transcript in-line! (there we go)

      --
      This is the NSA, we're gonna geet U h@x0r5! Also, what is a h@x0r5?
  2. NO! by gweilo8888 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    NO VIDEO, SLASHDOT. Interviews are much better when read, not when I have to sit through a lengthy video to get the same information much more slowly with no visual benefit over just reading it myself.

    1. Re:NO! by Roblimo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Tell you what: If you're real nice, we *may* consider not forcing you to watch videos on Slashdot. And it's entirely possible that (if you're nice) we'll supply transcripts of most videos so that you can read instead of watching. Deal? :)

    2. Re:NO! by gweilo8888 · · Score: 1

      Tell you what, if Slashdot gets any more videocentric, I'll just take my clicks elsewhere. I'm certainly not forced to watch anything, and indeed I don't watch Slashdot's videos. The transcript beneath, rather bizarrely hidden to try and get me to watch the video instead, told me I wasn't missing anything in all of about five seconds. ;-)

    3. Re:NO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are my hero! Yes, I found the transcript link, read it, comprehended it and I'm posting to thank you and team for doing so.
      (modding)

    4. Re:NO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree. Basically if you need good SEO then spend more $$$ and get a mobile version of your website.

    5. Re:NO! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hidden under the "show transcript" link? What a whiny fucker - sums up the slashbot experience.

    6. Re:NO! by Linnerd · · Score: 1

      Even though you've done all that work now, the mobile version of the page does not provide the transcription link!

      That's how you earn "google mobile-friendly points" and loose mobile users (not willing to spend bandwith on video).

      Is that what this is all about?

    7. Re:NO! by gweilo8888 · · Score: 1

      Do go ahead and enlighten me, then. What, precisely, is the reason for the content to be hidden from the page until a link is clicked *other* than to make it less likely to be noticed, and force people to watch the video that they've made pretty clear they don't want to watch in the first place?

    8. Re:NO! by Roblimo · · Score: 2

      You're kidding, right? The show/hide transcript links have been in the same place all along. Is that one click really that hard on you? What about the click it takes to watch the video you don't want to watch?

      If you don't want to watch videos on Slashdot, don't. We run three of them in the average week, and 20+ text pieces per day.

    9. Re:NO! by CmdrTamale · · Score: 1

      I can moderate the comments.

      I begin to feel the need to moderate the submissions.
      --
      If I were to ask you where the hell we were, would I regret it?

    10. Re:NO! by gweilo8888 · · Score: 1

      Again, what value does the show/hide link add for the reader, versus just showing the content in the first place? Frankly, it seems to me to have been designed NOT to be noticed, and therefore not to be used.

  3. Stupid Question... by weilawei · · Score: 1

    Answering my own question: ooyala.com.

  4. Meanwhile by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    google is wilfully breaking "desktop" and browsers they arbitrarily deem "too old". And not just on their own sites: The libraries they put out and are widely used have gone from useful to painfully slowing down websites, if you're not equipped with the fancy stuff google devs have on their desktops.

  5. WWW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Huh, I view WWI and WWII stuff on my mobile device, but WWW? World War 'W'? Help me out here - googling doesn't come up with anything and I didn't take much History or other humanities in school.

  6. Slashdot TV: With sweat and dead man's balls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Paging Rann Xerox.

    Hint Slashdot: Video articles suck. Videos are about the storyteller, not the story.

  7. Why doesn't google offer "responsive" results? by butchersong · · Score: 1

    Can google not use a more dynamic ranking based off of the device viewing their site rather than putting the onus on each individual website?

    1. Re:Why doesn't google offer "responsive" results? by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      That doesnt support Googles long term goals of its mobile platform delivering eyeballs to advertising throughout the entire universe.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
  8. it is "a geddon" by slashmydots · · Score: 1

    They're tanking search results for users ON A PC OR LAPTOP due to your mobile-friendliness. It's bullshit and it's forcing the internet to make an unnecessary change and waste money and/or time because they think the web should be more mobile-friendly. It's corrupt, stupid, unfair nonsense and the FTC, FCC, or Supreme Court will crush them when someone eventually files suit over this.
    Personally, my business opinion of my computer repair company's website is if they can't read it on a smartphone very well, use a real computer. I chose to completely ignore mobile-friendliness (although my site is extremely fast loading and uses simplistic HTML and no plugins so it actually is mobile friendly, but not in Google's opinion) and now I'm getting penalized by Google for users who are doing the right thing and using a real computer to do searches instead of an inadequately fast device with a 4 inch screen.

    1. Re:it is "a geddon" by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They're tanking search results for users ON A PC OR LAPTOP due to your mobile-friendliness.

      Hey, forcing a mobile-phone interface onto an inherently desktop system worked so well for Microsoft in Windows 8 that I guess Google had to give it a go too,

      More seriously, this is beyond braindamaged. Our product is mainframe middleware. Exactly zero percent of our users access our site from a phone or tablet. However, Google now wants us to optimise it for a platform that none of our users will ever use, just because, hey, Google says so. Cretins.

    2. Re:it is "a geddon" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You run a computer repair shop and you expect your customers to have a working computer to visit your website?

  9. A simple cure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about a list of everything google to put in the hosts file?

  10. Hey Google..... by Puls4r · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We run a robotics team. This team is extremely well known, and the students pride themselves on writing a web page every year full of useful information. It was well-visited, and when you searched for the team name and number it was the top result.

    Now? Searching for the team brings up youtube. And vine. And twitter. And facebook. And other social media sites that the team uses. The team web page has been pushed to the SECOND PAGE of the search results, because the kids didn't build a mobile web page.

    You're breaking your own search engine for your business plan. What happened to 'do no evil'?

    1. Re:Hey Google..... by athmanb · · Score: 1

      Are you doing your search on a desktop PC? If yes, the recently added mobile algorithm has no effect and it's all old-fashioned pagerank stuff. All your listed social media sites do their own very effective SEO and have lots of crosslinking so it's natural their results get up higher. If you want your website to show up higher start by adding links to it to all the social media pages and follow up with the other legal SEO tricks.

    2. Re:Hey Google..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The Google business plan is to try to make web sites usable on Android phones and close Apple's competitive advantage with the iPhone. I've never had a problem with an iPhone rendering a regular web page and making it easy for me to move around. Android, not so much.

    3. Re:Hey Google..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That should NOT be the publishers' responsibility. That's an SEO job that should have nothing to do (in a perfect world) with informational ranking. That is the underlying point.

    4. Re:Hey Google..... by Trogre · · Score: 2

      What happened to 'do no evil'?

      DNE was replaced with IPO.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    5. Re:Hey Google..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is SEO: The Concept. It's a pretty good concept. Design your Website so that it ranks high on various Search Engines, by use of such simple things as Keywords, and links in from reliable sources.
      The there is SEO: The Industry. The Industry is actually Anti-SEO. They have their own Agenda as Middlemen, Middlemen who scrape Kopecs out of every dubious Search Result delivered.

      Puls4r's site is _exactly_ what the WWW was originally designed for- a way to share Scientific and Engineering knowledge. Accumulate the knowledge, and make it easily available, for free.
      But that is not the way that the Web works these days.
      The Web has turned into a Wild West of Conmen, Shills, Marketing Scum, and ever more irritating Advertising.
      The only suggestion that I have, is for Puls4r finding somebody amenable at Google, and offering them a Bribe.

    6. Re:Hey Google..... by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      This is the reason why you should use this addon https://addons.mozilla.org/en-.... Screw google, take control back by blocking out shit SEO sites.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    7. Re:Hey Google..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which 'competitive advantage'? iOS is crappier than Android in every way...

    8. Re:Hey Google..... by rpstrong · · Score: 1

      Am I missing something? The description says that it replaces the 'lost' block-web-site function, but I'm still seeing that option. Is this a Firefox issue? (I use Chrome).

  11. Huh... by koan · · Score: 1

    Brian's not interested in site design and visibility because his company does SEO or designs websites.

    So not interested in the 2 things his company specializes in?

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
  12. If you aren't making mobile friendly websites... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you are already sadly behind the times.

  13. Honestly by SmaryJerry · · Score: 1

    Google should use different algorithms for different devices.

  14. Also by SmaryJerry · · Score: 1

    And let you choose to search with the browser version. Because often times I want to view the browser version of sites and no matter how many settings I tweak on my phone I still get their "mobile" aka useless version of the sites.

  15. Leave it alone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My iPhone does just fine with the desktop versions of websites. I don't want the "mobile" version.

    1. Re:Leave it alone by tompaulco · · Score: 2

      My iPhone does just fine with the desktop versions of websites. I don't want the "mobile" version.

      Hear! Hear! I hate going to websites that display the mobile version, which as far as I can tell means removing about half the content so it can display on a device that is not really meant for that sort of task. Sometimes I go to imdb on my phone and rather than monkey with trying to get the desktop version to display, i will just go to my computer because half the information is hidden and you need three or four clicks to get to it on the phone.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  16. SEO != Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a programmer that currently works in SEO - it's not a technology field, it's marketing. If you know your technology you'll do better in it, just like pretty much everything else.

    Can we can the stupid promo-content (especially for SEO) and focus on that whole News for Nerds/Stuff that Matters?

    I read slashdot to escape from the drudgery of digital marketing - not to have it thrown in my face as if it's some sort of technological wonder. SEO (just like any other marketing tool) can be helpful or terrible depending on the person using it - in and of itself it isn't technology.

    1. Re:SEO != Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can we can the stupid promo-content

      Yes they can can, and even should should. But they won't won't.

  17. Go away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SEO is a scam.

    1. Re:Go away. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SEO is a scam.

      SEO is a scam that results from piss poor planning at the design stage. Clicking things in Wordpress != "web development" despite the number of "IT (Idiot Talking) experts" who claim that's what they do for a living.

      Which reminds me of recent "marketing release published as a news item" in Australia where an "SEO expert" crowed about how she got 1st place on Google results for "Sydney Lifestyle Blog".... WTF?! 'cause that's really what people type into Google to find her spammy blog.

  18. Mobile users can stay away by gweihir · · Score: 1

    I really do not care about them at all on my page(s). I out content on there because it contains information, not meaningless entertainment. And I will do zero adjustments just because Google has a god-complex.

    As a side-note, I find Googles "search" to become less and less useful these days. I routinely find far more useful information by cross-links than any number of searches.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  19. I tell clients they can pay for the mobile upgrade or suffer a loss of Google ranking. It's working out well so far.

  20. Thanks for the push Google by WankerWeasel · · Score: 1

    Should everyone make their websites mobile-friendly? Of course. We should all be heavily invested in the user experience. But like so many things, we can't always do everything we should be doing. I'm sure you can think of a dozen or more projects at work that should be taken care of but you either don't have time or the resources to make them happen right now. Making a website mobile is great but for many companies it requires a huge investment in time and resources that they simply don't have. The Google mobile-ready changes were nice in that they forced people to make getting their website mobile-friendly a priority. Most wouldn't have done it if it wasn't for Google forcing their hand on it (or at least not for some time). While it's nice for the user that Google pushed them to do it, many businesses had to spend a lot of time and money making it happen which took away from other projects.

    1. Re:Thanks for the push Google by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Should everyone make their websites mobile-friendly? Of course.

      One of the stores I visited a lot has now made their website 'mobile-friendly'. As a result, it's a steaming pile of monkey turds when used on anything else. Heck, it's probably a steaming pile of monkey turds when used on a phone, too.

      'Mobile friendly' is the worst thing to happen to the web since the blink tag.

    2. Re:Thanks for the push Google by igloo-x · · Score: 0

      So what you're saying is, a store you visited is owned/operated by idiots.

      Shocker. Thanks for sharing.

  21. In Texas, it is ... by CaptainDork · · Score: 1

    ... illegal (a misdemeanor) to arm a geddon.

    --
    It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
  22. So, how far do I have to scroll for the real links by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Because one thing is certain: I DO NOT want to waste my time on a "mobile optimized" page. These things look terrible in a normal browser. So, how many search results do I have to ignore before I get to the real links. And, more important, could anyone develop a plugin that discards those duds automatically?

    Thanks.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  23. and... by Tom · · Score: 1

    And what if my website isn't intended for a mobile audience at all? I'll readily admit I'm stuck 10 years in the past with my web design, but a few of my sites are intentionally not built for mobile because the content they have is not intended for mobile and if you told me you're using your phone to access the site, I'd get a puzzled look and say "but why?".

    Can I set a "X-intentionally-not-designed-for-mobile: true" header?

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:and... by Hewligan · · Score: 1

      ... and if you told me you're using your phone to access the site, I'd get a puzzled look and say "but why?".

      Because the mobile device was the nearest available thing capable of browsing the web at the time I wanted to look at the content.

      The number of cases where there is a legitimate reason to not support mobile is very small.

      --

      "If God created us in his own image, we have more than reciprocated"

    2. Re:and... by Tom · · Score: 1

      Because the mobile device was the nearest available thing capable of browsing the web at the time I wanted to look at the content.

      I understand that.

      But I'm one guy running a website, not a company with budget for a web-designer. My content is now being punished not for its content, but for its presentation.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    3. Re:and... by igloo-x · · Score: 0

      My content is now being punished not for its content, but for its presentation.

      If you content is unique enough to stand on it's own, you're not being punished, and you won't be.

      But if someone else comes along and offers a similar alternative that's formatted to be usable on a small-screen device, I'd rather use their site when I'm on my small-screen device, so I'd prefer Google rank their sites higher.

      But I'm one guy running a website, not a company with budget for a web-designer.

      Ironically enough, if you stayed away from trying to do complex CSS designs and just stuck to very basic HTML, your site would actually work better on mobile devices.

    4. Re:and... by Tom · · Score: 1

      Ironically, I large stay away from complex CSS. But "mobile-ready" largely is complex CSS and Javascript and three other things, for breakpoints and responsiveness.

      I don't care if my site ranks last when you Google on your smartphone. If I didn't design it to be mobile-friendly, your mobile device is welcome to stay away.

      But this sounds much like it would be punished in general, even when the visitory is searching using his desktop computer. And that's just wrong.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  24. Inexplicable drop in Bounce Rate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone else see an inexplicable reduction in bounce rate shortly after Mobilgeddon (May 11th)? Our website saw a 10% reduction in bounce rate from 60% to 50% and it's been holding steady since (and the # of users has remained steady). This is a matching parallel reduction in both desktop and mobile traffic. For the life of me I can't figure out why the sudden reduction except that might be when the new Mobile crawler finally got to us. Just curious if anyone else saw this phenomenon.

  25. Re:So, how far do I have to scroll for the real li by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's a difference between "if a site also looks good on mobile, score it higher" and "give people in normal browsers links to the mobile version by default" - and they are only doing the former.

  26. Re:So, how far do I have to scroll for the real li by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    And how many companies will bother to really keep two versions of their webpage current? If mobile preference gives them higher google rank, they will trim it for mobile use with a token acknowledge to "the rest".

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  27. Re:If you aren't making mobile friendly websites.. by tompaulco · · Score: 1

    you are already sadly behind the times.

    Not all applications are appropriate for a mobile platform. if you want something to be done quickly and efficiently, then a stupid little phone or tablet is not the place to do it. It may work great for Candy Crush and texting (well, not really), but it will never replace a keyboard, mouse and large screen. Or maybe it will, and God help us all.

    --
    If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
  28. What bothers me about "mobile" website fetish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that its advocates seem to ignore the ever increasing size, resolution and computational power of mobile devices. My tablet is just as capable of rendering a page as my desktop, but unless I spoof the browser ID I get the crippled version, and apparently this is now considered to be "good" site behavior. Can we just drop the "mobile" and talk about dynamic layouts instead.

    1. Re:What bothers me about "mobile" website fetish by Hewligan · · Score: 3, Informative

      Can we just drop the "mobile" and talk about dynamic layouts instead.

      What you're talking about is called a responsive layout, and it's the current best practice for mobile support. It involves using CSS media queries to adjust the page layout based on the size of the display.

      (And the Google algorithm does detect responsive layouts and consider them mobile friendly.)

      --

      "If God created us in his own image, we have more than reciprocated"

    2. Re:What bothers me about "mobile" website fetish by myid · · Score: 1

      What you're talking about is called a responsive layout, and it's the current best practice for mobile support. It involves using CSS media queries to adjust the page layout based on the size of the display.

      (And the Google algorithm does detect responsive layouts and consider them mobile friendly.)

      Yes. Using responsive layout, you can adjust lots of things depending on the size of the screen. You can adjust the font size, number of columns (3 columns for a large computer screen, 1 column for a phone screen), the colors (brighter colors with lots of contrast for a phone, so the user can read the phone in bright sunlight), etc.

      Web developers who aren't familiar with responsive design can find lots of tutorials and MOOC classes on it.

      I agree with the frustration of finding that a website has changed to mobile-only, and now doesn't work well with a large computer screen. But that doesn't mean the website should not have become mobile-friendly. It means that the people who made it mobile-friendly should have used responsive design, so that the website would look right in any size screen.

    3. Re:What bothers me about "mobile" website fetish by tepples · · Score: 1

      What you're talking about is called a responsive layout, and it's the current best practice for mobile support. It involves using CSS media queries to adjust the page layout based on the size of the display.

      No CSS media query can change the amount of HTML that you serve. For example, a news site may want to show only headlines on phone screens but headlines and one-sentence summaries on larger screens. Only a Vary: User-agent strategy can take that into account without running the risk of sending text that will never be seen to a viewer who pays by the bit for downloads.

    4. Re:What bothers me about "mobile" website fetish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      User-agent sniffing is the devil. Combine the media query with dynamically loading content.

    5. Re:What bothers me about "mobile" website fetish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Certain pages have Reader View which is great for some text intensive sites. That'll help.

  29. "The update impacts mobile search queries only" by tepples · · Score: 1

    Can google not use a more dynamic ranking based off of the device viewing their site rather than putting the onus on each individual website?

    The featured article on Searchmetrics states that it does: "The update impacts mobile search queries only – not desktop." This implies that Google applies desktop usability measure to ranking when viewed with a desktop UA and mobile usability measure to ranking when viewed with a mobile UA.

  30. Desktop ranking vs. mobile ranking by tepples · · Score: 1

    They're tanking search results for users ON A PC OR LAPTOP due to your mobile-friendliness.

    What in the featured article states that? The Searchmetrics article points out that results for mobile searches and desktop searches use different ranking, and its statistics use change in desktop search ranking as a control group when determining the impact of the change in mobile search ranking.

  31. APK: Android package or hosts file guy? by tepples · · Score: 1

    How about a list of everything google to put in the hosts file?

    APKs are Android packages. This means they're Google. But APK is also a big proponent of using hosts files as one layer in your security practices. Are you trying to recommend using APK techniques to block APKs? My head feels like it's about to explode.

  32. Re:If you aren't making mobile friendly websites.. by tepples · · Score: 1

    How can a blog, forum, or wiki that encourages its users to enter multiple paragraphs of text and mark-up be "mobile friendly" when "mobile" means a glass keyboard on a 5 inch screen?

  33. Both are necessary by tepples · · Score: 1

    The marketing department helps keep the technology department funded. Both are necessary to the continued operation of a business.

  34. Wait, there's more... by justthinkit · · Score: 1

    Wait, there's more...Google has a page analyser that tells you what you need to do to tweak pages. I took one of my pages and was told the font was too small. So I jacked it up. Same "problem". So I jacked it up again, and again. I never got the "too small" message to go away. So, thanks, Google, you've installed an idiot filter. I don't want the idiots you will be sending to HuffPost mega picture click-fests.

    --
    I come here for the love
  35. Just another example of... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google manipulating search results in the service of some agenda selected by Google rather than the end-user.

    If you think you can trust Google, you deserve all the manipulations they perform on you. Even their make-believe motto of "Do no evil" is a manipulation intended to make their users think more positively about them while they are being spied upon for fun and profit.

    WAKE UP!

    "free stuff" on the internet is NOT actually "free" when provided by companies that make billions of dollars giving stuff away "for free". If your neighbor puts something up on his website "for free", he's generally allowing people to download it for free while he himself is paying monthly fees for it to be hosted (he is losing money on his hobby). Google and Facebook etc are spending massive amounts of money on server farms and internet bandwidth to give you stuff "for free" but are not losing money... they're making BILLIONS... so it's clearly NOT "free" (they're making money SOMEHOW). If you think they're getting uber-rich giving stuff away for free then you are an idiot; they're getting uber-rich selling YOU to advertisers and they'll manipulate you as much as needed to keep the cash flowing.

  36. Re:So, how far do I have to scroll for the real li by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    Because one thing is certain: I DO NOT want to waste my time on a "mobile optimized" page. These things look terrible in a normal browser. So, how many search results do I have to ignore before I get to the real links.

    This. Jesus on a skateboard this. My site looks "okay" on a phone, but I'm sure as hell not going to design it for one. Too much data, and it is specifically designed for a decent sized screen, and will stay that way.

    If the concept of burying useful pages in a sea of bullshit advertising is a good idea, have at it Google. I regularly had had two pages of useless ads showing up (especially those cancerous msn.o pages that I have hostfiled out that you get sent to on the first fucing result, but only hand you off. Your search results already are approaching worthless. Why would I care if by bowing to your desires, I'd get to page three instead of page four?

    I went to Duckduckgo a few months ago, and the noise to signal ratio has muchly improved.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  37. NoScript by tepples · · Score: 1

    User-agent sniffing is the devil.

    Some people think this. Others think JavaScript is the devil.

    Combine the media query with dynamically loading content.

    Dynamic anything will screw things up for users of NoScript. Or are NoScript users heavily overrepresented among Slashdot regulars?

    1. Re:NoScript by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very. I'll never understand why these people even use the platform they seem to hate so much.

    2. Re:NoScript by tepples · · Score: 1

      I guess some people like the subset of the web platform that is HTML, CSS, and forms, just not the part that is script. Perhaps they've been burned by abusive scripts that waste disproportionate amounts of valuable CPU and bandwidth resources on ads, tracking, and drive-by installations of malware through browser exploits.

  38. Re:So, how far do I have to scroll for the real li by igloo-x · · Score: 0

    So have a site with "too much data" that you haven't managed to usably format on smaller devices.

    Google isn't going to penalise you on mobile search results - until, of course, someone comes along offering similar data that they have found a way to usably format on smaller devices. And that's a good thing.

  39. Re:NO VIDEO! Also, SEOs are scum! by billstewart · · Score: 1

    Search Engines try to find the most interesting pages that match queries from humans; they do this using robots running algorithms that model what humans might find interesting. "Search Engine Optimizers" try to model what search engine robots will do, and trick them into showing their customers' uninteresting web pages first instead of pages that humans will actually find interesting, because they want to sell you crap. (Doesn't matter if they're good at it, as long as their also-scum customers pay them.)

    SEOs will tell you they're not doing the black-hat stuff that got them a bad name, and that they're really providing legitimate services for their customers*. Sure, they'll help you rewrite your web page so Google's robots can find the interesting parts (Google will also tell you how to do this, for free, and I agree that charging a customer money to tell them not to hide their important content in singing dancing Flash-Animated Javascript-requiring Videos is actually a non-scummy valuable service to the public - but most people who sell those services call themselves "web designers" or similar consulting titles.)

    Some of them will also tell you how to write actual interesting content for your web pages - but most people who do that call themselves "editors" or "content specialists" or similar titles, and only fall back on the term "SEO" if they're appealing to dumber customers or trying to also offer scummy services.

    If Google's changing their search rankings in a publicly documented way, and you're calling it a "mobilegeddon" because it breaks all your little tricks for boosting uninteresting content to higher search rankings, you deserve it. If you're a legitimate web design specialist, you don't need scare tactics like that, you just need to learn what Google wants and offer legitimate re-design services.

    And yes, I did RTFA, but I didn't WTFV.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  40. Reading! It's good! by billstewart · · Score: 1

    I can read interesting material much faster than I can listen to it on video, and I can differentiate between interesting and uninteresting material much MUCH faster reading it than slogging through a video. Transcripts aren't perfect, but at least they're a start.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  41. Re:So, how far do I have to scroll for the real li by igloo-x · · Score: 0

    Maintaining multiple separate "versions" of a website hasn't been a thing for a good few years now. Anyone worth their salt will just serve the same HTML/CSS to all platforms, with rules specified in the CSS to re-arrange the layout on smaller devices. There are plenty of ready-made CSS frameworks that you that you can pick up, install and start using in seconds, and get a lot of this behaviour for free.

  42. Hate mobile page on my mobile devices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mobile pages suck. My "mobile" browsers (iOS devices mostly) almost always give me the best "viewing experience" when I'm viewing the full version of a site. I'm always looking for the "full version" button on mobile sites and wish the damn mobile sites didn't even exist. Too bad the Google folk are apparently not bothering to use modern mobile browsers, because, at least in my experience, they make mobile sites not only unimportant, but downright unwanted.

  43. Re:So, how far do I have to scroll for the real li by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

    So have a site with "too much data" that you haven't managed to usably format on smaller devices.

    I don't write for NTSC video either.

    The problem is I would need to essentially write two completely different websites. And after making the mobile version, you would need the patience of Job or better to go through it.

    But manage? Oh hell, I could manage pretty easily. But it's like entering a AMG GTS in the Baha 500. Some things don't make any sense.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  44. Re: So, how far do I have to scroll for the real l by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you use duckduckgo, you are, simply put, probably up to no good. Let's face it, the only reason someone would use a search engine which markets itself as "the search engine that doesn't track you" is of they want to hide something, especially since google is incomparably more advanced, relevant, and user friendly.

  45. Re: So, how far do I have to scroll for the real l by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 2

    If you use duckduckgo, you are, simply put, probably up to no good. Let's face it, the only reason someone would use a search engine which markets itself as "the search engine that doesn't track you" is of they want to hide something, especially since google is incomparably more advanced, relevant, and user friendly.

    Yeah, that must be it. Couldn't be that a person might be doing some research. It couldn't be that Google searches have become vehicles for sales, and not for information. If you have enough time to waste going through page after page of ads, then Google is for you. Make sure you turn off adblock and no script - there's a good boy.

    And I don't even dislike Google, it's just that it doesn't serve much of a purpose for me. I don't care if they track my searches - I only care that they track them to design what I see.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  46. Free Advertising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a company who shouldn't be relevant anymore.

    Sorry to sidetrack, but isn't bar code printing and scanning kinda a commodity now. I can't believe people still but thousand dollar solutions from these companies anymore. Let alone try to access their product offerings from a mobile device.

  47. mobile algorithm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last google mobil algorithm is really important for every websites.

  48. How ironic by ZeroWaiteState · · Score: 1

    I'm reading about mobile usability on the Slashdot site whilst the adchoices popover advert is blowing up the Chrome mobile browser. I say its past time for the geddon.

    1. Re: How ironic by ZeroWaiteState · · Score: 1

      And I can't quite reach the submit button because 80% of it is covered by the ad.