Matt Cutts posted some information today about Google’s next incremental update and it’s availability on Google’s “Big Daddy” datacenter (I didn’t make that up).
He’s not quite ready for feedback from results just yet, so give it a few weeks so the engineers can do their magic before posting on Matt’s blog.
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The constant translation of internet marketing concepts into terms that clients easily understand can be challenging at times, especially with clients that have limited knowledge of computers, the internet, and search engines. While there are many SEO books and guides out there of varying importance and skill levels, I have finally found one I can recommend with confidence to clients and friends.
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SES Chicago 2005 began yesterday and although I couldn’t attend this year (I had a free pass from a friend with a booth in the expo hall, but I found out too late), I’m keeping up with everything that’s going on via Barry Schwartz’ Search Engine Roundtable Blog. Barry and the other site authors do an awesome job of covering the key information from each session while leaving out anything irrelevant, and the additional comments they include keep it interesting.
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While employed for over 4 years on different contract positions as a Software Quality Assurance Engineer, I became very familiar with a variety of programming languages (not HTML or CSS which are markup languages, I’m referring to ASP, PHP, JAVA, XML, and a few others). Some of these languages I actually became so involved with that I ended a few projects as a novice programmer in whatever language I needed to focus on as required.
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I realize that it’s a superlative title to a very subjective matter, but I have honestly felt for years that the talented and intelligent (and sometimes not even intelligent) people I have met that are successful all share one common characteristic. They’re all able to get past the single biggest obstacle that prevents most people from being successful entrepreneurs: self-doubt.
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