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Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Involved in the Google Caffeine release is web indexing that offers new content faster

Wednesday Google's new web indexing system named Caffeine went live. Announcing the global launch of Caffeine, Google explained that its evolving search engine technology makes even more freshly minted web content accessible and delivers that new material faster than before. Nobody will alter the way they use Google. But links to a broader range of relevant content are now presented much sooner after the content is published. The Caffeine overhaul of the web indexing technology also can be able to supply Google a lot more flexibility to keep pace with a web that is evolving at an accelerating rate.

Resource for this article: Google Caffeine launch – web indexing delivers new content faster By Personal Money Store

Speed isn't anything – Google Caffeine launch

Caffeine delivers 50 percent of freshwater search results. That characteristic alone may be hard to translate into a benefit for the average Google user. PCWorld tested an evaluation of web indexing systems when Caffeine was in development and discovered that results took .15 seconds on the regular Google search and .09 seconds on Caffeine. Since Caffeine is the regular Google search now, the test can't be repeated. And .06 seconds probably won’t make much of a difference for searchers, no matter how tight the deadline seems to be. However, what shows up .06 seconds faster will make a difference for individuals who work with content publishing.

Articles and other content publishing real time

The urgent benefit of the Google Caffeine launch to the average user is fresher content, and more of it. Google’s Matt Cutts told Search Engine Land that that “Caffeine benefits both searchers and content owners because it means that all content (and not just content deemed "real time") can be searchable within seconds after it is crawled." It was reported by Search Engine Land the old Google would crawl a set of pages, process those pages and add them to the index. Rather than one page at a time proceeding, the whole batch had to go at the same time. Now Google crawls and processes pages individually and instantly.

Substantial storage capacity – Caffeine

For Caffeine to eliminate the delay between when it finds a page and makes it available to the public demands an astronomical amount of storage. Carrie Grimes said Caffeine indexed website pages on an enormous scale on the official Google blog. Each second Google processes hundreds of thousands of webpages. 3 miles high each and every second is how much paper pages processed at that rate would make. Caffeine takes up nearly 100 million gigabytes of storage in a single database and adds new info at a rate of hundreds of thousands of gigabytes per day. You would have to have 625,000 of the largest iPods to store that much details; if these were stacked end-to-end they would go for a lot more than 40 miles. As outlined by PC World, the Apple bill would be $155,625,000.

Attempting to keep up with Caffeine

The Google Caffeine launch doesn’t change web looking content publishing. But some important details were pointed out by Resource Shelf. Information found one day may not be there if you go back to the very same location the next. Pages are being refreshed a lot more often and the cache is updated a lot more often also. If a searcher needs content on a page the way it looked at noon on Wednesday, it's a good idea to make a copy with something like Zotero, a Firefox extension because by 12:15 p.m. on Wednesday the content on the page might modify when the cache is updated.

Find more info on this topic

PC World

pcworld.com/article/198384/google_jolts_search_with_fresher_results_with_caffeine.html?tk=hp_blg

Searchengineland.com

searchengineland.com/googles-new-indexing-infrastructure-caffeine-now-live-43891?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed: searchengineland (Search Engine Land)&utm_content=Google Reader

Official Google Blog

googleblog.blogspot.com



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