The other day I realized that I sort of missed some of the more light hearted content this site used to have. When I relaunched patorjk.com, my original vision was for something a bit more focused, however, I think neglecting the humorous content took away a piece of this site’s personality. So I took a trip over to archive.org and grabbed up some of my old pages for a new section I’m calling “Miscellaneous”. It’ll basically house content that doesn’t fit into the categories of Software or Programming. Specifically, I grabbed up my old collection of funny chain letters: 1, 2, 3, and 4. I also grabbed up a funny IM conversation my friend Mike Smetak sent me when we were in high school, a neat poem about coke, and a profanity filled rant on room busters by Ping (who used to do art work for this site).
While creating this new section, I also did a little house cleaning around the site:
- The Links section was removed. I noticed this section wasn’t getting much traffic and it was slightly redundant to my Blogroll (which is basically a links section), so I decided to remove it. I think I’ll think of the Blogroll as my new links section.
- The Contact page was merged with the About page. Having a whole page for just my email address seemed kind of silly, plus it sort of cluttered up the navigation a bit.
- The VB Array Tutorial [fixed] was updated. Someone emailed me requesting that I add a section on multidimensional arrays, so I added a blurb at the end of the article that discusses them.
Google Penalty for the Color Fader
Woe is me. My Color Fader app seems to be suffering from a Google penalty. The program went from being ranked #3 on Google for the phrase “color fader” to not being ranked at all for that phrase (I checked all 68 pages). A Google penalty occurs when Google decides your page is somehow violating their terms of service. No published data is available about the kinds of penalties, but they’ve been speculated to fall into the categories of the -30 penalty (your search rank goes down by 30), the -950 penalty, and being removed from Google’s index. The program still ranks for one key phrase, so its not gone from the index, but I’ve also noticed that Google Analytics doesn’t appear to be reporting any data for the app, so for one reason or another, Google has decided it doesn’t like my color fader.
I’m kind of at a loss for why this is. I emailed the support team through their Webmasters Tools application, but I haven’t heard anything so I’m not sure what to do. Google had been bringing that page around 30 visitors a day, so it sucks that all of a sudden its facing this bizarre penalty. Luckily Yahoo and the other search engines still seem to like the app.
Edit: Woo! It appears the mysterious penalty has been lifted. I now rank again for various color fader related search terms. My guess is that the penalties are auto-generated and that to undo one someone at Google has to go look at the page and make sure everything’s cool. I probably should have been more patent (I sent my reconsideration request on the 15th), but for some reason I was thinking I was in for a long penalty. I read a couple Google penalty stories I found online of most of them revolved around people having long penalties (up to 10 months). I guess I just got lucky.
DarcFX is Not Dead
In my “Three Things to Say” post I mentioned that DarcFX.com was no longer with us, however, it apparently is not dead and was just offline for a while. In the comments to that post Syber dropped by to say “DarcFX is still around and the victim of me recently being useless with linux and ruining his entire site. All the stuff still exists though.” So it’s good to know it’s not gone, it’ll be interesting to see if anything new is in store for the site.
Did they say why the penalty was issued in the first place?
At first I was thinking, “Oh man, what if this happened to me.” Then, two things occurred to me:
1. I don’t get that many hits from google searches.
and
2. I couldn’t look at myself in the mirror if I knew that I’m afraid of a search engine.
Sometimes they’ll tell you about the penalty via the Google Webmaster Tools, sometimes (like in my case) they wont tell you about it. From what I’ve read, Google auto-penalties some sites based on what its Googlebot sees and also takes suggestions from users who can submit sites they think are spam or irrelevant for certain phrases.
It’s definitely good to know about. It sucks when you suddenly get on a roll for a certain phrase and then they take it away.
The VB array tutorial points to your WordPress administration area :-[. Glad to hear that you weren’t permanently kicked from Google seeing as how I don’t believe you’ve done anything “illegal” by their standards. I don’t know a whole lot about how Google operates in that respect, but from what I’ve read about Yahoo!’s services you only need to be weary when you see the “morgue2” subdomain as a referrer.
Thanks for the catch! I try to check all the links before I post them, sometimes something that like slips by though.
I’ll keep an eye out for “morgue2”, though Yahoo only accounts for 5.4% of my search engine traffic so I’m not as concerned with them as I am with Google (which is the source of 85.5% of my search engine traffic). Some site owners tell me their traffic is neck and neck when it comes to Google and Yahoo, I’m not sure why I do so well on Google and not the others.
Most traffic I receive from search engines points to Google and its subsidiaries (such as Google U.K., Google China, et cetera). I tend to think this is due to the fact that Google has become the most well-known search engine on the entire internet far surpassing companies such as Yahoo! and Windows Live Search (formerly MSN). Realistically it is the most heavily advertised, it’s talked about very frequently on the news, and it’s been adapted into popular culture as a slang-term/verb (“I’ll Google it later”). Does anyone ever say, “Let me Yahoo! them and I’ll get back to you”? I don’t believe so.
They’re certainly the biggest, but I don’t think they’re 15 times bigger than Yahoo (85.5% vs 5.4%). Yahoo seems to fair pretty well on Google Trends:
http://www.google.com/trends?q=google%2C+yahoo%2C+windows+live%2C+msn%2C+ask&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all&sort=0
Though that may just be people using the services they provide. I can’t say I use Yahoo or MSN’s Live Search very much, but I’d be shocked if they each only had around 5% of the search engine market.
Good day! Would you mind if I share your blog with my myspace group?
There’s a lot of people that I think would really appreciate your content. Please let me know. Many thanks