much better
Recent estimates calculate that, depending on the country, the site dominates between 70 and 90% percent of the browser market. What follows is a series of tips for improving your use.
1) If a site does not have a search facility, is there any way to use Google to search only certain content on a site?
Google maintains an index of pages from each site in your directory, and is easy to find pages in just one place by the prefix "site:" in Spanish, or "site:" in English, which can be used to precede a term search.
Say, for example, that we wanted to do a search for "windows 7" on the site. To do this, you have to go to Google and type "site: taringa.net windows 7", without quotes, and press Enter. This is, regardless of where they are seeking. You can also combine this with the well-known trick of placing the search term in quotes, which will force Google to give pages that contain the exact phrase in quotation marks.
2) Suppose that you have a website that is intended to improve their ratings by other people to visit, is there a way to find out who visits?
You must use "Inbound links (links) which is the official name of this. The "inbound links" are links to a particular site from other sites on the Internet. The analysis of incoming links is the key to the classification of Google searches. In large part, Google determines which search results to favor consideration of the quantity and quality of links pointing to a particular site. While most often a site is linked from other sites of high quality estimates Google, the site appears higher in search results. Prefix search "link:" will reveal all the sites are connected with the site.
3) Do Internet searches on Google depending on whether the term is written in uppercase or lowercase, in technical terms, if "case sensitive"?
Ordinarily, Google searches are not "case sensitive", or at least that's what the documentation says Google. That is, no matter if they are written in lowercase or uppercase. Numerous reports of users, however, found that at various times the capitalization of your search terms affects the search results. Sometimes, also, that it is of interest to write the search term case-sensitive. If you want to do a search in Google that makes the difference between uppercase and lowercase letters (ie, it is case sensitive), you must go to the site "Google case sensitive search"
(Http://case-sensitive-search.appspot.com).
4) How do things that Google only displays recently published?
Google offers a little-known prefix "daterange:" that lets you specify that the browser must deliver results only within a particular stretch of time. There are a couple of warnings about this code. First, the range of dates should be expressed in Julian date format, which is anything but ordinary date. Second, in the world of Google, the date of a document has nothing to do with the date of its creation, but rather the date on which Google ranks its content.
However, strip searches of date can be enormously helpful, they help to narrow the search results. The easiest way to run such searches is not with Google itself but with Fagan Finder (www.faganfinder.com / engines / google.shtml), which provides an easy-to-use strips provide dates and ask Google documents fall within these bands
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