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#1
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#2
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Have tried nearly everything to get googlebot to find my site, even their (hahahah) faq's |
#3
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Have tried nearly everything to get googlebot to find my site, even their (hahahah) faq's still cant find me. |
#4
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img src="picts/spacer.gif" HEIGHT=3 WIDTH=10 alt="image" <-- change the alt="image" to alt="" since the image is only used for spacing and nothing else. Do likewise with all the other spacer images. img src="picts/main.jpg" HEIGHT=100 WIDTH=750 alt="image" <-- change the alt="image" to something else so it is holding meaningful text for images that are relaying visual information to people. Yes, this can help you out in more ways than one. Do likewise with all the other meaningful images in your pages such as the ones used for linking. |
#5
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img src="picts/spacer.gif" HEIGHT=3 WIDTH=10 alt="image" <-- change the alt="image" to alt="" since the image is only used for spacing and nothing else. Do likewise with all the other spacer images. |

#6
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Or just remove alt="" at all. You will save on bandtwidth ![]() |
#7
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Borek wrote: Or just remove alt="" at all. You will save on bandtwidth ![]() Removing alt="" results in the word 'image' for every single spacer.gif or decorative image in text only browsers. There is a reason the alt attribute is mandatory according to the specs ;-) |
#8
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PS - It can also be helpful to blind people, but this is a search engine newsgroup. |
#9
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#10
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Roy Schestowitz wrote: [alt attributes on images] PS - It can also be helpful to blind people, but this is a search engine newsgroup. Making a site a good experience for blind people, helps SEO more than you may think. Definitely worth talking about it in a search engine newsgroup. Example: regular non-thinking webmaster's web page: paragraph about birds 'read more' paragraph about bees 'read more' 'read more' number one goes to a page about birds, 'read more' number two goes to a page about bees. This is probably made visibly logical to sighted viewers using IE or Firefox. In the blind person's browser, when tabbing from link to link, this person will only hear "read more", but he can't tell what it is that he could read more about. Now change 'read more' one to 'read more about birds' and 'read more' two to 'read more about bees', and the blind person is helped, and so is the SEO for the birds and bees pages. |
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Click here< is actually a common case study where the user, whether blind or not, does not know where s/he is headed. Web design is impaired not on- |
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