Post by account_disabled on Mar 13, 2024 5:45:41 GMT
The their old AJAX indexing instructions but did not say how they would be replaced except to specify in a Google post that Google would not click links to get more content. Instead they would need an OnLoad event to trigger further crawling. These webmaster instructions for making AJAX crawlable were often relied on as a way to make singlepage web apps crawlable and we think that feeds will play a role here too as part of the replacement. Relying more heavily on feeds also makes it easier for Google to scrape data directly into SERPS which they have been doing more and more.
See the appendix of this slide deck starting on slide for lots of mobile examples Anhui Mobile Phone Number List of this change in play already. This probably will include the ability to scrape forms directly into a SERP la the form markup for autocomplete that Google just announced. We are also inclined to believe that the use of the new MobileFriendly designation in mobile SERPS may be temporary as long as SEOs and webmasters feel incentivized to make their CSS and JavaScript crawlable and get into the new mobile index. MobileFriendly in the SERP is a bit clunky and takes up a lot of space so Google may decide switch to something else like the slow tag shown to the right originally spotted in testing by Barry Schwartz.
In fact showing the Slow tag might make sense later in the game after most webmasters have made the updates and Google instead needs to create a more serious and impactful negative incentive for the stragglers. seen this one yet. In terms of the MobileFriendly announcement it is surprising that Google has not focused more on mobile page speed minimizing redirects and avoiding mobileonly errorstheir historical focus for mobile SEO. This could be because page speed does not matter as much in the evaluation of.
See the appendix of this slide deck starting on slide for lots of mobile examples Anhui Mobile Phone Number List of this change in play already. This probably will include the ability to scrape forms directly into a SERP la the form markup for autocomplete that Google just announced. We are also inclined to believe that the use of the new MobileFriendly designation in mobile SERPS may be temporary as long as SEOs and webmasters feel incentivized to make their CSS and JavaScript crawlable and get into the new mobile index. MobileFriendly in the SERP is a bit clunky and takes up a lot of space so Google may decide switch to something else like the slow tag shown to the right originally spotted in testing by Barry Schwartz.
In fact showing the Slow tag might make sense later in the game after most webmasters have made the updates and Google instead needs to create a more serious and impactful negative incentive for the stragglers. seen this one yet. In terms of the MobileFriendly announcement it is surprising that Google has not focused more on mobile page speed minimizing redirects and avoiding mobileonly errorstheir historical focus for mobile SEO. This could be because page speed does not matter as much in the evaluation of.