So this is mainly focused at setting up a sitemap but people are welcome here to post any other useful thing they've seen putting them up in rankings. I use the Google XML Sitemap generator and I'm not sure what kind of settings are the best. Currently, I'm currently at these settings : Homepage, Posts, Tags, Archives, Categories and Author Pages Change Frequency Daily for Homepage and Monthly for the rest. Priority 1.0 Homepage and 0.3 for the rest. My sitemap is too stuffed up and I feel Google would care more about my links and ranking my pages if I provide it with lesser stuff. So what are the various settings you people use what according to you are better for on-site SEO. Also, there are some top-sites that don't use tags in sitemaps, so how good is disabling that in the sitemap ? Any other suggestions are also welcome.
Google is far efficient than anyone of us. Just put your website link on xml-sitemap.com and create your sitemap - Your sitemap will look like this: http://www.genetechsolutions.com/sitemap.xml Google read all your pages on the website if you don't create any sitemap - Pro Tip: Just create perfect navigation and try to link all important pages through home page. AsadMoeen, I need to talk to you personally, please email me at
I agree with Kumail. It is good to submit a custom sitemap to google webmasters but regardless of that Google will crawl your links based on your website linking to those specific pages. If your home/inner pages doesn't link to a particular page it will never get indexed. Also - a better idea is to do social bookmarking rather than submit sitemaps. Google indexes pages faster if it gets external links for those pages.
Don't know why but Google doesn't accept feed when I submit it through webmaster tool's sitemap option. How can we do that ?
hiee, my site dont have go back to home page option from feed page. there is no any link to go back plzz help me for this.... my site is mobileinindia.in
If you don't own the rights to the show, it is illegal to rebroadcast something. But - let's say you decide to stream at 500kb/s, if you have 10 people watching, that's 5,000kb/s 5mb/s upstream. Fiber connections can offer 20-50mb/s upstream so you're covered there. But if you have 30 streams with 5 people each watching, that 150 x 500kb/s = 75,000kb/s or 75mb/s. After 30 minutes of streaming you've just transfered ~2gigs of data upstream in 30 minutes!!! So you'll need a fat pipe and a foregiving ISP If you're only looking to stream a show or 2 for you watch remotely, VLC has this function built in. Start here http://www.videolan.org/vlc/streaming.html