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Adobe to make searching easier on Flash sites: related news

Adobe to make searching easier on Flash sites

Internet users will now have an easier time finding sites that rely heavily on the popular Flash video format.

Adobe to make searching easier on Flash sites

Internet users will now have an easier time finding sites that rely heavily on the popular Flash video format.

[07/03] Adobe to make searching easier on Flash sites

NEW YORK (AP) - Internet users will now have an easier time finding sites that rely heavily on the popular Flash video format.

Adobe pushes to make Flash sites searchable

Sometimes, trying to find content in sites that that rely heavily on Adobe Flash isn't so easy. In an attempt to resolve that problem, Adobe has teamed up with Google and Yahoo to help the two firms better index Flash files through their respective search engines.

Why Flash movies and intros are frightening for SEO specialists?

The SEO experts and Web designer professionals are getting the hot problem for optimizing the flash related websites. Flash movies and intros are frightening for SEO specialists. The reason is the spiders will not crawl the flash movies and search engines will not crawl the flash related sites. Flash movie contain the inside of the text in the movie you can simply count this text lost for boosting your rankings. Of course search engines are start indexing the flash movies if contain the plain text, this is just incompetent way for optimization of flash sites.

Adobe Advances Rich Media Search on the Web

Adobe Systems Incorporated (Nasdaq: ADBE) today announced the company is teaming up with search industry leaders to dramatically improve search results of dynamic Web content and rich Internet applications (RIAs). Adobe is providing optimized Adobe(R) Flash(R) Player technology to Google and Yahoo! to enhance search engine indexing of the Flash file format (SWF) and uncover information that is currently undiscoverable by search engines. This will provide more relevant automatic search rankings of the millions of RIAs and other dynamic content that run in Adobe Flash Player. Moving forward, RIA developers and rich Web content producers won't need to amend existing and future content to make it searchable -- they can now be confident it can be found by users around the globe.

Adobe Advances Rich Media Search on the Web

SAN JOSE, Calif. --(Business Wire)-- Adobe Systems Incorporated (Nasdaq:ADBE) today announced the company is teaming up with search industry leaders to dramatically improve search results of dynamic Web content and rich Internet applications (RIAs). Adobe is providing optimized Adobe(R) Flash(R) Player technology to Google and Yahoo! to enhance search engine indexing of the Flash file format (SWF) and uncover information that is currently undiscoverable by search engines. This will provide more relevant automatic search rankings of the millions of RIAs and other dynamic content that run in Adobe Flash Player. Moving forward, RIA developers and rich Web content producers won't need to amend existing and future content to make it searchable -- they can now be confident it can be found by users around the globe.

Adobe Advances Rich Media Search on the Web

SAN JOSE, Calif. (Business Wire) -- Adobe Systems Incorporated (Nasdaq:ADBE) today announced the company is teaming up with search industry leaders to dramatically improve search results of dynamic Web content and rich Internet applications (RIAs). Adobe is providing optimized Adobe(R) Flash(R) Player technology to Google and Yahoo! to enhance search engine indexing of the Flash file format (SWF) and uncover information that is currently undiscoverable by search engines. This will provide more relevant automatic search rankings of the millions of RIAs and other dynamic content that run in Adobe Flash Player. Moving forward, RIA developers and rich Web content producers won't need to amend existing and future content to make it searchable -- they can now be confident it can be found by users around the globe.

Top Torrent Sites According to Google - Mininova tops the list of favorite torrent sites

A report today over at TorrentFreak takes a look at the way that Google ranks Torrent sites and finds that Google’s information seems comparable to that reported by the sites themselves which hasn’t always been the case when looking at Alexa rankings for the sites. Using Google, it was determined that Mininova is the most popular Torrent site and The Pirate Bay comes in second. Rankings indicate that Torrentz and Isohunt compete closely for third place and then there are a handful of other torrent sites that also rank fairly high although the popularity of these sites varies between countries. The stats also indicate that Torrent sharing via all of these sites is on the rise.

Flash Search Being Enabled By Google, Yahoo; Images/Video Still Not Searchable

In a major step forward in search technology, Adobe (NSDQ: ADBE) is working with Google (NSDQ: GOOG) and Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) to make Flash files searchable in online search. The project will enable searches on Flash content to return text and links, which can then be indexed, and hence available in search results for the users. Content from a Flash application or even a game or advertisement will be available to search engines, reports InfoWorld. Pages containing a Flash .SWF file will be returned in a search. Google has already implemented this, while Yahoo, ever the laggard, will enable Flash search in a future version, whenever that comes out.

Adobe Improving Flash Web Search Support

Flash-based content has historically been difficult for Web-based search engines to index, but Adobe is hoping to change that by working with Yahoo! and Google to make it easier for engines to sort through dynamically created Flash-based content.

Adobe Makes Flash Crawlable

nickull wrote in his journal that "Today Adobe systems made an announcement that it has provided technology and information to Google and Yahoo! to help the two search engine rivals index Shockwave Flash (SWF) file formats. According to the company, this will provide more relevant search rankings of the millions pieces of flash content. Until now, developers had to implement workarounds for exposing text content using in Flash to search engine spiders and other bots such as using XHTML data providers. While the Flash content is exposed, it is not yet clear how it will be utilized by the search engines, as they have not revealed their algorithms. The SWF specification is openly published."

Why Is Adobe Flash On Linux Still Broken?

mwilliamson writes "As I sit reading my morning paper online I still cannot view the embedded videos due to auto-detection of my Flash player not working. One in every three or four YouTube videos crashes the browser. I remember sometime back reading that Adobe has a very small development team (possibly only one) working on the Linux port of Flash. It has occurred to me that Flash on Linux is the one major entry barrier controlling acceptance of Linux as a viable desktop operating system. No matter how stably, smoothly, efficiently, and correctly Linux runs on a machine, the public will continue to view it as second-rate if Flash keeps crashing. This is the worst example of being tied down and bound by a crappy 3rd-party product over which no Linux distribution has any control.

How Well Can Flash Sites Be Optimized for Search Engines?

Ross Dunn, CEO, Stepforth Web MarketingOn June 30, 2008 Google and Adobe announced that upgrades to the Google and (soon) Yahoo search engines will allow them to crawl Flash webpages to an extent never before seen. Since this news broke, there has been speculation on how this might change the practice of search engine optimization (SEO). Can Flash websites now compete with HTML sites for top rankings? Not yet. It is clear to me that a search engine optimized Flash website isn't yet ready for a head-to-head battle with a fully optimized HTML website. Allow me to explain.

Adobe Gets the Press But Does Search No Favors

Adobe hands out party favorsIt is easy to see by all the headlines today that Adobe, Google, and to a lesser degree Yahoo, are getting all the love. As Stan Schroeder posted earlier this morning, Adobe is getting together with Google and Yahoo to put some new technology in place that will make Flash enabled Web sites indexable by the two search engine companies. Everyone’s reaction so far has been to get all excited about the news with a few hold outs questioning just how practical this really is. Mathew Ingram said this morning:

Adobe To Enhance Web Content Search With Adobe Flash Technology - Update

(RTTNews) - Tuesday, software maker Adobe Systems Inc. (ADBE: News, Chart, Quote ) announced it would provide its Adobe Flash Technology to search industry companies, to improve search results of dynamic web content and Rich Internet Applications or RIAs.

Adobe makes Flash searchable, crawlable

Adobe Flash CS3 ProIt’s not gadget news per se, but if you consider Adobe Flash a tool in your arsenal, this is big news.

Google, Yahoo to Make Flash Searchable

Adobe Systems has teamed up with Google and Yahoo to make content mixed with its Flash file format easier to index. The software maker predicts a big impact on how and what pages are sorted in the rankings of those search engines. Just give it some time.

Adobe Helps Search Leaders Uncover 'Invisible' Flash-based Content

Design software maker Adobe Systems Inc. announced Adobe announced late Monday night that it would begin providing its Adobe Flash Player technology to leading search engines Google and Yahoo to help them uncover Web content that was previously invisible to Web searches.

Flash is Now Search Engine Friendly, Adobe Says

With the launch of a Flash-reading tool from Adobe, marketers can factor Flash into their SEO efforts, instead of compensating for the presence of Flash with extra text.

Adobe Works with Google and Yahoo! to Help Web Users Search Flash Content

Until now it has been extremely challenging to search the millions of RIAs and dynamic content on the Web, so we are leading the charge in improving search of content that runs in Adobe Flash Player,” said David Wadhwani, general manager and vice president of the Platform Business Unit at Adobe, as Adobe today announced it is teaming up with search industry leaders to dramatically improve search results of dynamic Web content and rich Internet applications (RIAs).

Adobe makes indexing Flash content in search easier

Tags: Adobe Systems Inc., Google Inc., Search Engine, Yahoo! Inc., Rich Internet Application, Webtop, Flash, Search, Larry Dignan

Adobe, Google, Yahoo join to open RIAs to search engines

Adobe Systems Inc. today announced that an optimized Adobe Flash Player will be added to the search engines of Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc. under agreements with the two Internet firms. The tool will help the search engines better index dynamic Web content and rich Internet applications (RIA) that include the Flash file format, or Shockwave Flash (SWF).

Adobe plans to improve search results of Web content and RIAs - Quick Facts

(RTTNews) - Adobe Systems Inc. (ADBE: News, Chart, Quote ) announced that it has intended to improve search results of dynamic Web content and rich Internet applications or RIAs. Adobe said that it is providing optimized Adobe Flash Player technology to Google and Yahoo! to enhance search engine indexing of Flash file format and uncover information to provide relevant automatic search rankings of millions of RIAs and other dynamic content.

Caution urged following Google Flash changes

Yesterday (July 1) Google announced that it had teamed up with Adobe to make Flash files indexable by search engines. Up until now, any text appearing within Flash sites has been invisible to search engines.


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