Bigdaddy, Google’s new data centre,
isn’t news to most webmasters; both Search Engine Watch
and Webmaster World’s forums have discussed the technology
since late 2005, and even Google’s own Chief Search Engineer
Matt Cutts has blogged the topic extensively. Even the reason
behind the naming convention (one of the Google staff’s
kids call him Big Daddy at home) is out in the open.
How Bigdaddy will affect page rankings within Google however,
still remains to be seen, although there is a lot of speculation
floating around the Net. Mr. Cutt’s blog states that
the new foundation will improve cannonicalization, which is
the computer code that tells a search engine that
www.domain.com
domain.com
domain.com/index.html
www.domain.com/index.html
are all the same web site. It is also reported that the data
center will positively impact 302 redirects, which have been
a known issue for some time.
What wasn’t anticipated with the update though were the
chaotic and oftentimes strange behaviors the search engine
has displayed, most notably over the past several months. Although
some of Google’s previously-indexed sites dropping off
the face of the engine may be associated with their reported
lack of server space and others due to Google’s “different
datacenters get different data at different times” statement,
many of the problems seem surreal, without explanation.
For instance, Webmaster World’s forums have reported
large SERPS drops, changes in supplemental result handling, “home
page only” results and pages dropping right out of the
Bigdaddy index, while the Digital Point forums are asking if
Google has cleaned their index and why the supplemental problem
is reoccurring.
What little information is available on the subject is only
the information that webmasters are providing each other; little
explanation is coming from Google themselves right now. Some
experts have shown that the supplemental deletions across the
data centers have been gradual over the past several months,
with the idea that perhaps the supplemental results are being
deleted to free up server space. Others have noticed the inclusion
of longer URLs with multiple variables, such as database-driven
pages (which were not previously indexed), and the product-based
sites like BizRate and Amazon generating higher search results
than previously found.
Right now, the only “fixes” seem to be either contacting
a member of the Google team (most notably posting in Mr. Cutts’ blog),
ensuring your website doesn’t fit within the “too
similar” Google guideline (as it seems that sites with
slightly different page text are doing better than most) or
hitting up Google’s site for a re-inclusion request.
Without more guidance from Google though, there isn’t
much webmasters can actively do at the moment, other than sit
back and watch Bigdaddy work out the search engine-retrieval
bugs, talk over the situation with other webmasters, and stay
as informed on the subject as possible.
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