neben Google bietet nunmehr auch Ask.com als Vertreter prominenter Suchmaschinen eine eigene Blogsuche an, wobei die Ergebnisse u.a. anhand der Daten aus Bloglines.com (die Ask.com eingekauft hatte) hinsichtlich der Rankings veredelt werden.
Die Ergebnisse sind nach unterschiedlichsten Kriterien sortierbar:
Spannend ist der Ansatz auf jeden Fall, abweichend von Technoratis Ansatz, Ergebnisse nur rein nach Incoming Links zu ranken. Techcrunch dazu:
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Content Creator Social Media (m/w/d) Erlebnisbauernhof Gertrudenhof GmbH in Hürth |
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Studentisches Praktikum – Video- & Social-Media-Marketing im Bankwesen (m/w/d) Taunus Sparkasse in Bad Homburg vor der Höhe |
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Social Media Manager (m/w/d) NordwestLotto Schleswig-Holstein GmbH & Co. KG in Kiel |
There is a big need for the equivalent of Google Page Rank for blog search relevance. Link analysis on a post just doesn“t work – the content is too fresh to develop meaningful link analysis results. There are now three experiments going on with relevance: Technorati bases relevance solely on „authority“? of the blog, which is calculated solely on unique inbound links to the blog itself. This works much of the time, but can break quite easily. TechCrunch, for example, can be the highest rated blog on just about whatever I write about, regardless of whether I know anything about it. If I write a blog post on a political issue, for example, it will appear at the top of results even though I have no qualifications for doing so. Bloglines is taking a different approach, by factoring in a number of statistics such as Bloglines subscribers, link analysis and other information. This may eliminate or reduce the non-topic-specific Technorati authority problem.
Die Ask.com Maschinerie wurde auch in Bloglines.com integriert.