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Wink. Introduction to SEO | The Nonprofit SEO Guide. The benefits of a respectable Internet presence are immense and well-documented. What is less well-known is how easily nonprofit organizations can increase their visibility on the major search engines. The majority of online searches take place on the three big search engines: Google , Yahoo , and MSN , with Google controlling most of the current market. There are two types of results which show up when a user performs a search in one of these engines: sponsored listings (for which there is a cost) and organic results. We will focus on achieving organic results. Organic results are links to sites that the search engine has dynamically, and seemingly magically, ranked as being most relevant to any particular keyword or phrase.

This guide will explain the basic steps of how to get your site to show up higher in the search results of major search engines, preferably within the first page of listings. Get Started: What's in a Word? S Best Photos of b17. Flickr Hive Mind Search example page. Flickr Hive Mind is a search engine as well as an experiment in the power of Folksonomies. All thumbnail images come directly from Flickr, none are stored on Flickr Hive Mind. These photos are bound by the copyright and license of their owners, the thumbnail links take to you to the photos (as well as their copyright and license details) within Flickr.

Because some other search engines (Google, etc.) index parts of Flickr Hive Mind, you may have been led here from one of them. Welcome to Flickr Hive Mind, almost certainly the best search engine for photography on the web. If you are a Flickr user and use Flickr Stats you may have seen people being led to your photos via Flickr Hive Mind (as a Referrer). Flickr requires that I inform you that Flickr Hive Mind uses the Flickr API, but is neither endorsed nor certified by them. There are literally hundreds of other web tools built around the Flickr API, see Flickr Bits for a bunch of examples. Zebra. Fancy our fun Zebra? Visit our store for some fun gift ideas for yourself or for your fine fellow Zebra fans. “The difference between Zebra 1.3.36 and Zebra 2.0 is astounding – top work – at least 4-6 times quicker with our AND terms. Thank you VERY VERY much.” – Dan Mullineux, LMS Tech Lead, Talis.

Zebra is a high-performance, general-purpose structured text indexing and retrieval engine. It reads structured records in a variety of input formats (eg. email, XML, MARC) and allows access to them through exact boolean search expressions and relevance-ranked free-text queries. Zebra supports large databases (more than ten gigabytes of data, tens of millions of records). It supports incremental, safe database updates on live systems. Zebra is free software, available under the GPL license. Notice: Optional, commercial support is available for Zebra. New from Index Data: MasterKey Express: A SaaS search portal for your library focused on free open access resources. Clusty the clustering search engine. Previewseek. IceRocket blog search.