More Search Dynamics
To continue on my prevous page,this time concentrating on information that I am interested
in. Having developed a technique using the URL Instpection Tool I have been
submitting pages to Google that I have checked are not indexed. Some pages that I know have been found by people making searches
and I have added content to I am re-indexing.
I know that some of my history pages are in the index and have been found. Similaly for my web design and admin pages. These
are the pages that I AM INTERESTED in.
The dynamics of a search are not straight forward. Quite often I have found things related to what I had been searching.
For example: when searching for "alvera edward confessor" I came across information about Woodhall Manor.
Having had some success in getting pages found by search engines the analysis of the hits that I get are interesting. For
example, hits on my page on the Gestingthorpe Roman Villa could have been from someone interested in the villa or local
history or it could be that they were searching for their own name on the Internet. There are two names that I could think of
in that instance. I changed the pages to try and determine what the "dynamic" was.
Top
Little benefit of external links
External links just provide a eans for a visitor to leave your website.
The About this website on Alan Shelly's Website:
I came across Alan Shelly's website/blog when I was researching Woodhall Manor.
English ‘Folkright’ is principled upon equality and the national culture of responsibility and sense of fair-play. It is the
origin of English democracy and the basis of our common law. It was the folkright that introduced our jury service, providing
trial by fellow citizens. The basic principle is one of protection under the law in return for responsible duties and behaviour.
It was the primary law of the people up until and during the 10th and 11th centuries, particularly before the Norman Conquest.
In those early times it was commonly directed in the Shire-Moots while the overarching Statutes were issued from the ‘Witan’
to instruct the nation, most particularly over military matters. The common law was much modified under the Norman feudal system
until the Magna Carta re-adopted the just principles of ‘Folkright’.
Ancient Folkright combines the lore of English custom and traditions with the law of chancery and conscience. The Folkright is
the foundation of our freedom. It is the inherited right of all freeborn, law abiding responsible citizens of England and Wales.
Relating through English culture and conscience with natural justice, where there is a ‘duty to act fairly’.
The roots of life are inheritance, survival and tradition. Always bear in mind what is, or is not, rightful. “Greatness lies
not in the power a person may snatch for personal glory, it lies rather in caring for one another and for nature,
from which alone a universal quality of life can spring”. (P.B. Shelley)