primorudy said:
coding does matter. website speed is taken into consideration.
Says who???
Google have certainly
SUGGESTED that "speed"
MAY be used as a factor but have yet to quantify what " speed" actually means.
Is it the milliseconds it takes for the server to spit out the source code, which is the ONLY thing that can actually be measured by a SE useragent.
Is it the network latency? which is no real measure of "speed" given that Google datacentres are spread around the globe, so should your URLs be "judged" on the server being in Germany (for instance) and the crawler that last visited the URI was from a Google datacentre in India or Australia??
Or maybe it's the rendering time? Which of course can be different depending on the browser and client machine, and of course given that Google's system does NOT load or trigger javascripts, load or render styles, or load images when the URL is requested they do not actually know that either.
What it is the yardstick that "average speed" is measured by?
Is it by URLs on the same server?
The same CIDR allocation?
The same country?
The same continent?
The same marketplace?
The same TLD/ccTLD?
Or something else?
If "coding" matters, how is it that pages created with a crappy WYSI[almostWY[might]G "page builder can be found on "page one" of the results?
primorudy said:
Tables and fieldsets aren't good for SEO and you are supposed to do external CSS and javascript
Says who???? Some clueless "expert" who doesn't know his gluteus maximus from his olecranon
Search engineers have
NEVER said any such thing, they have
NEVER even hinted at that being the case. IN fact ALL the SE spokes men|women|persons say unequivocally the EXACT opposite.
So please, if you are going to tell us all about these "factors" try and get some REAL FACTS not SEOMoz style pseudo scientific bull crap and "buzz phrases" that happen to be "in vogue".
The World of Search is full of speculation, supposition, mis-information, guesswork and total lies. Do NOT add to it.
Chris.
Indifference will be the downfall of mankind, but who cares?
Time flies like an arrow, however, fruit flies like a banana.
Webmaster Forum