Google: an observation of their process

I have some websites that I have created in the last little bit (mostly just boring static HTML for simplicity). I have been tracking them to figure out when/how they will appear on Google. Well, I've searched from work, and the page doesn't appear at all. It's been several weeks, and I've cross-posted the pages all over trying to make sure Google finds them. The other night, my home machine found the page with no problem. 1st page, 1st link, even! How amazing! I came to work, and my work machine has a different result. So, I had someone else here search; they also didn't find it. However, their result was different from mine! I even ran the search via my PDA; I found my page on the first page first link.


It sorta looked like this:

Location Result
Home Machine 1 1st Page
Home Machine 2 Not at all
Work Not at all
PDA 1st Page
Sheri's work Not at all
Chris' work 1st Page

So, I began to wonder why. I asked our optimization expert at work (yes, we've a dev whose whole job is to place our site 1st page, 1st link), and here's a summary of what he said:
"Your site seems to be new so don't expect your place to always remain constant. Google has multiple data centers and will move people from one to another to allow for updates so each one can show different results. You are #1 on MSN, #51 on Yahoo and greater than 100 on google. You can check all the datacenters here. If you still see yoruself on google tonight let me know because that should be very short lived."
Somehow, this inconsistent results across multiple machines seems odd. Does this make sense to anyone?

posted @ Wednesday, December 07, 2005 8:51 AM

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# re: Google: an observation of their process

Left by Mark Coffman at 12/7/2005 10:05 AM
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Theo,

This is completely true. Inconsistant results across different machines is because those machines have a different datacenter cached in their DNS for www.google.com -- it is partially because of load-balancing and partially geography-based.

The best advice I can give you is continue to create quality, original content, and don't worry about your day-to-day ranking. Treat it like the stock market. It will take care of itself.


Hope that helps.
Mark

# re: Google: an observation of their process

Left by Theo Moore at 12/7/2005 7:57 PM
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Ah, good deal. Thanks for the info, MES. Hope CC was good. G seemed to be in a good mood when I picked him up.
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