I’m back with fresh design. New theme is smarter, looks prettier, and works much more functional than older one. And if you think that changing that thing was was easy - you are wrong. There was a big dilemma which one to choose - BloggingPro, Salmon (it would be much much better if you share with us your actual theme, Justin!
), or 4U. Finally I realized that third Wordpress theme is definitely the best one, so I started to modify…
And there comes another problem - after adding all of modifications (code optimization, compositions of header, sidebar, and footer,) my site has stared to look like a mess. But now - after one hour of fixing - the code displays my theme properly in every available browser. It’s really amazing - there are no problems with Internet Explorer. It must have something to do with few uses of outmoded tables in that layout ![]()



May 4th, 2007 #
Well done, it seems good
Anyway, can you explain me what you exactly mean by “google geolocation”? I’m searching for infos…
May 5th, 2007 #
Geolocation is a master reason why Google shows different results for different places. An example - let’s say you are on first place in Google.it for ‘Andrea’ keyterm. You are first in Italian Google, but Google.com/de/co.uk/pl/etc doesn’t show your site for that keyterm on first 20 pages of results, right? So there is a symptom of Geolocation. And we need a ‘comprehensive’ answer how Google do a ‘recognition’ where a website came from.
And what do you think about green Firefox? He has the eyes of Lobo… Seriously!
May 6th, 2007 #
Lol The last time I hadn’t noticed the green fox

Thanks for the clarification, I will try to find something interesting about this
May 6th, 2007 #
One tip: It doesn’t look like algorithm based on domain names or IP address of a website, rather Google looks for IP of linking pages IMO.
Do you think I have to put here a bigger version of green firefox?
May 9th, 2007 #
Love the new theme Bart, looks much better now (not that it didn’t look good before).
As for Google Geolocation, I could be wrong but as far as I know Google knows where your site is coming from based on IP address — surely if they put your site in their index they know where your site is hosted. Also, Google shows similar results for the same query across different Google domains, however it seems to favor sites originating in whatever country you’re in. For example, if you’re in Poland search for “bart” :), it will show similar results as if I searched in the US, however whether you use Google.com or Google.pl it will know you’re in Poland, and will give Polish sites a bit of a boost in the lists. Hope this helps…
May 10th, 2007 #
Sure thing. Older one was just a twobit intermediate modification of pop MistyLook, I set it coz’ there was lack of time for hitting something better.
Last words of your comment hits our problem. Let’s say - we want to get to know how Google engine gives that ‘boost in the lists’.
I’m sure that it isn’t based on IP numbers of ‘boosted sites’, I’m conquering Polish Search Engine Results Pages from US hosting, successfully. Also, there are many other ‘native’ websites that rock international SERPS straight from abroad hosting, so it’s not a way it is.
Google Geolocation might be based on IPs of incoming links, I think. But I’m not sure at all. Anyway, deep inside I hope it’s not relevant to domain extensions, I’ve just brought one great Spanish domain