On Tuesday, April 21, Google is making a major update to its mobile search algorithm that will change the order in which websites are ranked when users search for something from their phone.
The algorithm will start favoring mobile-friendly websites (ones with large text, easy-to-click links, and that resize to fit whatever screen they’re viewed on) and ranking them higher in search. Websites that aren’t mobile-friendly will get demoted.
About 60% of online traffic now comes from mobile and Google wants users to have a good experience whenever they click on a mobile link.
The company announced its impending changes back in February, giving webmasters nearly two months and plenty of information to make the changes necessary to keep their sites from disappearing from mobile search results. But the update is still expected to cause a major ranking shake-up. It has even been nicknamed “Mobile-geddon” because of how “apocalyptic” it could be for millions of websites, Itai Sadan, CEO of website building company Duda, told Business Insider.
“I think the people who are at risk are those who don’t know about it,” Sadan says. To him, that mostly means small businesses.
“Come April 21, a lot of small businesses are going to be really surprised that the number of visitors to their websites has dropped significantly. This is going to affect millions of sites on the web,” he says.
Businesses that depend on people finding them through localized search — like, if someone typed “coffee shops in Sunnyside, Queens,” into Google on their phone — could see a decrease in foot traffic as a result of this update, Sadan says.
“Google has always been about relevancy, and content is king,” he says. “But that’s changing. Yes, they’re saying content is still extremely important, but user experience is just as important. It’s not sufficient to have all the right content — if people come to your site and the content is there but it’s not readable, that’s not good.”
It’s not only small businesses that are going to be affected by mobile-geddon though.
Marketing company Somo released a study last week that found that a bunch of big brands, like American Apparel, The Daily Mail, and Ryanair, will all get punished when the change takes place, unless they update their sites before Tuesday.
[UPDATE: An earlier version of this post said that the mobile search update would affect search on phones and tablets — it will not affect tablet search.]
By: JILLIAN D’ONFRO
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/google-mobilegeddon-2015-4#ixzz3XvJEIyfX
Digital artist Dave Whyte creates incredible mathematical animated GIFs.
“The Dublin-based PhD student is currently studying the physics of foam and tells us his first geometric gifs riffed on computational modules he was exploring while in undergrad. As interest in the work grows Whyte is focusing more on his artistic side, pushing the boundaries of these small animations created with the Processing programming language. He’s now able to fully envision each animation before coding it, making tweaks to color, timing, and measurements along the way.”
Great concept packaging for a collection of fruit wines by Simon C. Page & Marcel Buerkle. This has a nod to The Hypnotic Geometric Compositions of Andy Gilmor.
Just a collection of stuff i think is cool on friday the 13th
– Compiled while listening to: Susumu Yokota and Rothko – Distant Sounds of Summer
Advancement in design and programming technology makes for a perfect storm: Now is the best time to redo your website. Technology breakthroughs are constant…but design breakthroughs? What’s that all about? Comedian Louis CK does a bit about how your stomach takes 20 minutes to tell your head that it’s full. He says you can stub your toe and your head knows right away how much it hurts, why does it take 20 minutes for your stomach to communicate? Well, embracing and using new technology to its fullest is a bit like communicating with your stomach: it takes time. It’s been 23 years since Tim Berners-Lee launched the first website and we finally have the tools for designing a website that really focuses on the user. And yet it’s not only about the user, it’s also about the owner of the website and what the owner has to offer the user. It’s about a relationship between user and content holder. And like any relationship, it’s hard work.
5 technological breakthoughs that your website redesign must have…
Figurative sculptures of artist Dale Dunning who welds together lead type and other hardware to create intricate masks and heads. Of his work Dunning says:
“The head that has been featured in my work for the last 13 years is a generic, simplified form not specific to gender, devoid of detail, resembling an egg. The head is universally recognized, easy to identify with. We live in our heads, see, feel, and experience the world in our head. It serves as the foundation upon which I can develop various paths to explore.”
Via daledunning.net
Land is Caleb Owen Everitt and Ryan Rhodes, there work brings back the days of yeteryear with brilliant hand painted excellence. looking through there work made me want to get on a motorcycle and ride across the long and eclectic roads of america.
www.workbyland.com