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Google Caching ?

Started by oliver321, 05-22-2013, 11:03:28

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oliver321Topic starter

How often does Google caches a website and why doesn't my submitted articles get cached ?


convergent

Quote from: oliver321 on 05-22-2013, 11:03:28
How often does Google caches a website and why doesn't my submitted articles get cached ?
It's upon Google :)
Basically it depends on your site promotion rate, niche (good news websites are checked at once) and so on.
Suppose your site is not so nice for Google at the moment
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allenhill

Google Cache is nothing but a snapshot or a copy of a page stored by Google as a back-up. Google usually takes a snapshot of each page it examines and caches or stores that version as a back-up. The cached version is what Google uses to judge if a page is a good match for our query. Google's servers are typically much faster than many web servers, we can often access a page's cached version faster than the page itself.


Sturatwilliam

#3
Google caches websites according to its own schedule, which can vary depending on the frequency of content updates and the importance of the website. The caching process is designed to help Google display the most current version of a webpage in its search results.

As for why your submitted articles may not be getting cached, there could be several reasons. First, it's important to ensure that your articles are high-quality, original content that provides value to readers. Google prioritizes pages that offer unique and useful information.

Additionally, if your website has technical issues or is difficult for Google's crawlers to access and index, this could also impact whether your articles get cached. Ensure that your website is well-structured, loads quickly, and is mobile-friendly to improve its chances of being properly indexed and cached by Google.

If your submitted articles are not getting cached, it could be due to various reasons. Firstly, ensure that your articles are of high quality, original, and provide valuable information to readers. Google gives preference to pages offering unique and useful content.

Furthermore, technical issues on your website or difficulties for Google's crawlers to access and index your content may hinder the caching process. It's important to have a well-structured, fast-loading, and mobile-friendly website to improve the chances of proper indexing and caching by Google.

It's important to note that Google does not guarantee the caching of all submitted articles or webpages. However, by adhering to best practices for content creation and website optimization, you can increase the probability of your articles being crawled, indexed, and ultimately cached by Google.
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kormeysin

Just like what Convergent has said "it's up to Google" to determine your crawl rate, and Google webmasters tool has custom setting for your crawl rate, but you shouldn't play around with that unless you want to slow Google's crawl rate down, this could happen if you have extremely busy website which Googlebot maybe slowing down your server resources with its http requests.
Articles or even some website's have been decached by Google lately, this could be something that is here to stay. How to avoid it?
Provide useful content, whether it is articles, or even blog posts etc, and make sure the content isn't thin content.
For those of us who are interested in Google & SEO, here's a blog that gives useful SEO information for webmasters and online marketers
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webcreations

Google takes a snapshot of each page it examines and caches (stores) that version as a back-up. The cached version is what Google uses to judge if a page is a good match for your query. Practically every search result includes a Cached link. Clicking on that link takes you to the Google cached version of that web page, instead of the current version of the page. This is useful if the original page is unavailable because of:
The owner's recently removing the page from the Web
Sometimes you can access the cached version from a site that otherwise require registration or a subscription.
Note that Google's servers are typically faster than many web servers, you can often access a page's cached.


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