Lifehacker.com Productivity and Software Guide edit this microsummary

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edit Lifehacker.com - Hacks to make life easy!

Lifehacker.com specializes in offering to its users a variety of resources, tips, tricks, software downloads and much more aimed at making their life easy by empowering them to use technology in the most efficient and powerful manner possible. Launched in 2005, the website is owned by Gawker Media. It also offers a Japanese and an Australian version.

Lifehacker offers its tips and resources to Windows, Mac as well as Linux users. It offers hundreds of posts every week from its staff editors as well as guest writers. Even though the website's main focus is on technology, it also offers tips and resources on topics such as healthcare etc.

The website has won numerous honors and recognitions over the years including the Best Group Weblog Award in 2007 besides being named as one of the top 50 websites by Mesna International, one of the 50 coolest websites by Time magazine, as well as one of the Blog 100 by CNET among many others.

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BLOGWIRE HUNGARY SZELLEMI ALKOTAST HASZNOSITO KFT.

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How visible is your website?

Home Page Analysis

A better home page will help you show up in search results.

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Web Presence Analysis

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Home Page Analysis

The Home Page Analysis helps you understand how a site's home page appears to both search engines and site visitors.


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Lifehacker.com Home Page Analysis Summary

Titles & Headings The title and headings on the home page tell people and search engines what a website is about.
Analyze the title & headings of the home page for free or the entire site.
Warning
Links & Images Relevant links to other sites are good for people and search engines. Images on a web page should be described for visually impaired visitors and search engines.
Analyze the links & images of the home page for free or the entire site.
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Search Engine Friendliness A few simple technical fixes can make any site show up better in search results.
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Title

The title of a web page appears in search results as the link to that page. Learn more ...

Purpose

The title of a web page appears as a clickable link in search results and bookmarks. A descriptive, compelling home page title with relevant keywords can increase the number of people visiting the site.

Search Engines

Search engines view the text of the title tag as a strong indication of what the page is about. Accurate keywords in the title tag can help the page rank better in search results.

Length

A title tag should have fewer than 70 characters, including spaces. Major search engines won't display more than that.

Content

The title tag of your home page (and any other page on your site) should not contain the site’s domain name or URL. These will appear near the title in search results, so use your 70 characters to tell people what the page is about. The title tag should not contain any HTML, because it will be displayed incorrectly or not at all.

  • Good: This web page has a title tag.
  • Good: The title tag is a good length.
The title of this site's home page:
Lifehacker, tips and downloads for getting things done

Meta Description

Search engines often use the meta description of a web page to describe it in search results. Learn more ...

Purpose

The meta description tells searchers what a web page is about. It is often displayed below the title in search results, and helps people decide if they want to visit that website.

Length

Search engines will read 200 to 250 characters, but usually display only 150, including spaces. The first 150 characters of the meta description should contain the most important keywords for that web page. Using fewer than 50 characters could mean you’re not saying enough about the page.

Content

The meta description should be engaging, and should include keywords that accurately reflect what visitors will find on the web page. The keywords should be the same ones that a site's potential customers are using to search. Include a site’s location if it is important.

  • Good: The meta description is the right length, between 50 and 150 characters.
The meta description for this site's home page:
Lifehacker curates tips, tricks, and technology for living better in the digital age.

H1 Headings

The H1 heading is an important sentence or phrase on a web page that quickly and clearly tells people and search engines what they can expect to find there. Learn more ...

Just one H1

In most cases, a web page should have just one H1 heading. Using multiple H1 headings is okay if that is a logical way to organize the page, but they should be used sparingly. That’s because search engines can view multiple H1 headings as an attempt to signal that all the content on a page is equally important, a tactic that’s seen as an attempt to game the search engine algorithms.

Purpose

Search engines look for an H1 heading to determine what a page is about. Human visitors do, too.

Content and placement

The H1 heading appears on the web page itself, unlike the page title, which people will see mostly in search results.

The H1 tag (which contains the H1 heading) is usually listed first among the other heading tags for a page. None of the major search engines, however, will penalize a site for listing H2 through H6 tags ahead of the H1 tag.

The H1 heading for a page should be different from its title. Each can target different important keywords for better SEO.

  • Warning: This page has more than one H1 heading. It should have just one.
  • Warning: The H1 heading on this page is too long. It should have no more than 70 characters, including spaces.
  • Warning: The H1 heading for this page is too long. It should have no more than 10 words.
H1 headings for this site's home page:
  • Keep Your Loose Zippers Up With a Key Ring
  • A New Form Is All You Need To Avoid Running Injuries
  • The Best Podcast Manager for Android
  • How to Use Your Flexible Spending Account to Save Money and Avoid Wasting Benefits
  • Google Offers on Android Saves You from Printing Deals or Reading All Those Emails
  • Rinse Your Coffee Filters for a Cleaner, Better-Tasting Cup of Coffee
  • Buddhify Teaches You to Meditate and Relax a Little on the Go

Lifehacker.com in search results

You can see below how most search engines will display this site's home page in search results. The title is used as the link to the page, and the meta description appears below the title.

Lifehacker, tips and downloads for getting things done

Lifehacker curates tips, tricks, and technology for living better in the digital age.

lifehacker.com/

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updated over 1 year ago

Robots

Your website's robots.txt file can tell search engines to ignore parts of your site. Learn more ...

Purpose

Website owners usually use robots.txt to let search engines know which pages or sections of their site shouldn't be indexed — for example, web contact forms, print versions of web pages and other content that's duplicated elsewhere on the site. Robots.txt can also be used to request that specific robots not index a site. For more information, read How To Use Robots.txt.

Be careful!

If you're going to use robots.txt, be careful not to accidentally exclude search engines from pages you want people to find. To learn more, read Don't Block Search Engine Crawlers.

Search engine robots

You'll need to know the names of specific search engine robots - or "bots" – if you’re going to exclude any or all of them from any part of your site.

  • Google’s bot is called Googlebot. Google is the world’s largest search engine, and is where many people discover new websites.
  • Bing’s bot is called msnbot. Bing also provides search results to people using Yahoo to search the Web. Together, Bing and Yahoo are the second largest search resource, after Google.
  • Baidu’s bot is called Baiduspider. Baidu is a major search engine in China, and the number of people using it is increasing rapidly.
  • AboutUs.org’s bot is called AboutUsBot. To create a Site Report, AboutUs uses crawling technology that’s similar to what search engines use.
  • Good: This website’s robots.txt file is not blocking major search engines from crawling its pages. Your website can appear in any engine’s search results.

Canonical Url

This website can live at www.Lifehacker.com or Lifehacker.com. It's best for your site's visibility to live at just one URL, or web address. You'll want to create a 301 redirect to the URL you choose from the other URL. Learn more ...

Choose one or the other

Whichever of these URLs you choose, make sure your website lives ONLY at that location, which is called the canonical URL for your site.

Be careful!

If you choose www.MyWebsite.com for your site, make sure people who don't type www can get to your site, too. Create a permanent 301 redirect from MyWebsite.com to www.MyWebsite.com.

If the same web page exists at two different URLs, people can choose to link to one or the other. Links from other sites to your website are valuable — they tell search engines that your site is important to people. By splitting valuable links between two identical pages, you're diluting the power of those links to help a page rank higher in search results.

Learn more about why you should have just one home page: Read Twin Home Pages: Classic SEO Mistake

  • Warning: Your website resides at Lifehacker.com, and www.Lifehacker.com is temporarily redirected to it. You should permanently redirect it instead, using a 301 redirect.
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Web Presence

Search Engine Visibility

Check this site's prominence around the web and in major search engines.

Backlinks

value for Google
value for Alexa

Indexed Pages

value for Google 549,000
value for Bing 11,700

Rank

value for Quantcast 344
value for Compete 2,310
value for Alexa 542

Date Last Crawled

value for Google Dec 06, 2010
value for Bing Not Available

Check this site's presence on news sharing and community sites.

Social Media Visibility

value for Digg 163
value for Dmoz 2
value for Google Groups 229,000
value for Yahoo Answers 152
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Redirectory

Below we show domains that redirect to Lifehacker.com.

We survey every domain on the Internet ending in .com, .net, or .edu to see if any redirect to this website. Large or famous websites like Amazon.com often have many sites redirecting to them.

Domains that redirect to the home page of Lifehacker.com

A website owner can point one domain to the home page of another. Learn more ...

Capture visitors who type the wrong name

It can make a lot of sense to redirect a domain to an existing web page. For example, many people are likely to type wikipedia.com when they are really looking for wikipedia.org. Creating a redirect from wikipedia.com to wikipedia.org helps these people get to the site they want.

2 domains redirect to the home page of Lifehacker.com.

Domains that redirect to a page within Lifehacker.com

A domain can point to any page within another website. Learn more ...

Get people to a specific web page

Creating a redirect from a simple domain name helps people find an existing web page that has a long, hard-to-remember URL. For example firefox.com redirects to http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/.

We have not found any domains that redirect to pages within Lifehacker.com.

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