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A New Technology -Hectic Capiznon Bloggers 2009

A Hectic Capiznon Bloggers 2009 create by renz. This is a blog about Capiznon Bloggers of 2009 with hectic schedule Originally, the first commercial search engines were directories, such as Yahoo! and Galaxy, and as such, site technology of the sites in their index was (by and large) not a real issue, except for aesthetic and site quality considerations. However, with the introduction of the major early spider based search properties, such as Lycos, AltaVista and Inktomi, the ability of "robots" to investigate websites became a major consideration. Robots, which are colloquially known as spiders, are pieces of software used by some search engines to investigate the content of websites, and then present their findings to the search engine database. Search results are then ranked according to an algorithm that attaches certain priorities to aspects of the database, and orders the sites in the search engine results pages as an effect of this. However, there are many aspects of site coding that may present barriers to search engine robots. Many of the robots were programmed at around the time of the first few search engines, and so their reference to HTML is in many ways stuck in the mid-late 1990's. Many have difficulty parsing HTML that is taken for granted by webmasters, such as framesets, embedded tables, image links and maps, and JavaScript/dHTML. Although some robots have evolved well, Googlebot (the robot used by Google) being a notable example of a robot that moves well with the times, there are as many that have not really changed in the six years or so that they have been in existence. This means that an SEO company must have a full understanding of how intricate site coding may present barriers to search engine robots, and also of how site coding may present opportunities to improve rank by simple technical changes to the site. However, it should be remembered that site coding should not be abused to artificially inflate rank, as again this will be considered spam by search engines, and may cause the site to be penalised or barred by those search engines. One complex, and fairly crafty way of fooling search engines is by using a technique that is commonly called cloaking. This technique involves recognising site visitors by their user agent (browser or robot name) or by their IP address. This allows you to present pages specifically optimised for specific search engines, meaning that each engine can be optimised for individually. In principle this sounds like quite a good idea, but it is obviously open for abuse, and has been banned by many search engines as a result. Google, for example, takes the line that what its spider indexes, must be what the users of your site will see. IP and user agent delivery has been used in the past to fool robots into thinking they were indexing popular sites such as Hotmail or Microsoft, where in fact they were indexing pornographic sites. This is obviously not in the interests of search engines, and it is easy to see their point of view.

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Capiz History

Capiz became the second Spanish settlement after Cebu when Captain Diego de Artienda, sent by Legaspi landed in the town of Pan-ay and proclaimed it the capital of the province. The capital was then moved to the present location of Roxas City.
Folk history recorded in the Maragtas by Pedro Monteclaro says ten Bornean datus landed at a site now known as San Joaquin town in Iloilo province. They purchased Panay Island from the Aeta, cultivated the land, and renamed the island Madya-as. They divided it into three communities: Irong-irong, Akean (which includes the Capiz area), and Hamtik.
It is said that in Capiz in 1570, the Datu Bankaya’s wife of the Aklan district gave birth to twin daughters. Twin is "Kapid" in the local dialect, so the Spaniards adopted the name Capiz (Kapid) as inadvertently miscommunicated to them by the natives.
Capiz, which was part of Aklan in pre-Spanish times, was one of the early settlements of the Malays, centuries before the coming of the Spaniards to the Philippines. It was part of the Confederation of Madjaas, formed after the purchase of Panay by the Bornean datus from the Negrito king named Marikudo.
When the Spaniards led by Miguel López de Legazpi came to Panay from Cebu in 1569, they found people with tattoos, and so they called it Isla de los Pintados. How the island itself came to be called Panay is uncertain. The Aeta called it Aninipay, after a plant that abounded in the island. Legend has it that López de Legazpi and his men, in search of food, exclaimed upon the island, pan hay en esta isla!. So they established their first settlement in the island at the mouth of the Banica River in Capiz and called it Pan-ay. This was the second Spanish settlement in the Philippines, the first being San Miguel, Cebu.
In the same year of 1569 Captain ('Capitan') Diego de Artieda who was sent by Legaspi landed in the Town of Panay and proclaimed it as the capital of the province. Later, they moved the Capital to its present site upon discovering the town of Capiz (not the province, and now Roxas City) which was near the sea and provided docking facilities.
In 1942, the region was occupied by the Japanese troops. In 1945, the region was liberated by the joint Filipino and American troops with Filipino guerrillas from the defeated Japanese Imperial forces during Second World War.
Capiz and Aklan were united under one province until April 25, 1956, when President Ramon Magsaysay signed into law Republic Act 1414 separating the two entities.