AP: About 20 percent of search queries were made using Latincharacters as of Spring 2011. Competition has been hot since the birth of the Russian Internet segment back in the mid-'90s, however, over the past 3 months, Yandex had an average of 59.4...
Autocomplete was inappropriately counting the intermediate keystrokes for IME (non-Latincharacters) queries, leading to gibberish predictions for searches in certain languages (i.e. Beyond the much-discussed "fresh" update, Google discussed recent...
In addition to SES San Francisco, participating events include: the Online Marketing Summit (OMS), Jeff Pulver's 140 Characters Conference, Email Experience Council, IAB, and Tim Ash's Conversion Conference Day.
Recently, ICANN allowed non-Latincharacters in domain names for Japanese and other languages. This really hasn't taken off yet in Japan even though it's fun to hear about the discussions of Kanji characters because users often can't identify...
Egypt, Saudi Arabia and UAE granted first access
ccTLD is the last portion to the right of the dot (and conversely for languages spelled the other way round) such as dot "co.uk" for the UK, dot "fr" for France or dot "eg" for Egypt, to cite a...
In the 19 years since he first started on his information superhighway project, English or Latincharacters have been at the heart of what makes the Web tick. Now that part of the Web, which may have to be renamed "Rfnet" in view of Russia's...
ICANN announced it will start allowing domains to be registered using non-Latincharacters (English etc.starting Nov. Considering it is known as the "World Wide web", the internet's reliance on the English language has long been maligned as a...
The changes only affect ad units in Latin-based characters and only ads that have been set to "AdSense default" for the font face. Google AdSense has been testing different fonts and has found that various fonts fare better than others depending...
An update is limited by 140 characters and can be posted through three methods: Web form, text message, or instant message. Key wins: Dominates the social network market share for Latin America, in particular Brazil.
Don't worry about using special characters with the U.S. We always use special characters in our client sites' metadata," adds Bernier. Our previous articles covered the opportunities, challenges, and essential planning strategies for the US...
For Latin languages, there's often a concern about using "extended" characters such as accent marks. For example, if you are writing in a Latin language, they use an encoding format for those particular characters.
Also, drop special characters such the "˜" found over the "n", he advised, to ease searching. To begin with, there is no single Spanish speaking market: consumers in the US, Spain and Latin America are all in different markets.
Internet naming regulators tackle domain names with non-Latincharacters. Here's a personal and admittedly idiosyncratic look back at some of the most newsworthy or notable stories from SearchDay's first year of publication.
Another plus is that unlike the domain name system, RealNames do not have to be in Latin-characters. In fact, RealNames has just expanded into Japan, offering navigational keywords in Kanji, Hiragana and Katakana characters.
Another plus is that unlike the domain name system, RealNames do not have to be in Latin-characters. In fact, RealNames has just expanded into Japan, offering navigational keywords in Kanji, Hiragana and Katakana characters.
Another plus is that unlike the domain name system, RealNames do not have to be in Latin-characters. In fact, RealNames has just expanded into Japan, offering navigational keywords in Kanji, Hiragana and Katakana characters.
Another plus is that unlike the domain name system, RealNames do not have to be in Latin-characters. In fact, RealNames has just expanded into Japan, offering navigational keywords in Kanji, Hiragana and Katakana characters.
Another plus is that unlike the domain name system, RealNames do not have to be in Latin-characters. In fact, RealNames has just expanded into Japan, offering navigational keywords in Kanji, Hiragana and Katakana characters.