ADVANCED SEARCH OPERATORS:
Note: For best results, select the any words radio button before using these operators.
' ' A phrase that is enclosed within single quote (' ') indicates to TorrentOOgle that characters matches only rows that contain the phrase exactly as it was typed.
+ A plus sign before a word indicates to TorrentOOgle that the word
must be present in every result returned.
- The leading minus sign indicates that the word must not appear in any search result returned.
* The asterisk is the truncation or wildcard character in TorrentOOgle.
Example: suck*
The set of results returned by this query will include items containing words like suck, sucks, sucked, sucker, sucking or 'sucktastic.' Okay, no feed is indexed in TorrentOOgle as having used the word 'sucktastic' (…until about an hour after I post this).
( ) Parentheses group words into subexpressions.
Example: +'Meredith Farkas' +('5 weeks' 'Five Weeks')
This query will produce results that contain the exact phrase 'Meredith Farkas' AND either 'five weeks' or '5 weeks'.
> < These help influence the relevance sorting of returned search results. If the > is placed before a word or phrase, its 'weight' in the sorting by relevance is increased. The < placed before a word or phrase lessens its 'weight.'
Example: +'Walt Crawford' +(>'cites and insights' <'Walt at Random')
This query will return only results that contain both the exact phrase 'Walt Crawford' AND either 'Cites and Insights' or 'Walt at Random,' but it’ll place those that mention 'Cites and Insights' higher in my list of results as ordered by relevance.
~ This operator is sort of like the -, but not as emphatic. A search term with this operator in front of it will not be excluded from results returned, but the term’s presence will not be considered in the sorting of results by relevance. It sort of de-emphasizes the search term without making it a hard, absolute NOT.
Try these operators out and you’ll find you can generate very, very specific results.
Searching by URL Searching by URL sometimes works and sometimes doesn’t because TorrentOOgle strips out an item’s HTML. Searching by URL will work if the URL was in the text of the item, but not if it was only in the hyperlink. Also note that the source URL is not searchable, but the Source’s name is.
For example: On your computer, you may have different folders like, 'songs' or 'videos' or 'documents' etc.. On the web also files are generally organized into folders. For example, a music website site may have all the video songs that the website provides in a directory called 'video songs'!
Now, if you can use TorrentOOgle to find the 'video songs' directory, you will have the directory and all the songs in it! That is basically what i am basically going to tell you.... that is ' how can you find out the hidden files and folder '.....
How to hack Hidden songs/music/videos directories :
On the web the folder directory whether protected or un-protected will be having certain words which are common to both the directory.They are :
There is also one other part that is there in every un-protected directory on the Internet. This part is, the words: 'Index of' in the 'Title' of the web page.
Now we look for pages on the web which has had :
* The phrase 'Index of' in the title
* The phrase 'Index of' on the page
* The word 'Name' on the page
* The word 'Size' on the page
* The word 'Description' on the page
* The word 'Last Modified' on the page
Type this line in the TorrentOOgle search box:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified
When you search for this, you will find all the un-protected directories on the Internet that Goggle has found with in the TorrentOOgle tracker list! Try to see what is helpful for you from these unprotected directories!
The line: intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified is made up of many small TorrentOOgle commands Like :
intitle:'index of' : This tells TorrentOOgle to only search for web pages with the term 'index of' in the Title of the web page. The term 'intitle:' is called an OPERATOR.
So if you have intitle:'index of' in the search box, TorrentOOgle knows that it has to search for only pages with 'index of' in the title…
+'index of' : This tells TorrentOOgle that all the pages that come in the search results, must have 'index of' on the page.
The '+' basically tells TorrentOOgle that whatever is after the '+' MUST be there in all the pages that TorrentOOgle provides in the results.
For example: You go to TorrentOOgle and type in 'songs +Elvis' it will provide all the pages that have the term songs and also have the term 'Elvis' in them. If you just type in 'Songs Elvis' then the pages that have 'Songs or Elvis' or 'Songs and Elvis' may show up in the search results.
Basically, just remember if you want all searched pages to have a particular word, use the '+'! This is useful is the cases when you are searching for a 'synonym' kind of word.
Things to notice:
* If you put anything within 'quotation' marks, TorrentOOgle searches for that exact phrase
* A '+' behind a term will make sure that term is there in all the results pages
* A '-' behind a term will make sure that term is NOT there in all the results pages
* There is NO SPACE between the '+' and the term or the '-' and the term. Basically there is no space between the 'operator' and the term.
Having understood all this, let us look at the whole line again. It should make much more sense:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified
The line basically tells TorrentOOgle to search for pages with:
* The phrase 'index of' in the title
* The phrase 'index of' somewhere on the page
* The word 'name' somewhere on the page
* The word 'size' somewhere on the page
* The word 'description' somewhere on the page
* The word 'modified' somewhere on the page
And if you understood everything till now, you will see how this command can be used to find all the un-protected directories on the Internet! Look at it carefully....
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified
Finding E-book,pdf,games,software,videos,songs and much more...
To do this you can use this line:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +mp3
It makes sense, does it not? Just add a '+mp3' at the end. This will make sure that all the pages come up have the term 'mp3' in them.
Similarly, if you wanted to find all the 'ebooks' in all the up-protected directories, you could use this line:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +pdf
Incase, you are not sure what 'pdf' is, 'pdf' is the format in which ebooks come!
Lets make the search more specific. You can search for a 'Gladiator' mp3 using a line like this:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +mp3 Gladiator
Notice that I have not put 'Gladiator' in quotes or in front of a '+'. This is because I do not know how the 'Gladiator' file will be saved! It may be saved by some different name like 'Gladiator1233.mp3'! So I just let TorrentOOgle figure out the closest match! Basically if you are not sure about the exact words the web page will contain, just type it without any operator or quotes and let TorrentOOgle figure out the closest match!
To search for WinZip program in the un-protected directories you might use something like:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +exe win zip
To search for a 'Harry Potter' ebook, you might want to use something like:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +pdf harry potter
- The leading minus sign indicates that the word must not appear in any search result returned.
* The asterisk is the truncation or wildcard character in TorrentOOgle.
Example: suck*
The set of results returned by this query will include items containing words like suck, sucks, sucked, sucker, sucking or 'sucktastic.' Okay, no feed is indexed in TorrentOOgle as having used the word 'sucktastic' (…until about an hour after I post this).
( ) Parentheses group words into subexpressions.
Example: +'Meredith Farkas' +('5 weeks' 'Five Weeks')
This query will produce results that contain the exact phrase 'Meredith Farkas' AND either 'five weeks' or '5 weeks'.
> < These help influence the relevance sorting of returned search results. If the > is placed before a word or phrase, its 'weight' in the sorting by relevance is increased. The < placed before a word or phrase lessens its 'weight.'
Example: +'Walt Crawford' +(>'cites and insights' <'Walt at Random')
This query will return only results that contain both the exact phrase 'Walt Crawford' AND either 'Cites and Insights' or 'Walt at Random,' but it’ll place those that mention 'Cites and Insights' higher in my list of results as ordered by relevance.
~ This operator is sort of like the -, but not as emphatic. A search term with this operator in front of it will not be excluded from results returned, but the term’s presence will not be considered in the sorting of results by relevance. It sort of de-emphasizes the search term without making it a hard, absolute NOT.
Try these operators out and you’ll find you can generate very, very specific results.
Searching by URL Searching by URL sometimes works and sometimes doesn’t because TorrentOOgle strips out an item’s HTML. Searching by URL will work if the URL was in the text of the item, but not if it was only in the hyperlink. Also note that the source URL is not searchable, but the Source’s name is.
The 'Basics' behind TorrentOOgle hacks!
On the web, the files are saved in the same way as they are saved on general computers. All the files are organized into folders so that they are easy to understand and use.For example: On your computer, you may have different folders like, 'songs' or 'videos' or 'documents' etc.. On the web also files are generally organized into folders. For example, a music website site may have all the video songs that the website provides in a directory called 'video songs'!
Now, if you can use TorrentOOgle to find the 'video songs' directory, you will have the directory and all the songs in it! That is basically what i am basically going to tell you.... that is ' how can you find out the hidden files and folder '.....
How to hack Hidden songs/music/videos directories :
On the web the folder directory whether protected or un-protected will be having certain words which are common to both the directory.They are :
- Index of
- Name
- Last Modified
- Size
- Description
There is also one other part that is there in every un-protected directory on the Internet. This part is, the words: 'Index of' in the 'Title' of the web page.
Now we look for pages on the web which has had :
* The phrase 'Index of' in the title
* The phrase 'Index of' on the page
* The word 'Name' on the page
* The word 'Size' on the page
* The word 'Description' on the page
* The word 'Last Modified' on the page
Type this line in the TorrentOOgle search box:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified
When you search for this, you will find all the un-protected directories on the Internet that Goggle has found with in the TorrentOOgle tracker list! Try to see what is helpful for you from these unprotected directories!
The line: intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified is made up of many small TorrentOOgle commands Like :
intitle:'index of' : This tells TorrentOOgle to only search for web pages with the term 'index of' in the Title of the web page. The term 'intitle:' is called an OPERATOR.
So if you have intitle:'index of' in the search box, TorrentOOgle knows that it has to search for only pages with 'index of' in the title…
+'index of' : This tells TorrentOOgle that all the pages that come in the search results, must have 'index of' on the page.
The '+' basically tells TorrentOOgle that whatever is after the '+' MUST be there in all the pages that TorrentOOgle provides in the results.
For example: You go to TorrentOOgle and type in 'songs +Elvis' it will provide all the pages that have the term songs and also have the term 'Elvis' in them. If you just type in 'Songs Elvis' then the pages that have 'Songs or Elvis' or 'Songs and Elvis' may show up in the search results.
Basically, just remember if you want all searched pages to have a particular word, use the '+'! This is useful is the cases when you are searching for a 'synonym' kind of word.
Things to notice:
* If you put anything within 'quotation' marks, TorrentOOgle searches for that exact phrase
* A '+' behind a term will make sure that term is there in all the results pages
* A '-' behind a term will make sure that term is NOT there in all the results pages
* There is NO SPACE between the '+' and the term or the '-' and the term. Basically there is no space between the 'operator' and the term.
Having understood all this, let us look at the whole line again. It should make much more sense:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified
The line basically tells TorrentOOgle to search for pages with:
* The phrase 'index of' in the title
* The phrase 'index of' somewhere on the page
* The word 'name' somewhere on the page
* The word 'size' somewhere on the page
* The word 'description' somewhere on the page
* The word 'modified' somewhere on the page
And if you understood everything till now, you will see how this command can be used to find all the un-protected directories on the Internet! Look at it carefully....
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified
Finding E-book,pdf,games,software,videos,songs and much more...
To do this you can use this line:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +mp3
It makes sense, does it not? Just add a '+mp3' at the end. This will make sure that all the pages come up have the term 'mp3' in them.
Similarly, if you wanted to find all the 'ebooks' in all the up-protected directories, you could use this line:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +pdf
Incase, you are not sure what 'pdf' is, 'pdf' is the format in which ebooks come!
Lets make the search more specific. You can search for a 'Gladiator' mp3 using a line like this:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +mp3 Gladiator
Notice that I have not put 'Gladiator' in quotes or in front of a '+'. This is because I do not know how the 'Gladiator' file will be saved! It may be saved by some different name like 'Gladiator1233.mp3'! So I just let TorrentOOgle figure out the closest match! Basically if you are not sure about the exact words the web page will contain, just type it without any operator or quotes and let TorrentOOgle figure out the closest match!
To search for WinZip program in the un-protected directories you might use something like:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +exe win zip
To search for a 'Harry Potter' ebook, you might want to use something like:
intitle:'index of' +'index of' +size +name +description +modified +pdf harry potter




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3 :Comments:
A Googlebot is a search bot used by Google. It collects documents from the web to build a searchable index for the Google search engine.
If a webmaster wishes to restrict the information on their site available to a Googlebot, or another well-behaved spider, they can do so with the appropriate directives in a robots.txt file,and by adding the meta tag to the webpage. Googlebot requests to Web servers are discernible from their user-agent string 'Googlebot'.
Googlebot has two versions, deepbot and freshbot. Deepbot, the deep crawler, tries to follow every link on the web and download as many pages as it can to the Google indexers. It completes this process about once a month. Freshbot crawls the web looking for fresh content. It visits websites that change frequently, according to how frequently they change. Currently Googlebot only follows HREF links and SRC links.
Googlebot discovers pages by harvesting all of the links on every page it finds. It then follows these links to other web pages. New web pages must be linked to from another known page on the web in order to be crawled and indexed.
A problem which webmasters have often noted with the Googlebot is that it takes up an enormous amount of bandwidth. This can cause websites to exceed their bandwidth limit and be taken down temporarily. This is especially troublesome for mirror sites which host many gigabytes of data. Google provides "Webmaster Tools" that allow website owners to throttle the crawl rate.
Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of improving the volume and quality of traffic to a web site from search engines via "natural" ("organic" or "algorithmic") search results. Usually, the earlier a site is presented in the search results, or the higher it "ranks", the more searchers will visit that site. SEO can also target different kinds of search, including image search, local search, and industry-specific vertical search engines.
As a marketing strategy for increasing a site's relevance, SEO considers how search algorithms work and what people search for. SEO efforts may involve a site's coding, presentation, and structure, as well as fixing problems that could prevent search engine indexing programs from fully spidering a site. Other, more noticeable efforts may include adding unique content to a site, ensuring that content is easily indexed by search engine robots, and making the site more appealing to users. Another class of techniques, known as Black Hat SEO or spamdexing, use methods such as link farms and keyword stuffing that tend to harm search engine user experience. Search engines look for sites that employ these techniques and may remove their listings.
The initialism "SEO" can also refer to "search engine optimizers", a term adopted by an industry of consultants who carry out optimization projects on behalf of clients, and by employees who perform SEO services in-house. Search engine optimizers may offer SEO as a stand-alone service or as a part of a broader marketing campaign. Because effective SEO may require changes to the HTML source code of a site, SEO tactics may be incorporated into web site development and design. The term "search engine friendly" may be used to describe web site designs, menus, content management systems and shopping carts that are easy to optimize.
The leading search engines, Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft, use crawlers to find pages for their algorithmic search results. Pages that are linked from other search engine indexed pages do not need to be submitted because they are found automatically. Some search engines, notably Yahoo!, operate a paid submission service that guarantee crawling for either a set fee or cost per click. Such programs usually guarantee inclusion in the database, but do not guarantee specific ranking within the search results. Yahoo's paid inclusion program has drawn criticism from advertisers and competitors. Two major directories, the Yahoo Directory and the Open Directory Project both require manual submission and human editorial review. Google offers Google Sitemaps, for which an XML type feed can be created and submitted for free to ensure that all pages are found, especially pages that aren't discoverable by automatically following links.
Search engine crawlers may look at a number of different factors when crawling a site. Not every page is indexed by the search engines. Distance of pages from the root directory of a site may also be a factor in whether or not pages get crawled.
Preventing listings
To avoid undesirable search listings, webmasters can instruct spiders not to crawl certain files or directories through the standard robots.txt file in the root directory of the domain. Additionally, a page can be explicitly excluded from a search engine's database by using a meta tag specific to robots. When a search engine visits a site, the robots.txt located in the root directory is the first file crawled. The robots.txt file is then parsed, and will instruct the robot as to which pages are not to be crawled. As a search engine crawler may keep a cached copy of this file, it may on occasion crawl pages a webmaster does not wish crawled. Pages typically prevented from being crawled include login specific pages such as shopping carts and user-specific content such as search results from internal searches. In March 2007, Google warned webmasters that they should prevent indexing of internal search results because those pages are considered search spam.
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