Google Chrome team releases finger exercises for fast web users

Friday, April 1st, 2011

Google have paid special attention today to users of Google Chrome who have difficulties keeping up with their web browser’s general speed. To aid in this they have released a finger exercise program dubbed the ‘Chromercise’ routine. They have released a instructional video to demonstrate the required exercise structure and all relevant safety precautions requires to perform Chromercise exercises prior to the user of the Chrome web browser.

Although we are not offering dedicated Chromercise instruction here at Rapid Web, we are beginning to enforce these as part of our regular health and safety routine. If you would like further advice on these procedures, please see the relevant Chromercise documentation.

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Web Visibility – and how to increase it

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Web visibility is of vital importance to any web business, be it e-commerce or otherwise. The visibility of your website is one of the key focuses of search engine optimisation.SEO will increase your web visibility through by improving the rankings of your websites in search engine results pages (or ‘SERPs’).

Google SERPs Rapid Web Google Chrome

SERPs are the pages you land on, as an Internet user, when you enter search terms into an online search engine. They present a list of web page results which are linked is order of relevance, from most relevant to least relevant, in accordance to the keywords you have entered. Obviously, having a having ranking in these results pages will increase your website’s overall web visibility, whilst a lower ranking will decrease its visibility.

If you want to increase your web visibility in SERPs, you need search engine optimisation. For more information about search engine optimisation, take a look at some of the following blog posts.

Alternatively, you can view all our search engine optimisation articles, read about the SEO services we provide, or simply contact us directly.

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Security hole in Internet Explorer

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Anyone who’s worked around computers for any length of time has probably seen the above statement several times. The latest issue, which you may have seen in the news, is the ‘cyber attacks’ on Google where hackers accessed Googlemail accounts of civil rights activists in China. Google then threatened they would pull out of the Chinese market. This sent a mild ripple of panic across a large portion of Europe where government officials advised to stop using IE. The actual press release wording was “the vulnerability could allow remote code execution if a user views a specially crafted Web page using Internet Explorer”. Hackers and code jockeys are always going to try and break the ‘big boys’ code it’s always been the way of things “I got one up on Bill Gates” yak yak. Good news for the rivals though; Opera, Chrome (which I use and thinks great!) and Mozilla’s Firefox.

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