Google For A Healthy Brain

No Gravatar

Google can save brains according to a report that Web Surfing Can Save Your Aging Brain. Researchers found that older adults who started browsing the Web experienced improved brain function after only a few days.

Dr. Gary Small, a psychiatry professor at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the author of iBrain. said that after just a week of practice searching, there was a much greater extent of activity particularly in the areas of the brain that make decisions, the thinking brain.

Further details of the research can be found in the paper, “Neural activation patterns in older adults following Internet training” by TD Moody, H Gaddipati, GW Small, SY Bookheimer.

In short, for older people with minimal experience, performing Internet searches for even a relatively short period of time can change brain activity patterns and enhance function. As people live increasingly long lives, such research findings are of critical importance in ensuring that the quality of life is maintained as much as possible.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

Seniors Search Service In China

No Gravatar

Perhaps once more China is leading the way as China’s largest search engine tailors a portal for older Web surfers.

One can still debate the logic of the country’s leading search engine launching a portal geared specifically for older Web surfers. Trekking out to 123.baidu.com — instead of the flagship www.baidu.com — opens a page with oversized fonts, few ads, and links to sites dedicated to things like tai-chi, revolutionary-song downloads, and calligraphy, all common interests for older people in China. 

The portal, which labels itself “Baidu elderly search,” also includes a classical Chinese poetry forum that older Chinese are far more likely to appreciate than the younger generation.  According to IDG News Service, older Internet users are still rare in the world’s most populous nation. Less than 6% of China’s Internet users are over 50, according to the China Internet Network Information Center.

That isn’t to say that similar facilities do not exist in the west, since you can find SeniorsSearch, one of the  Senior Friendly Web Sites, which is available to Wired Seniors Members. 

Providing seniors-friendly websites is not something that Google has ventured into even though Seniors are the fastest growing segment of the population.  Baidu hopes the new site will give the company another property in its arsenal as it continues to fend off the challenge from Google. Baidu seems to already have other demographic groups covered; it launched search engine for “youth” in 2006.

China has so often been ahead of the western world as we can see from the biography* of Joseph Needham.  This English intellectual from my alma mater, Caius College in Cambridge, wrote Science and Civilization in China, a twenty-four-volume masterpiece, which is known as the most important set of books telling the west what Chinese have contributed to the world.

The 17th-century philosopher-statesman Francis Bacon declared that nothing had changed the world more profoundly than three great inventions: gunpowder, printing and the compass. But what the philosopher didn’t know was that all the three had already been conceived of and successfully employed by a single people — the Chinese.

China has an astonishing history of invention and technology, and  the extraordinary rise of the Chinese nation continues to this day.  There will probably be many other innovations in the online search world where China will have something to teach the rest of us.

* The full title of the book is Bomb, Book and Compass: Joseph Needham and the Great Secrets of China. by Simon Winchester.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Technorati Tags: , , , , ,

Pensions Information Google May Not Show You

No Gravatar

Google may know a lot of information about pensions but it may not always show all it knows.  This comes to mind because I happened to stumble on some Electric information from Pensions World, which is not all that visible to search queries.

Take a surf with Robin Ellison through the world wide web and discover pensions at the touch of a button.  There is a lot of pensions law out there. There are plenty of books; increasingly however, electronics are adding a new approach to finding and interpreting the flood of new rules and regulations.

The reason why this is less visible than it should be is that normally it is visible within a framed web site at Pensions World. Wherever you go on the website, the URL never changes in the address field.

Google does acknowledge its problem with Frames.

Google supports frames and iframes to the extent that it can. Frames can cause problems for search engines because they don’t correspond to the conceptual model of the web.

If you use wording such as “This site requires the use of frames,” or “Upgrade your browser,” instead of providing alternate content on your site, then you’ll exclude both search engines and individuals who’ve disabled frames on their browsers.

Another website in the Frozen UK Pensions field that has some good information slightly buried is that for the British Australian Pensioner Association.  Here are some of the web pages that are worth exploring on frozen pensions.

As a footnote for the technically-minded, it should be noted that by mentioning all these extra web pages here, they will now be much more visible in Google.  There are now direct links to them that in Google’s words probably ‘correspond to the conceptual model of the web’.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Seniors Money or Senior Money

No Gravatar

If you are looking for the Seniors Money website or for information on reverse mortgages, then please read on.  There is important information for you later in this post.

It was a post from Loren Baker,  Use Keywords in Your Business Name for Local SEO, this morning that reminded me to check whether Senior Money Memos is a website that is easily found in Google.  As for any other blog, some time was spent initially considering whether it should be Seniors Money Memos or Senior Money Memos.  Which was likely to produce more Google visitors?  In that analysis, Seniors Money might have been preferable but there were more domain choices available for Senior Money so that was the name that stuck.

Google searches on Seniors Money and Senior Money now show that in two months since this blog started not too much has changed.  Nevertheless as of today, this blog comes up at #2 for Senior Money and #12 for Seniors Money.

seniors money

One domain name that took my fancy was seniorsmoney but both the dotcom and dotca versions were already taken. These sites are concerned with reverse mortgages, which are proving somewhat difficult for some of those who have entered into such arrangements. The dotcom website belongs to Seniors Money International and provides links to a series of other websites dealing with reverse mortgages.  These provide reverse mortgage services in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa and Spain. The Canadian website is currently showing the following message:

reverse mortgages

The inserted message appears when your mouse hovers over a small red asterisk, following the sentence, You retain ownership of your house.  It is certainly a very appropriate caution.

Perhaps given current global economic conditions, reverse mortgages will not be reappearing on the seniorsmoney.ca website for quite some time.  It might have been useful if that  seniorsmoney.ca domain had been available two months ago.  However by working more with Senior Money Memos, perhaps its ranking for Seniors Money will also improve.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Search the Internet for related articles:
Loading