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masiurrahman24 · 1 year
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What is SEO ................?
Hi Guys! I am Masiur Rahman before you. I am professional Digital Marketer and SEO Expert. I will manage any kind of social media ( Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr, Linkedin, Reddit, Pinterest etc. ). I will create Twitter & Facebook Ads Campaign & Boosting. Also I will do SEO ( Search Engine Optimization ). like: On-page SEO, Of-page SEO, Technical SEO, Keyword Research, Competitor Analysis, Google Search Console, Google Analytics.
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screpyserp11 · 4 months
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Ranking Drop? Chill Out Google's Silent, But We Got You!
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Ever see your website ranking plummet in search results, leaving you feeling ‍♀️‍♂️ and searching for answers?
Here's the truth: Google keeps its ranking algorithm a closely guarded secret. So, minor fluctuations or mysterious updates can cause ranking drops without a detailed explanation.
But don't despair! Focusing on these key areas will put you on the path to long-term ranking success:
High-Quality Content ✍️: Create informative, engaging content that solves problems and keeps users glued to your site.
Strong Technical SEO ⚙️: Ensure your website is mobile-friendly, loads fast, and has a clear structure.
Positive User Experience (UX): Make your website easy to navigate, visually appealing, and a joy to use.
By focusing on these fundamentals, you'll be well on your way to ranking high, even if Google stays silent on every drop.
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researchmapping · 9 months
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soumyafwr · 9 months
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https://www.articlebowl.com/active-pharmaceutical-ingredient-api-market-size-share-and-forecast-2031/
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Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API) Market
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aishavass · 1 year
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adroit--2022 · 1 year
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samantawill74 · 2 years
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evonnebaker · 2 years
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Owing to the rising demand for APIs to facilitate digital transformation, the global API management solution market has expanded significantly.
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industryinsights · 2 years
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navabharatlive · 2 years
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rootsanalysis-blog · 2 years
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Rise in Demand for Treatment Modalities, Coupled to the Requirement of Complex Manufacturing Equipment and Expertise, Medical Device Developers have been Compelled to Outsource their Manufacturing Operations to Contract Service Providers
The in-house development of peptide API requires necessary expertise and capabilities, including design, construction and maintenance of a facility which demands significant capital investments. Therefore, several small drug developers and, at times, certain pharma giants as well, have started outsourcing their manufacturing operations to contract service providers.
 Over the years, the popularity of biologics has led to an evident shift in the focus of pharmaceutical companies, from traditional interventions towards more complex and advanced pharmacological interventions, such as peptide therapeutics. Since the discovery of insulin, the peptide therapeutics market has evolved significantly. The increasing demand for companies capable of offering manufacturing and, in certain cases, development services to biopharmaceutical players has resulted in the establishment of several CMOs. Most of these contract service providers have profound experience in niche and emerging areas. The innate expertise and availability of the required capabilities and infrastructure enables CMOs to effectively fulfil the requirements of their clients, eliminate costly oversights and, thereby, reduce chances of failure. As pharma companies resume full-scale operation after the COVID-19 outbreak, the demand for large-scale peptide therapeutics contract API manufacturing is expected to increase significantly.
 To request a sample copy / brochure of this report, please visit
https://www.rootsanalysis.com/reports/305/request-sample.html
 In fact, drug developers are actively collaborating with CMOs that offer improved technology platforms to increase the bioavailability of peptide drugs and enhance the efficacy of the production process. The aforementioned factors are likely to drive growth of the contract manufacturing and provide lucrative opportunities to CMOs in the near future. Presently, XX% of the total capacity is available with contract manufacturers catering to the needs for commercial scale operations. Further, majority (XX%) of the peptide API contract manufacturing capacity is installed in facilities based in Europe. However, we believe that, in order to cope up with the increasing demand and maintain a competitive advantage, CMOs should further enhance their existing capabilities and capacities, as well as adopt innovative and efficient production technologies.
 For additional details, please visit
https://www.rootsanalysis.com/reports/view_document/peptide-therapeutics-manufacturing/305.html or email [email protected]
 You may also be interested in the following titles:
1.       Targeted protein degradation market, 2022-2035
2.       Cell Therapy Manufacturing Market, 2021-2030
3.       Single-Use Upstream Bioprocessing Technology / Equipment Market, 2022-2035
About Roots Analysis
Roots Analysis is one of the fastest growing market research companies, sharing fresh and independent perspectives in the bio-pharmaceutical industry. The in-depth research, analysis and insights are driven by an experienced leadership team which has gained many years of significant experience in this sector. If you’d like help with your growing business needs, get in touch at [email protected]
 Contact:
Ben Johnson
+1 (415) 800 3415
+44 (122) 391 1091
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Too big to care
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I'm on tour with my new, nationally bestselling novel The Bezzle! Catch me in BOSTON with Randall "XKCD" Munroe (Apr 11), then PROVIDENCE (Apr 12), and beyond!
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Remember the first time you used Google search? It was like magic. After years of progressively worsening search quality from Altavista and Yahoo, Google was literally stunning, a gateway to the very best things on the internet.
Today, Google has a 90% search market-share. They got it the hard way: they cheated. Google spends tens of billions of dollars on payola in order to ensure that they are the default search engine behind every search box you encounter on every device, every service and every website:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/03/not-feeling-lucky/#fundamental-laws-of-economics
Not coincidentally, Google's search is getting progressively, monotonically worse. It is a cesspool of botshit, spam, scams, and nonsense. Important resources that I never bothered to bookmark because I could find them with a quick Google search no longer show up in the first ten screens of results:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/21/im-feeling-unlucky/#not-up-to-the-task
Even after all that payola, Google is still absurdly profitable. They have so much money, they were able to do a $80 billion stock buyback. Just a few months later, Google fired 12,000 skilled technical workers. Essentially, Google is saying that they don't need to spend money on quality, because we're all locked into using Google search. It's cheaper to buy the default search box everywhere in the world than it is to make a product that is so good that even if we tried another search engine, we'd still prefer Google.
This is enshittification. Google is shifting value away from end users (searchers) and business customers (advertisers, publishers and merchants) to itself:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/03/05/the-map-is-not-the-territory/#apor-locksmith
And here's the thing: there are search engines out there that are so good that if you just try them, you'll get that same feeling you got the first time you tried Google.
When I was in Tucson last month on my book-tour for my new novel The Bezzle, I crashed with my pals Patrick and Teresa Nielsen Hayden. I've know them since I was a teenager (Patrick is my editor).
We were sitting in his living room on our laptops – just like old times! – and Patrick asked me if I'd tried Kagi, a new search-engine.
Teresa chimed in, extolling the advanced search features, the "lenses" that surfaced specific kinds of resources on the web.
I hadn't even heard of Kagi, but the Nielsen Haydens are among the most effective researchers I know – both in their professional editorial lives and in their many obsessive hobbies. If it was good enough for them…
I tried it. It was magic.
No, seriously. All those things Google couldn't find anymore? Top of the search pile. Queries that generated pages of spam in Google results? Fucking pristine on Kagi – the right answers, over and over again.
That was before I started playing with Kagi's lenses and other bells and whistles, which elevated the search experience from "magic" to sorcerous.
The catch is that Kagi costs money – after 100 queries, they want you to cough up $10/month ($14 for a couple or $20 for a family with up to six accounts, and some kid-specific features):
https://kagi.com/settings?p=billing_plan&plan=family
I immediately bought a family plan. I've been using it for a month. I've basically stopped using Google search altogether.
Kagi just let me get a lot more done, and I assumed that they were some kind of wildly capitalized startup that was running their own crawl and and their own data-centers. But this morning, I read Jason Koebler's 404 Media report on his own experiences using it:
https://www.404media.co/friendship-ended-with-google-now-kagi-is-my-best-friend/
Koebler's piece contained a key detail that I'd somehow missed:
When you search on Kagi, the service makes a series of “anonymized API calls to traditional search indexes like Google, Yandex, Mojeek, and Brave,” as well as a handful of other specialized search engines, Wikimedia Commons, Flickr, etc. Kagi then combines this with its own web index and news index (for news searches) to build the results pages that you see. So, essentially, you are getting some mix of Google search results combined with results from other indexes.
In other words: Kagi is a heavily customized, anonymized front-end to Google.
The implications of this are stunning. It means that Google's enshittified search-results are a choice. Those ad-strewn, sub-Altavista, spam-drowned search pages are a feature, not a bug. Google prefers those results to Kagi, because Google makes more money out of shit than they would out of delivering a good product:
https://www.theverge.com/2024/4/2/24117976/best-printer-2024-home-use-office-use-labels-school-homework
No wonder Google spends a whole-ass Twitter every year to make sure you never try a rival search engine. Bottom line: they ran the numbers and figured out their most profitable course of action is to enshittify their flagship product and bribe their "competitors" like Apple and Samsung so that you never try another search engine and have another one of those magic moments that sent all those Jeeves-askin' Yahooers to Google a quarter-century ago.
One of my favorite TV comedy bits is Lily Tomlin as Ernestine the AT&T operator; Tomlin would do these pitches for the Bell System and end every ad with "We don't care. We don't have to. We're the phone company":
https://snltranscripts.jt.org/76/76aphonecompany.phtml
Speaking of TV comedy: this week saw FTC chair Lina Khan appear on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. It was amazing:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oaDTiWaYfcM
The coverage of Khan's appearance has focused on Stewart's revelation that when he was doing a show on Apple TV, the company prohibited him from interviewing her (presumably because of her hostility to tech monopolies):
https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/apple-got-caught-censoring-its-own
But for me, the big moment came when Khan described tech monopolists as "too big to care."
What a phrase!
Since the subprime crisis, we're all familiar with businesses being "too big to fail" and "too big to jail." But "too big to care?" Oof, that got me right in the feels.
Because that's what it feels like to use enshittified Google. That's what it feels like to discover that Kagi – the good search engine – is mostly Google with the weights adjusted to serve users, not shareholders.
Google used to care. They cared because they were worried about competitors and regulators. They cared because their workers made them care:
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2019/4/4/18295933/google-cancels-ai-ethics-board
Google doesn't care anymore. They don't have to. They're the search company.
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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/04/teach-me-how-to-shruggie/#kagi
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newspatron · 10 months
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Google Gemini: The Ultimate Guide to the Most Advanced AI Model Ever
We hope you enjoyed this article and found it informative and insightful. We would love to hear your feedback and suggestions, so please feel free to leave a comment below or contact us through our website. Thank you for reading and stay tuned for more
Google Gemini: A Revolutionary AI Model that Can Shape the Future of Technology and Society. Artificial intelligence (AI) is one of the most exciting and rapidly evolving fields of technology today. From personal assistants to self-driving cars, AI is transforming various aspects of our lives and society. However, the current state of AI is still far from achieving human-like intelligence and…
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researchmapping · 9 months
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soumyafwr · 11 months
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https://biiut.com/read-blog/46601_global-adrenocortical-hormones-api-market-size-overview-key-players-and-forecast.html
Adrenocortical Hormones API Market 
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aishavass · 1 year
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