Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Monday, June 15, 2009

Network Camera Viewing From Google

This is an old trick I thought was a good time waster. Everyday businesses install video servers and network cameras so that they can view the business remotely. They want to have them monitor key points of the business that may include valuable equipment or a lot of customer traffic. Both of these factors make these very entertaining to watch. Try it out for yourself! Just go to Google and type any of these in as a search string and browse the results! Try a few different ones because different search strings will direct you to different types of video servers or cameras, some having better quality than others. This looks to be all legal as long as you are just viewing and do not try to get past any password protection (password prompt). A great example of why you should password protect ANY equipment for a business connected to the internet. Have Fun.

* inurl:”ViewerFrame?Mode=
* intitle:Axis 2400 video server
* inurl:/view.shtml
* intitle:”Live View / - AXIS” | inurl:view/view.shtml^
* inurl:ViewerFrame?Mode=
* inurl:ViewerFrame?Mode=Refresh
* inurl:axis-cgi/jpg
* inurl:axis-cgi/mjpg (motion-JPEG)
* inurl:view/indexFrame.shtml
* inurl:view/index.shtml
* inurl:view/view.shtml
* liveapplet
* intitle:”live view” intitle:axis
* intitle:liveapplet
* allintitle:”Network Camera NetworkCamera”
* intitle:axis intitle:”video server”
* intitle:liveapplet inurl:LvAppl
* intitle:”EvoCam” inurl:”webcam.html”
* intitle:”Live NetSnap Cam-Server feed”
* intitle:”Live View / - AXIS”
* intitle:”Live View / - AXIS 206M”
* intitle:”Live View / - AXIS 206W”
* intitle:”Live View / - AXIS 210?
* inurl:indexFrame.shtml Axis
* inurl:”MultiCameraFrame?Mode=Motion”
* intitle:start inurl:cgistart
* intitle:”WJ-NT104 Main Page”
* intext:”MOBOTIX M1? intext:”Open Menu”
* intext:”MOBOTIX M10? intext:”Open Menu”
* intext:”MOBOTIX D10? intext:”Open Menu”
* intitle:snc-z20 inurl:home/
* intitle:snc-cs3 inurl:home/
* intitle:snc-rz30 inurl:home/
* intitle:”sony network camera snc-p1?
* intitle:”sony network camera snc-m1?
* site:.viewnetcam.com -www.viewnetcam.com
* intitle:”Toshiba Network Camera” user login
* intitle:”netcam live image”
* intitle:”i-Catcher Console - Web Monitor”
* inurl:"ViewerFrame?Mode=refresh"
via householdhacker.com

SEO Search Operators used in search engines (Google, Msn, Yahoo)

1.) BASIC OPERATORS*

Quotes : Wrapping a search term in quotation marks, for example “search engine optimization” will return pages containing that exact phrase.

AND : This is the default method of searching, if you put in two words it will search for the first word AND the second word within a page.

OR : Putting OR between words will bring back pages holding any of the words.

NOT : The not operator is written like this: honda –price
In the example above the results will return any page that holds the word honda without
the word price in them (so this page will not appear in SERPs).
Using a “-” in front of a keyword you can remove all results with that search term.

SYNONYMS : If we search for ~car then it will return pages that contain the word quiz or its
synonyms eg. games and tests

SEPARATED WORDS : Ex: honda*price
This will bring back pages that hold the words honda and Price separated by one or more words.

2.) OPERATORS:
+ – * / basic arithmetic 12 + 34 - 56 * 7 / 8
% of percentage of 45% of 39
^ or ** raise to a power 2^5 or 2**5
old units in new units convert units 300 Euros in USD, 130 lbs in kg, or 31 in hex

3.) OPERATORS
Using these advanced search operators modify the search results in
some way, or even tell Google to do a totally different type of search on your Web
site.
Keep in mind too that some of these operators can be used in other
search engines as well, like MSN and Yahoo!
Note : There are no spaces between the search operator and the Web page URL.

1.Site 6.Allinurl or Inurl
2.Cache 7.Allintext
3.Info 8.Allinanchor: or Inanchor:
4.Link 9.Allintitle: or Intitle
5.Related 10.Define

1.) site:
Using the site: in the search box followed by www.yourwebsiteaddress.com determines how many Web pages within the entire Web site are currently being recognized by Google. This function also limits results to one particular domain. This helps SEO experts know which Web pages are already being seen (and which ones aren’t yet), so we can optimize those first.

2.) cache:
Using the cache: in the search box followed by www.yourwebsiteaddress.com shows the last
time the search engine crawled a particular Web page. You may enter your homepage address or an inside Web page to find out the most recently spidered version of a Web page stored in a search engine’s cache.

3.) info:
The search query info: presents a collection of data that a search engine has about that Web
page, like its latest cache date, Web pages similar to your site, Web pages that link to your site,
Web pages within your site and Web pages containing the your domain name.

4.) link:
This search query results in finding all Web sites that are currently linking to your site. This
helps determine how much link building services are needed in an SEO program for a client. Link popularity is still considered a major factor to achieving high keyword rankings in search
engines. It also helps knowing what sites are linking to yours, so you can then determine
whether or not you want them linking to your site.

5.) related:
This search shows Web pages that are similar to a specific URL. For example,
related:www.santaclaus.com will list all web pages that are similar to the Santa Claus homepage.

6.) allinurl: or inurl:
These searches display all Web pages where the search terms queried appear in the URL. For
example, allinurl: circus world will return only Web sites that have the words circus and world
somewhere in the URL. The advanced search operator inurl: is used only when a single search
term queried is necessary.

7.) allintext:
This search results in showing Web pages where all search terms listed appear in the body
content (visible text) portion of a Web page. In SEO campaigns, using this advanced search
operator helps in discovering other related sites for possible link exchanges or link submissions.

8.) allinanchor: or inanchor:
These queries display all Web pages where the search terms listed appear in the URL. For
example, allinanchor: circus world will return only Web sites that have the search terms circus and world appear in the text of links pointing to a Web page. The advanced search operator inanchor: is used only when a single search term listed is necessary.

9.) allintitle: or intitle:
These advanced search operators display all search terms listed appear in the title of Web
pages. For example, allintitle: circus world will return only Web sites that have the keywords
circus and world in the titles of Web pages. The search operator intitle: only shows Web pages
where a single word appears in the title of Web pages.

10.) define:
Although SEO experts may not use this advanced search operator often, sometimes it comes in handy just to quickly learn what a particular word or phrase means, instead of going to other online dictionary Web sites.

SOME MORE OPERATORS:
1.) date:You can search for pages that have been created within the last 3, 6, or 12 months
e.g. apple date:3
Will return pages created within the last 3 months for the term apple.

2.) safesearch: typing safesearch: before a search will return filtered results removing adult content
This is only required if you already have safesearch switched off in your profile.

3.) stocks: The stocks operator treats your search term as a stock ticker symbol and returns financial information stocks:GOOG

4.) filetype: The filetype operator brings back documents of certain filetypes only
e.g. stats filetype:pdf

5.) Truncation Wildcards (* ?): The multi-character (*) and single character (?) truncation symbols can be used within and at the ends of words to search for word variants thereby broadening your search. It is usually a good idea to truncate words to no less than four or five characters.

POINTS TO REMMEMBER:
Implicit AND - Google returns only pages that match all your search terms.
Exact Matching - Google returns pages that match your search terms exactly.
Automatic Stemming - Google returns pages that match variants of your search terms.
Common Word Exclusion - Google ignores some common words called “stop words,” e.g., the, on, where,
how, de, la, as well as certain single digits and single letters.
32- Word limit - Google limits queries to 32 words.
Term Proximity - Google favors results that have your search terms near each other.
Term Order - Google gives higher priority to pages that have the terms in the same order as in your query.
Case Insensitivity - Google is NOT case sensitive; it shows both upper- and lowercase results.
Ignoring Punctuation - Google ignores some punctuation and special characters, including ! ? , . ; [ ] @ / # < > .
Apostrophes - A term with an apostrophe (single quote, ') doesn't match the term without an apostrophe.
Hyphenated Terms - Because some people spell hyphenated words with a hyphen and others with a space, Google searches for variations on any hyphenated terms.

*Source Internet