One of the common things I hear from people is I never know what to write about on my blog, well why not pick one thing and be good at. Go at it with a passion for example look at Styledash’s Dress of the day. Look at the content not the dress. Now lets see what they did with it [site:styledash.com "dress of the day"]. So how about “appetizer of the week”, “Cigar of the month”, “IPod tip of the Day”, “cleaning tip of the day”, “soda of the day”, “mcdonalds happy meal collector toy of the day”, “strangest thing I found for auction on ebay today”, “best pickup line of the week”, “celebrity of the week” and so on, and so on …
Side note: Hey Matt how come I can’t search for [site:styledash.com allintitle:dress of the day]?
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{ 7 comments }
Dunno why the command you gave doesn’t work, but site:styledash.com intitle:”dress of the day” does.
What is?
What are?
http://www.wisegeek.com/
Easy peasy, Rae’s right. allintitle: operates on the entire query, so it can’t really be mixed with other operators. The solution is to use intitle:”the phrase” vs. allintitle: the phrase.
Drops… dead…
Nuts, Rae beat me to it…
You can only mix and match certain special operators.
Bonus question : which special operator can be accessed in 2 ways?
I think Rae has a crush on Matt?
>>>I think Rae has a crush on Matt?
Hahahaha. No, just thought for a second there he actually directed a comment to me… in public anyway.
I’m the criminal, not cop type.
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