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How can I know wether a website is based on Wordpress / Wix / React / Next.js / Nuxt.js / PHP etc?
I know answer for two, maybe you can help with other popular technologies.
Wordpress: I mostly check wether the https://theirdomain/wp-admin.php drop onto the login screen. It helps many times. And usually their html has prefixes based on their page builder. I.e. if they use Elementor is used, it has many elementor- prefix in the html tag names.
Next.js: Under body there is always a mandatory <div> with id __next.
I am most curious about the following two sites, what they could use:
https://www.szauna-szeansz.hu
https://sebeszem.hu
A software tools is welcome to propose to get infos about used technologies in websites.
You can use Wappalyzer: https://www.wappalyzer.com/
Or tech specific devtools like the VueJS ones or Vue telescope, then React ones etc...
Otherwise, checking the source code.
For the first one
For the second one
Then it comes down to know a bit of e-commerce platforms etc.
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So my school has blocked all websites (for now at least) and I'm wondering if there was a way to access them without entering into them. What I've thought is that this could be done with google as google search can show you certain parts of pages.
Also, the current configuration of the firewall allows you to do google search and access certain websites. I also know that they perform this using a man in the middle attack intercepting SSL connections. Is there any VPN, tool or script that can bypass this? Something to do with packets obfuscation using XOR gates? I've tried using many different VPNs but all seem to not work.
Thanks in advance.
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I have made custom segments/blocks around my website which I use it for advertising/marketing. Google search bots are considering those as part of my website and gets confused of what my site really is versus advertisement.
This negatively impacts my SEO. Is there a way I can register or use certain directives or elements to inform google and other bots to avoid crawling that portion or even if crawled should not be considered as part of that page.
I am aware of robots.txt file but that is for an entire page. I would like to block a certain blocks within each page. This could be a side bar a floating bar.
there's no way to ensure all bots don't index parts of a page. it's kind of a all or nothing thing.
can could use a robots.txt file and with
Disallow: /iframes/
then load the content you don't want indexed into iframes.
there's also the data-nosnippet-attr tag attribute.
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I would like to call Amazon reviews through an API call and then be able to sort and highlight certain sentences in the reviews, without obviously modifying any reviews.
Is this something I can legally do on my own website, without breaking Amazon's TOS. I am an affiliate of theirs and wish to continue to promote them.
I looked through Amazon's website about API calls and they seem to allow fetching of Amazon reviews, as explained in one of their pages here. http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSECommerceService/latest/DG/EX_RetrievingCustomerReviews.html
I read through the forums here and the answers are confusing. Most relevant questions to mine are dated 2010-2011. Any opinions/help to help me understand this feasibility will be greatly appreciated.
For the record, I have 0 programming skills. I will hire someone to do the work if at all it is possible.
Amazon product review only available in iframe page. If you still want to display amazon review of a product you can do screen scraping script of a that iframe page. With this way you need to make two process.
1. Product Details API Request ( Item Lookup )
2. Get Review Of that Product.
I use this method in some of my websites several months ago. But only display but not modifying the reviews ( sort and highlight certain sentences in the reviews ).
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I'm wondering how I can get my site to display preview information for specific search terms. I notice this occasionally from time to time and it would work really well in a question-answer based system I've built. You can see this live by Googling "Add a comment in word," and it's the content box that appears at the top of the search results.
Edit: I believe they're called Google answers. From what I've read, they're scraped from sites by Google for popular search results, but I'm hoping they can be implemented manually as well.
Unfortunately, you can't. This is called a "Knowledge Box" and is a new(ish) search feature that Google has implemented to assist in answer usability and is primarily show from to high-authority website's (brand's) such as Wikipedia, Microsoft..etc.
The answers do not actually being generated in real-time, but being pulled from a knowledge base that Google has pre-created called the "Knowledge Graph" which is also used in general search to help improve relevancy.
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I've been trying to describe the concept of platforms to some non-developer people on my team. I'm trying to explain how platforms are more than just tools and environments. For example, the Facebook Platform. How to describe the fact that the platform is more than just the website, but includes protocols like XFBML, opengraph, etc.
Facebook Platform is one example, but I would be interested if anyone has an abstracted way to describe what 'platforms' are in the tech world. I've had difficulty explaining this concept before in situations unrelated to flash.
Analogies that aren't tech related would be helpful as well.
I would say something about it being all-inclusive and extending to include all functionality that the entire ecosystem around that particular piece of software needs to thrive.
The Wikipedia page might help in putting it into words: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_platform
I use a "restaurant" metaphor, myself: Think of the kitchen, the bar, the dining room as components to the platform. How the decor can change in the dining room without changing the function, but can affect how customers perceive the business. How the recipes instruct the cooks, and the interactions with the wait staff can all affect different aspects of the business much like different pieces of your platform can be modified to affect different aspects of your business. Oh, and don't forget management!