Friday 24 July 2020

Here’s Your Guide to Explore the World of Shatter

If there is one highly sought-after and photogenic marijuana product in the market, it is the shatter. Also called shatter wax or shatter weed, this extract has given cannabis consumers a potent way to take in their favorite strains. 
Much like live diamonds, this extract is created using the plant’s essential oils containing terpenes, cannabinoids, and other chemical compounds. Thanks to its crystalline cannabis concentrate structure, the term shatter indicates its nature of shattering like glass.

What Is a Cannabis Extract?

Fresh or cured cannabis materials are thoroughly ground and processed to derive the essential chemicals like THC, cannabinoids, terpenes, and CBD. Solvents like hexane, isopropyl, butane, or CO2 can help obtain amber or gold-colored cannabis oil, which is loaded with plant’s active compounds. 

Tuesday 21 July 2020

Google: Submitting Redirect URLs for Indexing Doesn’t Make Sense


Google’s John Mueller recently explained that submitting a URL for indexing, when it redirects to another URL, doesn’t make sense.
This topic was covered in the latest #AskGoogleWebmasters video in which Mueller answers a question about client-side JavaScript redirects.
Here is the question that was submitted:
“Can Google evergreen Chromium, detect client-side JavaScript redirects? I’m not able to submit GSC indexing request to pages that have client-side JS redirect to a subscription page.”
In response, Mueller first went over what it means to have an evergreen Googlebot. It’s a fairly recent change that you can learn more about here.
Mueller addressed the redirect question saying that client-side redirects are followed by Googlebot the same way as server-side redirects.
Despite Googlebot being able to follow client-side JS redirects, it still doesn’t make sense to submit a redirecting URL for indexing.
That’s true whether it’s client-side, server-side, JS, or HTML.
A redirect sends a signal to Googlebot that the site owner would prefer to have a different URL indexed.
So, with that said, it makes more sense to submit the URL that should be indexed instead.
Another option is to make sure Google is able to discover the preferred URL. If it’s linked to within the website then Googlebot will discover it during its normal crawling process.
Mueller also adds that using a sitemap file can help Google discover URLs faster.