News

Google says there’s no need to worry about JavaScript when it comes to search, as there’s nothing fundamentally different about it compared to static content. This is discussed in the latest ...
The Google spokesperson told TechCrunch that, on average, less than 0.1% of Google searches are performed by people who disable JavaScript. This may seem small, but that’s a significant number on ...
Google processes around 8.5 billion searches per day, so one can assume that millions of people performing searches through Google aren’t using JavaScript. One of Google’s motivations here may ...
Google’s new mandate that all search requests must be rendered with JavaScript has sent shockwaves through the scraping community. In the past month, many legacy tools stumbled under the JS wall ...
Google this week began offering an alpha version of Google APIs Client Library for JavaScript, which provides access to HTTP-based APIs on the Web, as well as to many of Google’s public APIs.
However, Google says it doesn't think there will be a major issue -- only 0.1 percent of Google users shut JavaScript off. A lot of sites are entirely broken without JavaScript, ...
Google notes that less than 0.1% of searches (which still amounts to millions, given Google Search’s user base) are conducted by users who keep JavaScript disabled.
Google’s John Mueller and Martin Splitt recently debunked the notion that JavaScript SEO is dying. It’s certainly not dying, nor is it getting easier. If anything, JavaScript SEO is only going ...
Google’s new mandate that all search requests must be rendered with JavaScript has sent shockwaves through the scraping ...