JustinHarrison
New Member
Pinging the blog directories is one of the most important ongoing tasks after listing your blog in the various directories.
However, this little automated update technology called pining can have fatal affects on your best intentions if you do not adhere to some unwritten code of conduct.
“Over pining” your blog to the directories can get you listed as a blog spammer, so it is important to make sure your ping is timely, that you only do it once per directory, per new article.
The problem is that with a lack of standards (much the way search engines started out) it is easy to unintentionally over ping.
An example I can best list is if you made use of two services such as ping-o-matic and say Kloth, if there is a common directory being pinged by both services, you will be considered a blog spammer.
For a while now I have been messing around with Word Press as a Blog tool, and although it lacks many “niftier” features, it’s quick and painless way to get your own Blog up and running.
Additionally it has a built in area for automated blog pings, all you need to do is list the RPC url’s to ping.
The problem is that there are about 56 services to ping, with more than 45% of the submission services using common directories…. The result being that you end up duplicating many of your pings.
I have as a result done some cleaning and sorting, and if you would like to ping the majority of directories, without duplicating your pings, the list below provides the best exposure with the least risk.
http://rpc.pingomatic.com
http://ping.weblogs.se/
http://blogmatcher.com/u.php
http://coreblog.org/ping/
http://www.blogpeople.net/servlet/weblogUpdates
http://bulkfeeds.net/rpc
http://trackback.bakeinu.jp/bakeping.php
http://ping.myblog.jp
http://ping.bitacoras.com
http://ping.bloggers.jp/rpc/
http://ping.blogmura.jp/rpc/
cPanel?
ishinao.net
http://bblog.com/ping.php
http://blog.goo.ne.jp/XMLRPC
Kind Regards
Justin Harrison
However, this little automated update technology called pining can have fatal affects on your best intentions if you do not adhere to some unwritten code of conduct.
“Over pining” your blog to the directories can get you listed as a blog spammer, so it is important to make sure your ping is timely, that you only do it once per directory, per new article.
The problem is that with a lack of standards (much the way search engines started out) it is easy to unintentionally over ping.
An example I can best list is if you made use of two services such as ping-o-matic and say Kloth, if there is a common directory being pinged by both services, you will be considered a blog spammer.
For a while now I have been messing around with Word Press as a Blog tool, and although it lacks many “niftier” features, it’s quick and painless way to get your own Blog up and running.
Additionally it has a built in area for automated blog pings, all you need to do is list the RPC url’s to ping.
The problem is that there are about 56 services to ping, with more than 45% of the submission services using common directories…. The result being that you end up duplicating many of your pings.
I have as a result done some cleaning and sorting, and if you would like to ping the majority of directories, without duplicating your pings, the list below provides the best exposure with the least risk.
http://rpc.pingomatic.com
http://ping.weblogs.se/
http://blogmatcher.com/u.php
http://coreblog.org/ping/
http://www.blogpeople.net/servlet/weblogUpdates
http://bulkfeeds.net/rpc
http://trackback.bakeinu.jp/bakeping.php
http://ping.myblog.jp
http://ping.bitacoras.com
http://ping.bloggers.jp/rpc/
http://ping.blogmura.jp/rpc/
cPanel?
ishinao.net
http://bblog.com/ping.php
http://blog.goo.ne.jp/XMLRPC
Kind Regards
Justin Harrison
Last edited by a moderator: