Wednesday, 1 July 2015

SFTW: Scraping data with Google Refine

For the first Something For The Weekend of 2012 I want to tackle a common problem when you’re trying to scrape a collection of webpage: they have some sort of structure in their URL like this, where part of the URL refers to the name or code of an entity:     http://www.ltscotland.org.uk/scottishschoolsonline/schools/freemealentitlement.asp?iSchoolID=5237521

  tp://www.ltscotland.org.uk/scottishschoolsonline/schools/freemealentitlement.asp?iSchoolID=5237629

    ttp://www.ltscotland.org.uk/scottishschoolsonline/schools/freemealentitlement.asp?iSchoolID=5237823

In this instance, you can see that the URL is identical apart from a 7 digit code at the end: the ID of the school the data refers to.

There are a number of ways you could scrape this data. You could use Google Docs and the =importXML formula, but Google Docs will only let you use this 50 times on any one spreadsheet (you could copy the results and select Edit > Paste Special > Values Only and then use the formula a further 50 times if it’s not too many – here’s one I prepared earlier).

And you could use Scraperwiki to write a powerful scraper – but you need to understand enough coding to do so quickly (here’s a demo I prepared earlier).

A middle option is to use Google Refine, and here’s how you do it.

Assembling the ingredients

With the basic URL structure identified, we already have half of our ingredients. What we need  next is a list of the ID codes that we’re going to use to complete each URL.

An advanced search for “list seed number scottish schools filetype:xls” brings up a link to this spreadsheet (XLS) which gives us just that.

The spreadsheet will need editing: remove any rows you don’t need. This will reduce the time that the scraper will take in going through them. For example, if you’re only interested in one local authority, or one type of school, sort your spreadsheet so that you can delete those above or below them.

Now to combine  the ID codes with the base URL.

Bringing your data into Google Refine

Open Google Refine and create a new project with the edited spreadsheet containing the school IDs.

At the top of the school ID column click on the drop-down menu and select Edit column > Add column based on this column…

In the New column name box at the top call this ‘URL’.

In the Expression box type the following piece of GREL (Google Refine Expression Language):

“http://www.ltscotland.org.uk/scottishschoolsonline/schools/freemealentitlement.asp?iSchoolID=”+value

(Type in the quotation marks yourself – if you’re copying them from a webpage you may have problems)

The ‘value’ bit means the value of each cell in the column you just selected. The plus sign adds it to the end of the URL in quotes.

In the Preview window you should see the results – you can even copy one of the resulting URLs and paste it into a browser to check it works. (On one occasion Google Refine added .0 to the end of the ID number, ruining the URL. You can solve this by changing ‘value’ to value.substring(0,7) – this extracts the first 7 characters of the ID number, omitting the ‘.0′) UPDATE: in the comment Thad suggests “perhaps, upon import of your spreadsheet of IDs, you forgot to uncheck the importer option to Parse as numbers?”

Click OK if you’re happy, and you should have a new column with a URL for each school ID.

Grabbing the HTML for each page

Now click on the top of this new URL column and select Edit column > Add column by fetching URLs…

In the New column name box at the top call this ‘HTML’.

All you need in the Expression window is ‘value’, so leave that as it is.

Click OK.

Google Refine will now go to each of those URLs and fetch the HTML contents. As we have a couple thousand rows here, this will take a long time – hours, depending on the speed of your computer and internet connection (it may not work at all if either isn’t very fast). So leave it running and come back to it later.

Extracting data from the raw HTML with parseHTML

When it’s finished you’ll have another column where each cell is a bunch of HTML. You’ll need to create a new column to extract what you need from that, and you’ll also need some GREL expressions explained here.

First you need to identify what data you want, and where it is in the HTML. To find it, right-click on one of the webpages containing the data, and search for a key phrase or figure that you want to extract. Around that data you want to find a HTML tag like <table class=”destinations”> or <div id=”statistics”>. Keep that open in another window while you tweak the expression we come onto below…

Back in Google Refine, at the top of the HTML column click on the drop-down menu and select Edit column > Add column based on this column…

In the New column name box at the top give it a name describing the data you’re going to pull out.

In the Expression box type the following piece of GREL (Google Refine Expression Language):

value.parseHtml().select(“table.destinations”)[0].select(“tr”).toString()

(Again, type the quotation marks yourself rather than copying them from here or you may have problems)

I’ll break down what this is doing:

value.parseHtml()

parse the HTML in each cell (value)

.select(“table.destinations”)

find a table with a class (.) of “destinations” (in the source HTML this reads <table class=”destinations”>. If it was <div id=”statistics”> then you would write .select(“div#statistics”) – the hash sign representing an ‘id’ and the full stop representing a ‘class’.

[0]

This zero in square brackets tells Refine to only grab the first table – a number 1 would indicate the second, and so on. This is because numbering (“indexing”) generally begins with zero in programming.

.select(“tr”)

Now, within that table, find anything within the tag <tr>

.toString()

And convert the results into a string of text.

The results of that expression in the Preview window should look something like this:

<tr> <th></th> <th>Abbotswell School</th> <th>Aberdeen City</th> <th>Scotland</th> </tr> <tr> <th>Percentage of pupils</th> <td>25.5%</td> <td>16.3%</td> <td>22.6%</td> </tr>

This is still HTML, but a much smaller and manageable chunk. You could, if you chose, now export it as a spreadsheet file and use various techniques to get rid of the tags (Find and Replace, for example) and split the data into separate columns (the =SPLIT formula, for example).

Or you could further tweak your GREL code in Refine to drill further into your data, like so:

value.parseHtml().select(“table.destinations”)[0].select(“td”)[0].toString()

Which would give you this:

<td>25.5%</td>

Or you can add the .substring function to strip out the HTML like so (assuming that the data you want is always 5 characters long):

value.parseHtml().select(“table.destinations”)[0].select(“td”)[0].toString().substring(5,10)

When you’re happy, click OK and you should have a new column for that data. You can repeat this for every piece of data you want to extract into a new column.

Then click Export in the upper right corner and save as a CSV or Excel file.

Source: http://onlinejournalismblog.com/2012/01/13/sftw-scraping-data-with-google-refine/

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

Data Scraping - Hand Scraped Hardwood Flooring Gives Your Home That Exclusive Look

Today hand scraped hardwood flooring is becoming extremely popular in the more opulent homes as well as in some commercial properties. Although this type of flooring has only recently become fashionable it has been around for many centuries.

Certainly before the invention of modern sanding techniques all floors where hand scraped at the location where they were to be installed to ensure that the floor would be flat and even. However today this method is used instead to provide texture, richness as well as a unique look and feel to the flooring.

Although manufacturers have produced machines which can provide a scraped look to their flooring it looks cheap compared to the real thing. Unfortunately the main problem with using a machine to scrape the flooring is that it provides a uniform look to the pattern of the wood. Because of this it lacks the natural feel that you would see with a floor which has been scraped by hand.

When done by hand, scraping creates a truly unique look to the floor. However the actual look and feel of each floor will vary as it depends on the skills of the person actually carrying out the work. If there is no control in place whilst the work is being carried out this can result in disastrous look to the finished product.

Many manufacturers who actually provide hand scraped hardwood flooring will either just dent, scoop or rough the floor up. But others will use sanding techniques in order to create a worn and uneven look to the flooring. The more professional teams will scrape the entire surface of the wood in order to create the unique hand made look for their customers.

Many companies will allow their customers to choose what type of scraping takes place on their wood. They can choose between light, medium and heavy. The companies who are really good at hand scraping will be able give the hardwood floor a reclaimed look by including wormholes, splits and other naturally-occurring features within the wood.

If you do decide to choose hand scraped hardwood flooring you will need to factor the costs that are associated with it into your budget. Unfortunately this type of flooring does not come cheap and you can find yourself paying upwards of $15 per sq ft. But once it is installed it will give a room a unique and warm rich feel to it and is certainly going to wow your friends and family when they see it for the first time.

Source: http://ezinearticles.com/?Hand-Scraped-Hardwood-Flooring-Gives-Your-Home-That-Exclusive-Look&id=572577


Friday, 19 June 2015

Migrating Table-oriented Web Scraping Code to rvest w/XPath & CSS Selector Examples


My intrepid colleague (@jayjacobs) informed me of this (and didn’t gloat too much). I’ve got a “pirate day” post coming up this week that involves scraping content from the web and thought folks might benefit from another example that compares the “old way” and the “new way” (Hadley excels at making lots of “new ways” in R :-) I’ve left the output in with the code to show that you get the same results.

The following shows old/new methods for extracting a table from a web site, including how to use either XPath selectors or CSS selectors in rvest calls. To stave of some potential comments: due to the way this table is setup and the need to extract only certain components from the td blocks and elements from tags within the td blocks, a simple readHTMLTable would not suffice.

The old/new approaches are very similar, but I especially like the ability to chain output ala magrittr/dplyr and not having to mentally switch gears to XPath if I’m doing other work targeting the browser (i.e. prepping data for D3).

The code (sans output) is in this gist, and IMO the rvest package is going to make working with web site data so much easier.

library(XML)
library(httr)
library(rvest)
library(magrittr)

# setup connection & grab HTML the "old" way w/httr

freak_get <- GET("http://torrentfreak.com/top-10-most-pirated-movies-of-the-week-130304/")

freak_html <- htmlParse(content(freak_get, as="text"))

# do the same the rvest way, using "html_session" since we may need connection info in some scripts

freak <- html_session("http://torrentfreak.com/top-10-most-pirated-movies-of-the-week-130304/")

# extracting the "old" way with xpathSApply

xpathSApply(freak_html, "//*/td[3]", xmlValue)[1:10]

##  [1] "Silver Linings Playbook "           "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey " "Life of Pi (DVDscr/DVDrip)"       

##  [4] "Argo (DVDscr)"                      "Identity Thief "                    "Red Dawn "                        

##  [7] "Rise Of The Guardians (DVDscr)"     "Django Unchained (DVDscr)"          "Lincoln (DVDscr)"                 

## [10] "Zero Dark Thirty "

xpathSApply(freak_html, "//*/td[1]", xmlValue)[2:11]

##  [1] "1"  "2"  "3"  "4"  "5"  "6"  "7"  "8"  "9"  "10"

xpathSApply(freak_html, "//*/td[4]", xmlValue)

##  [1] "7.4 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "8.3 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "5.3 / trailer" "7.5 / trailer"

##  [8] "8.8 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "7.6 / trailer"

xpathSApply(freak_html, "//*/td[4]/a[contains(@href,'imdb')]", xmlAttrs, "href")

##                                    href                                    href                                    href

##  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1045658/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0903624/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0454876/"

##                                    href                                    href                                    href

##  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1024648/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2024432/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1234719/"

##                                    href                                    href                                    href

##  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1446192/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1853728/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0443272/"

##                                    href

## "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1790885/?"


# extracting with rvest + XPath

freak %>% html_nodes(xpath="//*/td[3]") %>% html_text() %>% .[1:10]

##  [1] "Silver Linings Playbook "           "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey " "Life of Pi (DVDscr/DVDrip)"       

##  [4] "Argo (DVDscr)"                      "Identity Thief "                    "Red Dawn "                        

##  [7] "Rise Of The Guardians (DVDscr)"     "Django Unchained (DVDscr)"          "Lincoln (DVDscr)"                 

## [10] "Zero Dark Thirty "

freak %>% html_nodes(xpath="//*/td[1]") %>% html_text() %>% .[2:11]

##  [1] "1"  "2"  "3"  "4"  "5"  "6"  "7"  "8"  "9"  "10"

freak %>% html_nodes(xpath="//*/td[4]") %>% html_text() %>% .[1:10]

##  [1] "7.4 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "8.3 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "5.3 / trailer" "7.5 / trailer"

##  [8] "8.8 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "7.6 / trailer"

freak %>% html_nodes(xpath="//*/td[4]/a[contains(@href,'imdb')]") %>% html_attr("href") %>% .[1:10]

##  [1] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1045658/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0903624/"

##  [3] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0454876/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1024648/"

##  [5] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2024432/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1234719/"

##  [7] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1446192/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1853728/"

##  [9] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0443272/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1790885/?"

# extracting with rvest + CSS selectors

freak %>% html_nodes("td:nth-child(3)") %>% html_text() %>% .[1:10]

##  [1] "Silver Linings Playbook "           "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey " "Life of Pi (DVDscr/DVDrip)"       

##  [4] "Argo (DVDscr)"                      "Identity Thief "                    "Red Dawn "                        

##  [7] "Rise Of The Guardians (DVDscr)"     "Django Unchained (DVDscr)"          "Lincoln (DVDscr)"                 

## [10] "Zero Dark Thirty "

freak %>% html_nodes("td:nth-child(1)") %>% html_text() %>% .[2:11]

##  [1] "1"  "2"  "3"  "4"  "5"  "6"  "7"  "8"  "9"  "10"

freak %>% html_nodes("td:nth-child(4)") %>% html_text() %>% .[1:10]

##  [1] "7.4 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "8.3 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "5.3 / trailer" "7.5 / trailer"

##  [8] "8.8 / trailer" "8.2 / trailer" "7.6 / trailer"

freak %>% html_nodes("td:nth-child(4) a[href*='imdb']") %>% html_attr("href") %>% .[1:10]

##  [1] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1045658/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0903624/"

##  [3] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0454876/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1024648/"

##  [5] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2024432/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1234719/"

##  [7] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1446192/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1853728/"

##  [9] "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0443272/"  "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1790885/?"

# building a data frame (which is kinda obvious, but hey)

data.frame(movie=freak %>% html_nodes("td:nth-child(3)") %>% html_text() %>% .[1:10],

           rank=freak %>% html_nodes("td:nth-child(1)") %>% html_text() %>% .[2:11],

           rating=freak %>% html_nodes("td:nth-child(4)") %>% html_text() %>% .[1:10],

           imdb.url=freak %>% html_nodes("td:nth-child(4) a[href*='imdb']") %>% html_attr("href") %>% .[1:10],

           stringsAsFactors=FALSE)

##                                 movie rank        rating                              imdb.url

## 1            Silver Linings Playbook     1 7.4 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1045658/

## 2  The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey     2 8.2 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0903624/

## 3          Life of Pi (DVDscr/DVDrip)    3 8.3 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0454876/

## 4                       Argo (DVDscr)    4 8.2 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1024648/

## 5                     Identity Thief     5 8.2 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2024432/

## 6                           Red Dawn     6 5.3 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1234719/

## 7      Rise Of The Guardians (DVDscr)    7 7.5 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1446192/

## 8           Django Unchained (DVDscr)    8 8.8 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1853728/

## 9                    Lincoln (DVDscr)    9 8.2 / trailer  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0443272/

## 10                  Zero Dark Thirty    10 7.6 / trailer http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1790885/?

Source: http://www.r-bloggers.com/migrating-table-oriented-web-scraping-code-to-rvest-wxpath-css-selector-examples/

Monday, 8 June 2015

Web Scraping Services : Data Discovery vs. Data Extraction

Looking at screen-scraping at a simplified level, there are two primary stages involved: data discovery and data extraction. Data discovery deals with navigating a web site to arrive at the pages containing the data you want, and data extraction deals with actually pulling that data off of those pages. Generally when people think of screen-scraping they focus on the data extraction portion of the process, but my experience has been that data discovery is often the more difficult of the two.

The data discovery step in screen-scraping might be as simple as requesting a single URL. For example, you might just need to go to the home page of a site and extract out the latest news headlines. On the other side of the spectrum, data discovery may involve logging in to a web site, traversing a series of pages in order to get needed cookies, submitting a POST request on a search form, traversing through search results pages, and finally following all of the "details" links within the search results pages to get to the data you're actually after. In cases of the former a simple Perl script would often work just fine. For anything much more complex than that, though, a commercial screen-scraping tool can be an incredible time-saver. Especially for sites that require logging in, writing code to handle screen-scraping can be a nightmare when it comes to dealing with cookies and such.

In the data extraction phase you've already arrived at the page containing the data you're interested in, and you now need to pull it out of the HTML. Traditionally this has typically involved creating a series of regular expressions that match the pieces of the page you want (e.g., URL's and link titles). Regular expressions can be a bit complex to deal with, so most screen-scraping applications will hide these details from you, even though they may use regular expressions behind the scenes.

As an addendum, I should probably mention a third phase that is often ignored, and that is, what do you do with the data once you've extracted it? Common examples include writing the data to a CSV or XML file, or saving it to a database. In the case of a live web site you might even scrape the information and display it in the user's web browser in real-time. When shopping around for a screen-scraping tool you should make sure that it gives you the flexibility you need to work with the data once it's been extracted.

Source: http://ezinearticles.com/?Data-Discovery-vs.-Data-Extraction&id=165396

Tuesday, 2 June 2015

WordPress Titles: scraping with search url

I’ve blogged for a few years now, and I’ve used several tools along the way. zachbeauvais.com began as a Drupal site, until I worked out that it’s a bit overkill, and switched to WordPress. Recently, I’ve been toying with the idea of using a static site generator (a lá Jekyll or Hyde), or even pulling together a kind of ebook of ramblings. I also want to be able to arrange the posts based on the keywords they contain, regardless of how they’re categorised or tagged.

Whatever I wanted to do, I ended up with a single point of messiness: individual blog posts, and how they’re formatted. When I started, I seem to remember using Drupal’s truly awful WYSIWYG editor, and tweaking the HTML soup it produced. Then, when I moved over to WordPress, it pulled all the posts and metadata through via RSS, and I tweaked with the visual and text tools which are baked into the engine.

A couple years ago, I started to write in Markdown, and completely apart from the blog (thanks to full-screen writing and loud music). This gives me a local .md file, and I copy/paste into WordPress using a plugin to get rid of the visual editor entirely.

So, I wrote a scraper to return a list of blog posts containing a specific term. What I hope is that this very simple scraper is useful to others—WordPress is pretty common, after all—and to get some ideas for improving it, and handle post content. If you haven’t used ScraperWiki before, you might not know that you can see the raw scraper by clicking “view source” from the scraper’s overview page (or going here if you’re lazy).

This scraper is based on WordPress’ built-in search, which can be used by passing the search terms to a url, then scraping the resulting page:

http://zachbeauvais.com/?s=search_term&submit=Search

The scraper uses three Python libraries:

    Requests
    ScraperWiki
    lxml.html

There are two variables which can be changed to search for other terms, or using a different WordPress site:

term = "coffee"

site = "http://www.zachbeauvais.com"

The rest of the script is really simple: it creates a dictionary called “payload” containing the letter “s”, the keyword, and the instruction to search. The “s” is in there to make up the search url: /?s=coffee …

Requests then GETs the site, passing payload as url parameters, and I use Request’s .text function to render the page in html, which I then pass through lxml to the new variable “root”.

payload = {'s': str(term), 'submit': 'Search'}

r = requests.get(site, params=payload)  # This'll be the results page

html = r.text

root = lxml.html.fromstring(html)  # parsing the HTML into the var root

Now, my WordPress theme renders the titles of the retrieved posts in <h1> tags with the CSS class “entry-title”, so I loop through the html text, pulling out the links and text from all the resulting h1.entry-title items. This part of the script would need tweaking, depending on the CSS class and h-tag your theme uses.

for i in root.cssselect("h1.entry-title a"):

    link = i.cssselect("a")

    text = i.text_content()

    data = {

        'uri': link[0].attrib['href'],

        'post-title': str(text),

        'search-term': str(term)

    }

    if i is not None:

        print link

        print text

        print data

        scraperwiki.sqlite.save(unique_keys=['uri'], data=data)

    else:

        print "No results."

These return into an sqlite database via the ScraperWiki library, and I have a resulting database with the title and link to every blog post containing the keyword.

So, this could, in theory, run on any WordPress instance which uses the same search pattern URL—just change the site variable to match.

Also, you can run this again and again, changing the term to any new keyword. These will be stored in the DB with the keyword in its own column to identify what you were looking for.

See? Pretty simple scraping.

So, what I’d like next is to have a local copy of every post in a single format.

Has anyone got any ideas how I could improve this? And, has anyone used WordPress’ JSON API? It might be a logical next step to call the API to get the posts directly from the MySQL DB… but that would be a new blog post!

Source: https://scraperwiki.wordpress.com/2013/03/11/wordpress-titles-scraping-with-search-url/

Thursday, 28 May 2015

Data Scraping Services - Web Scraping Video Tutorial Collection for All Programming Language

Web scraping is a mechanism in which request made to website URL to get  HTML Document text and that text then parsed to extract data from the HTML codes.  Website scraping for data is a generalize approach and can be implemented in any programming language like PHP, Java, C#, Python and many other.

There are many Web scraping software available in market using which you can extract data with no coding knowledge. In many case the scraping doesn’t help due to custom crawling flow for data scraping and in that case you have to make your own web scraping application in one of the programming language you know. In this post I have collected scraping video tutorials for all programming language.

I mostly familiar with web scraping using PHP, C# and some other scraping tools and providing web scraping service.  If you have any scraping requirement send me your requirements and I will get back with sample data scrape and best price.

Web Scraping Using PHP

You can do web scraping in PHP using CURL library and Simple HTML DOM parsing library.  PHP function file_get_content() can also be useful for making web request. One drawback of scraping using PHP is it can’t parse JavaScript so ajax based scraping can’t be possible using PHP.

Web Scraping Using C#

There are many library available in .Net for HTML parsing and data scraping. I have used Web Browser control and HTML Agility Pack for data extraction in .Net using C#

I have didn’t done web scraping in Java, PERL and Python. I had learned web scraping in node.js using Casper.JS and Phantom.JS library. But I thought below tutorial will be helpful for some one who are Java and Python based.

Web Scraping Using Jsoup in Java

Scraping Stock Data Using Python

Develop Web Crawler Using PERL

Web Scraping Using Node.Js

If you find any other good web scraping video tutorial then you can share the link in comment so other readesr get benefit form that.

Source: http://webdata-scraping.com/web-scraping-video-tutorial-collection-programming-language/

Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Web Scraping Services - Extracting Business Data You Need

Would you like to have someone collect, extract, find or scrap contact details, stats, list, extract data, or information from websites, online stores, directories, and more?

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At Hi-Tech BPO Services we are helping global businesses build their own database, mailing list, generate leads, and get access to vast resources of unstructured data available on World Wide Web.

We scrape data from various sources such as websites, blogs, podcasts, and online directories; and convert them into structured formats such as excel, csv, access, text, My SQL using automated and manual scraping technologies. Through our web data scraping services, we crawl through websites and gather sales leads, competitor’s product details, new offers, pricing methodologies, and various other types of information from the web.

Our web scraping services scrape data such as name, email, phone number, address, country, state, city, product, and pricing details among others.

Areas of Expertise in Web Scraping:

•    Contact Details
•    Statistics data from websites
•    Classifieds
•    Real estate portals
•    Social networking sites
•    Government portals
•    Entertainment sites
•    Auction portals
•    Business directories
•    Job portals
•    Email ids and Profiles
•    URLs in an excel spreadsheet
•    Market place portals
•    Search engine and SEO
•    Accessories portals
•    News portals
•    Online shopping portals
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•    Lead generation

Industries we Serve:

Our web scraping services are suitable for industries including real estate, information technology, university, hospital, medicine, property, restaurant, hotels, banking, finance, insurance, media/entertainment, automobiles, marketing, human resources, manufacturing, healthcare, academics, travel, telecommunication and many more.

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•    Highly cost-effective pricing strategies
•    Presence of satisfied clients worldwide
•    Using latest and effectual web scraping technologies
•    Ensures timely delivery
•    Round the clock customer support and technical assistance

Get Quick Cost and Time Estimate

Source: http://www.hitechbposervices.com/web-scraping.php

Monday, 25 May 2015

Which language is the most flexible for scraping websites?

3 down vote favorite

I'm new to programming. I know a little python and a little objective c, and I've been going through tutorials for each. Then it occurred to me, I need to know which language is more flexible (python, obj c, something else) for screen scraping a website for content.

What do I mean by "flexible"?

Well, ideally, I need something that will be easy to refactor and tweak for similar projects. I'm trying to avoid doing a lot of re-writing (well, re-coding) if I wanted to switch some of the variables in the program (i.e., the website to be scraped, the content to fetch, etc).

Anyways, if you could please give me your opinion, that would be great. Oh, and if you know any existing frameworks for the language you recommend, please share. (I know a little about Selenium and BeautifulSoup for python already).

4 Answers

I recently wrote a relatively complex web scraper to harvest a TON of data. It had to do some relatively complex parsing, I needed it to stuff it into a database, etc. I'm C# programmer now and formerly a Perl guy.

I wrote my original scraper using Python. I started on a Thursday and by Sunday morning I was harvesting over about a million scores from a show horse site. I used Python and SQLlite because they were fast.

HOWEVER, as I started putting together programs to regularly keep the data updated and to populate the SQL Server that would backend my MVC3 application, I kept hitting snags and gaps in my Python knowledge.

In the end, I completely rewrote the scraper/parser in C# using the HtmlAgilityPack and it works better than before (and just about as fast).

Because I KNEW THE LANGUAGE and the environment so much better I was able to add better database support, better logging, better error handling, etc. etc.

So... short answer.. Python was the fastest to market with a "good enough for now" solution, but the language I know best (C#) was the best long-term solution.

EDIT: I used BeautifulSoup for my original crawler written in Python.

5 down vote

The most flexible is the one that you're most familiar with.

Personally, I use Python for almost all of my utilities. For scraping, I find that its functionality specific to parsing and string manipulation requires little code, is fast and there are a ton of examples out there (strong community). Chances are that someone's already written whatever you're trying to do already, or there's at least something along the same lines that needs very little refactoring.

1 down vote

I think its safe to say that Python is a better place to start than Objective C. Honestly, just about any language meets the "flexible" requirement. All you need is well thought out configuration parameters. Also, a dynamic language like Python can go a long way in increasing flexibility, provided that you account for runtime type errors.

1 down vote

I recently wrote a very simple web-scraper; I chose Common Lisp as I'm learning the language.

On the basis of my experience - both of the language and the availability of help from experienced Lispers - I recommend investigating Common Lisp for your purpose.

There are excellent XML-parsing libraries available for CL, as well as libraries for parsing invalid HTML, which you'll need unless the sites you're parsing consist solely of valid XHTML.

Also, Common Lisp is a good language in which to implement DSLs; a DSL for web-scraping may be a solution to your requirement for flexibility & re-use.

Source: http://programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/74998/which-language-is-the-most-flexible-for-scraping-websites/75006#75006


Friday, 22 May 2015

Scraping Data: Site-specific Extractors vs. Generic Extractors

Scraping is becoming a rather mundane job with every other organization getting its feet wet with it for their own data gathering needs. There have been enough number of crawlers built – some open-sourced and others internal to organizations for in-house utilities. Although crawling might seem like a simple technique at the onset, doing this at a large-scale is the real deal. You need to have a distributed stack set up to take care of handling huge volumes of data, to provide data in a low-latency model and also to deal with fail-overs. This still is achievable after crossing the initial tech barrier and via continuous optimizations. (P.S. Not under-estimating this part because it still needs a team of Engineers monitoring the stats and scratching their heads at times).

Social Media Scraping

Focused crawls on a predefined list of sites

However, you bump into a completely new land if your goal is to generate clean and usable data sets from these crawls i.e. “extract” data in a format that your DB can process and aid in generating insights. There are 2 ways of tackling this:

a. site-specific extractors which give desired results

b. generic extractors that result in few surprises

Assuming you still do focused crawls on a predefined list of sites, let’s go over specific scenarios when you have to pick between the two-

1. Mass-scale crawls; high-level meta data – Use generic extractors when you have a large-scale crawling requirement on a continuous basis. Large-scale would mean having to crawl sites in the range of hundreds of thousands. Since the web is a jungle and no two sites share the same template, it would be impossible to write an extractor for each. However, you have to settle in with just the document-level information from such crawls like the URL, meta keywords, blog or news titles, author, date and article content which is still enough information to be happy with if your requirement is analyzing sentiment of the data.

cb1c0_one-size

A generic extractor case

Generic extractors don’t yield accurate results and often mess up the datasets deeming it unusable. Reason being

programatically distinguishing relevant data from irrelevant datasets is a challenge. For example, how would the extractor know to skip pages that have a list of blogs and only extract the ones with the complete article. Or delineating article content from the title on a blog page is not easy either.

To summarize, below is what to expect of a generic extractor.

Pros-

•    minimal manual intervention
•    low on effort and time
•    can work on any scale

Cons-

•    Data quality compromised
•    inaccurate and incomplete datasets
•    lesser details suited only for high-level analyses
•    Suited for gathering- blogs, forums, news
•    Uses- Sentiment Analysis, Brand Monitoring, Competitor Analysis, Social Media Monitoring.

2. Low/Mid scale crawls; detailed datasets – If precise extraction is the mandate, there’s no going away from site-specific extractors. But realistically this is do-able only if your scope of work is limited i.e. few hundred sites or less. Using site-specific extractors, you could extract as many number of fields from any nook or corner of the web pages. Most of the times, most pages on a website share similar templates. If not, they can still be accommodated for using site-specific extractors.

cutlery

Designing extractor for each website

Pros-

•    High data quality
•    Better data coverage on the site

Cons-

High on effort and time

Site structures keep changing from time to time and maintaining these requires a lot of monitoring and manual intervention

Only for limited scale

Suited for gathering – any data from any domain on any site be it product specifications and price details, reviews, blogs, forums, directories, ticket inventories, etc.

Uses- Data Analytics for E-commerce, Business Intelligence, Market Research, Sentiment Analysis

Conclusion

Quite obviously you need both such extractors handy to take care of various use cases. The only way generic extractors can work for detailed datasets is if everyone employs standard data formats on the web (Read our post on standard data formats here). However, given the internet penetration to the masses and the variety of things folks like to do on the web, this is being overly futuristic.

So while site-specific extractors are going to be around for quite some time, the challenge now is to tweak the generic ones to work better. At PromptCloud, we have added ML components to make them smarter and they have been working well for us so far.

What have your challenges been? Do drop in your comments.

Source: https://www.promptcloud.com/blog/scraping-data-site-specific-extractors-vs-generic-extractors/

Tuesday, 19 May 2015

The Features of the "Holographic Meridian Scraping Therapy"

1. Systematic nature: Brief introduction to the knowledge of viscera, meridians and points in traditional Chinese medicine, theory of holographic diagnosis and treatment; preliminary discussion of the treatment and health care mechanism of scraping therapy; systemat­ic introduction to the concrete methods of the holographic meridian scraping therapy; enumerating a host of therapeutic methods of scraping for disorders in both Chinese and Western medicine to em­body a combination of disease differentiation and syndrome differen­tiation; and summarizing the health care scraping methods. It is a practical handbook of gua sha.

2. Scientific: Applying the theories of Chinese and Western medicine to explain the health care and treatment mechanism and clinical applications of scraping therapy; introducing in detail the practical manipulations, items for attention, and indications and contraindications of the scraping therapy. Here are introduced repre­sentative diseases in different clinical departments, for which scrap­ing therapy has a better curative effect and the therapeutic methods of scraping for these diseases. Stress is placed on disease differentia­tion in Western medicine and syndrome differentiation in Chinese medicine, which should be combined in practical application.

Although there are more than 140,000 kinds of disease known to modem medicine, all diseases are related to dysfunction of the 14 meridians and internal organs, according to traditional Chinese med­icine. The object of scraping therapy is to correct the disharmony in the meridians and internal organs to recover the normal bodily func­tions. Thus, the scraping of a set of meridian points can be used to treat many diseases. In the section on clinical application only about 100 kinds of common diseases are discussed, although the actual number is much more than that. For easy reference the "Index of Diseases and Symptoms" is appended at the back of the book.

3. Practical: Using simple language and plenty of pictures and diagrams to guarantee that readers can easily leam, memorize and apply the principles of scraping therapy. As long as they master the methods explained in Chapter Three, readers without any medical knowledge can apply scraping therapy to themselves or others, with reference to the pictures in Chapters Four and Five. Besides scraping therapy, herbal treatment for each disease or syndrome is explained and may be used in combination with the scraping techniques.

Referring to the Holographic Meridian Hand Diagnosis and pic­tures at the back of the book will enhance accuracy of diagnosis and increase the effectiveness of scraping therapy.

Since the first publication and distribution of the Chinese edition of the book in July 1995, it has been welcomed by both medical specialists and lay people. In March 1996 this book was republished and adopted as a textbook by the School for Advanced Studies of Traditional Chinese Medicine affiliated to the Institute of the Acu­puncture and Moxibustion of the China Academy of Traditional Chi­nese Medicine.

In order to bring this health care method to more and more peo­ple and to make traditional Chinese medicine better appreciated They have modified and replenished this book in the spirit of constant im­provement. They hope that they may make a contribution to the health care of mankind with this natural therapy which has no side-effects and causes no pollution.

They hope that the Holographic Meridian Scraping Therapy can help the health and happiness of more and more families in the world.

Source: http://ezinearticles.com/?The-Features-of-the-Holographic-Meridian-Scraping-Therapy&id=5005031

Sunday, 17 May 2015

Dapper: The Scraper for the Common Man

Sometimes, especially with Web 2.0 companies, jargon can get a little bit out of hand. When someone says that a service allows you to "build an API for any website", it can be a bit difficult to understand what that really means.

However, put simply, Dapper is a scraper. Nothing more. It allows you to scrape content from a Web page and convert it into an XML document that can be easily used at another location. Though you won't find the words "scrape" or "scraper" anywhere on its site, that is exactly what it does.

What separates Dapper from other scrapers, both legitimate and illegitimate, is that it is both free and easy to use. In short, it makes the process of setting up the scraper simple enough for your every day Internet user. While one has never needed to be a geek to scrape RSS feeds, now the technologically impaired can scrape content from any site, even those that don't publish RSS feeds.

Though the TechCrunch profile of the service says that Dapper "aims to offer some legitimate, valuable services and set up a means to respect copyright" others are expressing concern about the potential for copyright violations, especially by spam bloggers.

Either way though, both the cause for concern and the potential dangers are very, very real.

What is Dapper

When a user goes to create a new "Dapp", he or she first needs to provide a series of links. These links must be on the same domain and in similar formats (IE: Google searches for different terms or different blog posts on a single site) for the service to work. Once the links have been defined, the user is then taken to a GUI where they pick out fields.

In a simple example where the user would create their own RSS feed for a blog, the post title might be one field, perhaps called "post title" and the body would be a second, perhaps called "post body". Dapper, much like the service social bookmarking Clipmarks, is able able to intelligently select blocks of text on a Web page, making it easy to ensure that the entire post body is selected and that extraneous information is omitted.

Once the fields have been selected, the user can then either create groups based upon those fields or simply save the dapp for future use. Once the Dapp has been saved, they can then use it to create both raw XML data, an RSS feed, a Google Gadget or any number of other output files that can be easily used in other services.

If you are interested in viewing a demo of Dapper, you can do so at this link.

There is little doubt that Dapper is an impressive service. It has taken the black art of scraping and made it into a simple, easy-to-use application that just about anyone can pick up. Though it might take a few tries to create a working Dapp, and certainly spending some time reading up on the service is required, most will find it easy to use, especially when compared to the alternatives.

However, it's this ease of use that has so many worried. Though scrapers have been around for many years, they have been either difficult to use or expensive. Dapper's power, when combined with its price tag and sheer ease of use, has many wondered that it might be ushering not a new age for the Web, but a new age for scrapers seeking to abuse other's hard work.

Cause for Concern

While being easy to use or free is not necessarily a problem in and of itself, in the rush to enable users to make an API for any site, they forget that many sites don't have one or restrict access to their APIs for very good reasons. RSS scraping is perhaps the biggest copyright issue bloggers face. It enables a plagiarist or spammer to not only steal all of the content on the blog right then, but also all of the content that will be posted in the future. This is a huge concern for many bloggers, especially those concerned about performing well in the search engines.

This has prompted many blogs to either disable their RSS feeds, truncate them or move them to a feed monitoring service such as Feedburner. However, if users can simply create their own RSS feeds with ease, these protections are circumvented and Webmasters lose control over their content.

Even with potential copyright abuse issues aside, Dapper creates potential problems for Webmasters. It bypasses the usual metrics that site owners have. A user who reads a site, or large portions of it, through a Dapp will not be counted in either the feed statistics or, depending on how Dapper is set up, even in the site's logs. All the while, the site is spending precious resources to feed the Dapp, taking money out of the Webmaster's pocket.

This combination of greater expense, less traffic and less accurate metrics can be dangerous to Webmasters who are working to get accurate traffic counts, visitor feedback or revenue.

Worse still, Dapp users also bypass any ads or other monetization tools that might be included in the site or the original RSS feed. This has a direct impact on sites trying to either turn a profit or, like this one, recoup some of the costs of hosting.

Despite this, it's the copyright concerns that reign supreme. Though screen scraping is not necessarily an evil technology, it is the sinister uses that have gotten the most attention and, sadly, seem to be the most common, especially in regards to blogs.

Even if the makers of Dapper is aiming to add copyright protection at a later date, the service is fully functional today and, though the FAQ states that they will "comply with any verified request by the lawful owner of the content to cease using his content," there is no opt-out procedure, no DMCA information on the United States Copyright Office Web site, no information on how to prevent Dapper from accessing your site and nothing but a contact page to get in touch with the makers of the service.

(Note: An email sent to the makers of Dapper on the 22nd has, as of yet, gone unanswered)

In addition to creating a potential copyright nightmare for Webmasters the site seems to be setting itself up for a lawsuit. In addition to not being DMCA Safe Harbor compliant (PDF), thus opening it up to copyright infringement lawsuits directly, the service seems to be vulnerable to a lawsuit under the MGM v. Grokster case, which found that service providers can be sued for infringement conducted by its users if they fail an "inducement" test. Sadly for Dapper, simply saying that it is the user's responsibility is not adequate to pass such a test, as Grokster found out. The failure to offer filtering technology and encouragement to create API's for "any" site are both likely strikes against Dapper in that regard.

To make matters more grim, copyright is not the only issue scrapers have to worry about, as one pair of lawyers put it, there are at least four different different legal theories that make scraping illegal including the computer fraud and abuse act, trespass against chattels and breach of contract. All in all, copyright is practically the least of Dapper's problems.

When it's all said and done, there is a lot of room for concern, not just on the part of Webmasters that might be affected by Dapper or its users, but also its makers. These intellectual property and other legal issues could easily sink the entire project.

Conclusions

It is obvious that a lot of time and effort went into creating Dapper. It's a very powerful, easy to use service that opens up interesting possibilities. I would hate to see the service used for ill and I would hate even worse to see all of the hard work that went into it lost because of intellectual property issues.

However, in its current incarnation, it seems likely that Dapper is going to encounter significant resistance on the IP front. There is little, if any protection or regard for intellectual property under the current system and, once bloggers find out that their content is being syndicated without their permission by the service, many are likely to start raising a fuss.

Even though Dapper has gotten rave reviews in the Web 2.0 community, it seems likely that traditional bloggers and other Web site owners will have serious objections to it. Those people, sadly, most likely have never heard of Dapper at this point.

With that being said, it is a service everyone needs to make note of. The one thing that is for certain is that it will be in the news again. The only question is what light will it be under.

Source: https://www.plagiarismtoday.com/2006/08/24/dapper-the-scraper-for-the-common-man/

Tuesday, 5 May 2015

Web Scraping Services Are Important Tools For Knowledge

Data extraction and web scraping techniques are important tools to find relevant data and information for personal or business use. Many companies, self-employed to copy and paste data from web pages. This process is very reliable, but very expensive as it is a waste of time and effort to get results. This is because the data collected and spent less resources and time required to collect these data are compared.

At present, several mining companies and their websites effective web scraping technique specifically for the thousands of pages of information developed culture can be traced. The information from a CSV file, database, XML file, or any other source with the required format is alameda. understanding of correlations and patterns in the data, so that policies can be designed to assist decision making. The information can also be stored for future reference.

The following are some common examples of data extraction process:

In order to rule through a government portal, citizens who are reliable for a given survey name removed.

Competitive pricing and data products include scraping websites

To access the web site or web design Stock download the videos and photos of scratching

Automatic Data Collection

It regularly collects data on a regular basis. Automated data collection techniques are very important because they find the company’s customer trends and market trends to help. By determining market trends, it is possible to understand customer behavior and predict the likelihood of the data will change.

The following are some examples of automated data collection:

Monitoring of special hourly rates for stocks

collects daily mortgage rates from various financial institutions

on a regular basis is necessary to check the weather

By using web scraping services, you can extract all data related to your business. Then analyzed the data to a spreadsheet or database can be downloaded and compared. Storing data in a database or in a required format and interpretation of the correlations to understand and makes it easier to identify hidden patterns.

Data extraction services, it is possible pricing, email, databases, profile data, and consistently to competitors for information about the data. Different techniques and processes designed to collect and analyze data, and has developed over time. Web Scraping for business processes that have beaten the market recently is one. It is a process from various sources such as websites and databases with large amounts of data provides.

Some of the most common methods used to scrape web crawling, text, fun, DOM analysis and include matching expression. After the process is only analyzers, HTML pages or meaning can be achieved through annotations. There are many different ways of scaling data, but more importantly is working toward the same goal. The main purpose of using web scraping service to retrieve and compile data in databases and web sites. In the business world is to remain relevant to the business process.

The central question about the relevance of web scraping contact. The process is relevant to the business world? The answer is yes. The fact that it is used by large companies in the world and many awards speaks derivatives.

Source: http://www.selfgrowth.com/articles/web-scraping-services-are-important-tools-for-knowledge

Wednesday, 29 April 2015

Customized Web Data Extraction Solutions for Business

As you begin leading your business on the path to success, competitive analysis forms a major part of your homework. You have already mobilized your efforts in finding the appropriate website data scrapping tool that will help you to collect relevant data from competitive websites and shape them up into useable information. There is however a need to look for a customized approach in your search for Data Extraction tools in order to leverage its benefits in the best possible way.

Off-the-shelf Tools Impede Data Extraction

 In the current scenario, Internet Technologies are evolving in abundance. Every organization leverages this development and builds their websites using a different programming language and technology. Off-the-shelf Website Data extraction tools are unable to interpret this difference. They fail to understand the data elements that need to be captured and end up in gathering data without any change in the software source codes.

As a result of this incapability in their technology, off-the-shelf solutions often deliver unclean, incomplete and also inaccurate data. Developers need to contribute a humungous effort in cleaning up and structuring the data to make it useable. However, despite the time-consuming activity, data seldom metamorphoses into the desired information. Also the personnel dealing with the clean-up process needs to have sufficient technical expertise in order to participate in the activities. The endeavor however results in an impediment to the whole process of data extraction leaving you thirsting for the required information to augment business growth.

Understanding how Web Extraction tools work

Web Scrapping tools are designed to extract data from the web automatically. They are usually small pieces of code written using programming languages such as Python, Ruby or PHP depending upon the expertise of the community building it. There are however several single-click models available which tends to make life easier for non-technical personnel.

The biggest challenge faced by a successful web extractor tool is to know how to tackle the right page and the right elements on that page in order to extract the desired information. Consequently, a web extractor needs to be designed to understand the anatomy of a web page in order to accomplish its task successfully. It should be designed to interpret the meaning of HTML elements like , table rows () within those tables, and table data (<td>) cells within those rows in order to extract the exact data. It will also be interfacing with the

element which are blocks of text and know how to extract the desired information from it.

Customized Solutions for your business

 Customized Solutions are provided by most Data Scraping experts. These software's help to minimize the cumbersome effort of writing elaborate codes to successfully accomplish the feat of data extraction. They are designed to seamlessly search competitive websites,identify relevant data elements, and extract appropriate data that will be useful for your business. Owing to their focused approach, these tools provide clean and accurate data thereby eliminating the need to waste valuable time and effort in any clean-up effort.

Most customized data extraction tools are also capable of delivering the extracted data in customized formats like XML or CSV. It also stores data in local databases like Microsoft Access, MySQL, or Microsoft SQL.

Customized Data scraping solutions therefore help you take accurate and informed decisions in order to define effective business strategies.
Source: http://scraping-solutions.blogspot.in/2014_07_01_archive.html 

Monday, 27 April 2015

Benefits of Scraping Data from Real Estate Website

With so much of growth in the recent times in real estate industry, it is likely that companies would want to create something different or use another method, so as to get desired benefits. Thus, it is best to go with the technological advancements and create real estate websites to get an edge over others in the industry. And to get all the information regarding website content, one can opt for real estate data scraping methods.

About real estate website scraping

Internet has become an important part of our daily lives and in industry marketing procedures too. With the use of website scraping one can easily scrape real estate listing from various websites. One just needs the help of experts and with proper software and tools; they can easily collect all the relevant real estate data from the required real estate websites and make a structured file containing the information. With internet becoming a valid platform for information and data submitted by numerous sources from around the globe, it is necessary to gather them all in one place for companies. In this way, the company can know what it lacks and work upon their strategies so as to gain profit and get to the top of the business world by taking one step at a time.

Uses of real estate website scraping

With proper use of website scraping one can collect and scrape the real estate listings which can help the company in the real estate market area. One can draw the attention of potential customers by designing the company strategies in such a way as contemplating the changing trends in the real estate global arena. All this is done with the help of the data collected from various real estate websites. With the help of proper website, one can collect the data and these get updated whenever new information gets into the web portal. In this way the company is kept updated about the various changes happening around the global market and thus, ensure in making plans regarding the company. This way one can plan ahead and take steps that can lead to the company gaining profits in future.

Thus, with the help of proper real estate website scraping one can be sure of getting all the information regarding real estate market. This way one can work upon making the company move as per the market trends and get a stronghold in real estate business.

Source: https://3idatascraping.wordpress.com/2013/09/25/benefit-of-scraping-data-from-real-estate-website/

Tuesday, 21 April 2015

How to Properly Scrape Windows During The Cleaning Process

Removing ordinary dirt such as dust, fingerprints, and oil from windows seem simple enough. However, sometimes, you may find stubborn caked-on dirt or debris on your windows that cannot be removed by standard window cleaning techniques such as scrubbing or using a squeegee. The best way to remove caked-on dirt on your windows is to scrape it off. Nonetheless, you have to be extra careful when you are scraping your windows, because they can be easily scratched and damaged. Here are a number of rules that you need to follow when you are scraping windows.

Rule No. 1: It is recommended that you use a professional window scraper to remove caked-on dirt and debris from your windows. This type of scraper is specially made for use on glass, and it comes with certain features that can prevent scratching and other kinds of damage.

Rule No. 2: It is important to inspect your window scraper before using it. Take a look at the blade of the scraper and make sure that it is not rusted. Also, it must not be bent or chipped off at the corners. If you are not certain whether the blade is in a good enough condition, you should just play it safe by using a new blade.

Rule No. 3: When you are working with a window scraper, always use forward plow-like scraping motions. Scrape forward and lift the scraper off the glass, and then scrape forward again. Try not to slide the scraper backwards, because you may trap debris under the blade when you do so. Consequently, the scraper may scratch the glass.

Rule No. 4: Be extra cautious when you are using a window scraper on tempered glass. Tempered glass may have raised imperfections, which make it more vulnerable to scratches. To find out if the window that you are scraping is made of tempered glass, you have to look for a label in one of its corners.

Window Scraping Procedures

Before you start scraping, you have to wet your window with soapy water first. Then, find out how the window scraper works by testing it in a corner. Scrape on the same spot three or four times in forward motion. If you find that the scraper is moving smoothly and not scratching the glass, you can continue to work on the rest of the window. On the other hand, if you feel as if the scraper is sliding on sandpaper, you have to stop scraping. This indicates that the glass may be flawed and have raised imperfections, and scraping will result in scratches.

After you have ascertained that it is safe to scrape your window, start working along the edges. It is best that you start scraping from the middle of an edge, moving towards the corners. Work in a one or two inch pattern, until all the edges of the glass are properly scraped. After that, scrape the rest of the window in a straight pattern of four or five inches, working from top to bottom. If you find that the window is beginning to dry while you are working, wet it with soapy water again.

Source: http://ezinearticles.com/?How-to-Properly-Scrape-Windows-During-The-Cleaning-Process&id=6592930

Thursday, 9 April 2015

How to Generate Sales Leads Using Web Scraping Services

The first stage of any selling process is what is popularly known as “lead generation”. This phase is what most businesses place at the apex of their sales concerns. It is a driving force that governs decision-making at its highest levels, and influences business strategy and planning. If you are about to embark on an outbound sales campaign and are in the process of looking for leads, you would acknowledge the fact that lead generation process is of extreme importance for any business.

Different lead generation techniques have been used over and over again by companies around the world to satiate this growing business need. Newer, more innovative methods have also emerged to help marketers in this process. One such method of lead generation that is fast catching on, and is poised to play a big role for businesses in the coming years, is web scraping. With web scraping, you can easily get access to multiple relevant and highly customized leads – a perfect starting point for any marketing, promotional or sales campaign.

The prominence of Web Scraping in overall marketing strategy

At present, levels of competition have risen sky high for most businesses. For success, lead generation and gaining insight about customer behavior and preferences is an essential business requirement. Web scraping is the process of scraping or mining the internet for information. Different tools and techniques can be used to harvest information from multiple internet sources based on relevance, and the structured and organized in a way that makes sense to your business. Companies that provide web scraping services essentially use web scrapers to generate a targeted lead database that your company can then integrate into its marketing and sales strategies and plans.

The actual process of web scraping involves creating scraping scripts or algorithms which crawl the web for information based on certain preset parameters and options. The scraping process can be customized and tuned towards finding the kind of data that your business needs. The script can extract data from websites automatically, collate and put together a meaningful collection of leads for business development.

Lead Generation Basics

At a very high level, any person who has the resources and the intent to purchase your product or service qualifies as a lead. In the present scenario, you need to go far deeper than that. Marketers need to observe behavior patterns and purchasing trends to ensure that a particular person qualifies as a lead. If you have a group of people you are targeting, you need to decide who the viable leads will be, acquire their contact information and store it in a database for further action.

List buying used to be a popular way to get leads, but their efficacy has dwindled over time. Web scraping is the fast coming up as a feasible lead generation technique, allowing you to find highly focused and targeted leads in short amounts of time. All you need is a service provider that would carry out the data mining necessary for lead generation, and you end up with a list of actionable leads that you can try selling to.

How Web Scraping makes a substantial difference

With web scraping, you can extract valuable predictive information from websites. Web scraping facilitates high quality data collection and allows you to structure marketing and sales campaigns better. To drive sales and maximize revenue, you need strong, viable leads. To facilitate this, you need critical data which encompasses customer behavior, contact details, buying patterns and trends, willingness and ability to spend resources, and a myriad of other aspects critical to ascertain the potential of an entity as a rewarding lead. Data mining through web scraping can be a great way to get to these factors and identifying the leads that would make a difference for your business.

web-scraping-service

Crawling through many different web locales using different techniques, web scraping services pick up a wealth of information. This highly relevant and specialized information instantly provides your business with actionable leads. Furthermore, this exercise allows you to fine-tune your data management processes, make more accurate and reliable predictions and projections, arrive at more effective, strategic and marketing decisions and customize your workflow and business development to better suit the current market.

The Process and the Tools

Lead generation, being one of the most important processes for any business, can prove to be an expensive proposition if not handled strategically. Companies spend large amounts of their resources acquiring viable leads they can sell to. With web scraping, you can dramatically cut down the costs involved in lead generation and take your business forward with speed and efficiency. Here are some of the time-tested web scraping tools which can come in handy for lead generation –

•    Website download software – Used to copy entire websites to local storage. All website pages are downloaded and the hierarchy of navigation and internal links preserve. The stored pages can then be viewed and scoured for information at any later time.     Web scraper – Tools that crawl through bulk information on the internet, extracting specific, relevant data using a set of pre-defined parameters.

•    Data grabber – Sifts through websites and databases fast and extracts all the information, which can be sorted and classified later.

•    Text extractor – Can be used to scrape multiple websites or locations for acquiring text content from websites and web documents. It can mine data from a variety of text file formats and platforms.

With these tools, web scraping services scrape websites for lead generation and provide your business with a set of strong, actionable leads that can make a difference.

Covering all Bases

The strength of web scraping and web crawling lies in the fact that it covers all the necessary bases when it comes to lead generation. Data is harvested, structured, categorized and organized in such a way that businesses can easily use the data provided for their sales leads. As discussed earlier, cold and detached lists no longer provide you with enough actionable leads. You need to look at various factors and consider them during your lead generation efforts –

•    Contact details of the prospect

•    Purchasing power and purchasing history of the prospect

•    Past purchasing trends, willingness to purchase and history of buying preferences of the prospect

•    Social markers that are indicative of behavioral patterns

•    Commercial and business markers that are indicative of behavioral patterns

•    Transactional details

•    Other factors including age, gender, demography, social circles, language and interests

All these factors need to be taken into account and considered in detail if you have to ensure whether a lead is viable and actionable, or not. With web scraping you can get enough data about every single prospect, connect all the data collected with the help of onboarding, and ascertain with conviction whether a particular prospect will be viable for your business.

Let us take a look at how web scraping addresses these different factors –

1. Scraping website’s

During the scraping process, all websites where a particular prospect has some participation are crawled for data. Seemingly disjointed data can be made into a sensible unit by the use of onboarding- linking user activities with their online entities with the help of user IDs. Documents can be scanned for participation. E-commerce portals can be scanned to find comments and ratings a prospect might have delivered to certain products. Service providers’ websites can be scraped to find if the prospect has given a testimonial to any particular service. All these details can then be accumulated into a meaningful data collection that is indicative of the purchasing power and intent of the prospect, along with important data about buying preferences and tastes.

2. Social scraping

According to a study, most internet users spend upwards of two hours every day on social networks. Therefore, scraping social networks is a great way to explore prospects in detail. Initially, you can get important identification markers like names, addresses, contact numbers and email addresses. Further, social networks can also supply information about age, gender, demography and language choices. From this basic starting point, further details can be added by scraping social activity over long periods of time and looking for activities which indicate purchasing preferences, trends and interests. This exercise provides highly relevant and targeted information about prospects can be constructively used while designing sales campaigns.

Check out How to use Twitter data for your business

3. Transaction scraping

Through the scraping of transactions, you get a clear idea about the purchasing power of prospects. If you are looking for certain income groups or leads that invest in certain market sectors or during certain specific periods of time, transaction scraping is the best way to harvest meaningful information. This also helps you with competition analysis and provides you with pointers to fine-tune your marketing and sales strategies.

get-results-from-your-lead-generation-campaign

Using these varied lead generation techniques and finding the right balance and combination is key to securing the right leads for your business. Overall, signing up for web scraping services can be a make or break factor for your business going forward. With a steady supply of valuable leads, you can supercharge your sales, maximize returns and craft the perfect marketing maneuvers to take your business to an altogether new dimension.

Source: https://www.promptcloud.com/blog/how-to-generate-sales-leads-using-web-scraping-services/

Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Thoughts on scraping SERPs and APIs

Google says that scraping keyword rankings is against their policy from what I've read. Bummer. We comprise a lot of reports and manual finding and entry was a pain. Enter Moz! We still manually check and compare, but it's nice having that tool. I'm confused now though about practices and getting SERPs in an automated way. Here are my questions

    Is it against policy to get SERPs from an automated method? If that is the case, isn't Moz breaking this policy with it's awesome keyword tracker?

    If it's not, and we wanted to grab that kind of data, how would we do it? Right now, Moz's API doesn't offer this data. I thought Raven Tools at one point offered this, but they don't now from what I've read. Are there any APIs out there that we can grab this data and do what we want with it? (let's day build our own dashboard)?

Thanks for any clarification and input!

Source: http://moz.com/community/q/thoughts-on-scraping-serps-and-apis

Monday, 30 March 2015

Why Data mining is still a powerful tool to help companies

The ability of Data mining technologies to sift through volumes of data and arrive at predictive information to empower businesses can in no way be undermined. The advent of new techniques and technologies has made the practice more affordable by organizations both big and small. The new technologies have not only helped in reducing the overhead costs of running the data mining exercise, but also simplified the practice making it more accessible for smaller and mid-size companies employ it in their organizational processes. In the current era, information is power and Web Data Mining Technologies are stretching the limits of their capabilities to help organizations acquire that power.

Data Mining Ensures Better Business Decisions


Organizations usually have access to large databases which store millions of historical data record. Traditional practices of hands-on analysis of patterns and trends of all available data proved to be too cumbersome to be pursued and were soon replaced with shorter and more selective data sets. This caused hidden patterns to remain hidden thus blocking off possibilities for organizations to grow and evolve. However, the advent of Data Mining as a technology that automates the identification of complex patterns in those databases changed all that. Organizations, now, are engaging in a thorough analysis of massive data sets and are moving ahead to extracting meanings and patterns from them. The analysis helps to unlock the hidden patterns and enables organizations to predict future market behavior and be geared with proactive and knowledge driven decisions for the benefit of their business.

Data Mining provides Fraud Detection Capabilities


 Loss in Revenue has definite adverse impacts on a company’s morale. It slackens productivity and slows down their growth. Fraud is one of the common malpractices that eat into the organization’s revenue earning capability. Data Mining helps to prevent this and ensures a steady rise in their revenue graph. Data mining models can be built to predict consumer behavior patterns which help in effectively detecting fraud.

Data Mining Evolves to be Business Focused


Traditional Data Mining technologies were focused more on algorithms and statistics on delivering results which, though good failed to address the business issues appropriately. The new age data mining technologies, however, have evolved to become business focused. They understand the needs that drive the business and utilize the strong statistical algorithms built into their system to explore, collect, analyze and summarize data that can be made to work for better health of the business.

Data Mining has become more Granular

As technology evolves, organizations leverage the benefits it generates. Integration of fundamental data mining functionalists into database engines is one such innovation that has helped organizations to thoroughly benefit from its effect. Mining data from within the database instead of Web Data Extraction the data and then analyzing it saves valuable time for the organization. Moreover, as organizations can now drill down into more granular levels of the data therefore there is a higher possibility of ensuring accuracy. Moreover, as data mining software now have a more direct access to the data sets within the database, there is a higher possibility of ensuring a smoother workflow and hence a better performance.

Conclusion


Data mining, though capable of helping organizations generate good things, however, needs to be used intelligently. It has to be strongly aligned with the organization’s goals and principles in order to ensure appropriate performance that would strengthen the organization adequately.

We are leading Webdatascraping.us company and enough capable to extract website information, review scraping, contact information scraping, business directory scraping, email list scraping etc.

Thursday, 26 March 2015

The Great Advantages of Data Extraction Software – Why a Company Needs it?

Data extraction is being a huge problem for large corporate companies and businesses, which needs to be handled technically and safely. There are many different approaches used for data extraction from web and various tools have designed to solve certain problems.

Moreover, algorithms and advanced techniques were also developed for data extraction. In this array, the Data Extraction Software is widely used to extract information from web as designed.

Data Extraction Software:

 This is a program specifically designed to collect and organize the information or data from the website or webpage and reformat them.

Uses of Data Extraction Software:


Data extraction software can be used at various levels including social web and enterprise levels.

Enterprise Level: Data extraction techniques at the enterprise level are used as the prime tool to perform analysis of the data in business process re-engineering, business system and in competitive intelligence system.

Social Web Level: This type of web data extraction techniques is widely used for gathering structured data in large amount that are continuously generated by Web.2.0, online social network users and social media. 

To specify other uses of Data Extraction software:

  •     It helps in assembling stats for the business plans
  •     It helps to gather data from public or government agencies
  •     It helps to collect data for legal needs

Does the Data Extraction Software make Your Job Simple?

The usage of data extraction software has been widely appreciated by many large corporate companies. In this array, here are a few points to favor the usage of the software;
  •     Data toolbar consists of web scraping tool to automate the process of web data extraction
  •     Point data fields from which the data need to be collected and the tool will do the rest
  •     There are no technical skills required to use data tool
  •     It is possible to extract a huge number of data records in just a few seconds
  • Benefits of Data Extraction Software:
  • This data extraction software benefits many computer users. Here follows a few remarkable benefits of the software;
  •     It can extract detailed data like description, name, price, image and more as defined from a website
  •     It is possible to create projects in the extractor and extract required information automatically from the site without the user’s interference
  •     The process saves huge effort and time
  •     It makes extracting data from several websites easy like online auctions, online stores, real estate portal, business directories, shopping portals and more
  •     It makes it possible to export extracted data to various formats like Microsoft Excel, HTML, SQL, XML, Microsoft Access, MySQL and more
  •     This will allow processing and analyzing data in any custom format
  • Who majorly Benefits from Data Extraction Software?
  • Any computer user benefit from this data extraction software, however, it is majorly benefiting users like;
  •     Business men to collect market figures, real estate data and product pricing data
  •     Book lovers to extract information about titles, authors, images, descriptions prices and more
  •     Collectors and hobbyists to extract auction and betting information
  •     Journalists to extract article and news from new websites
  •     Travelers to extract information about holiday places, vacations, prices, images and more
  •     Job seekers to extract information about jobs available, employers and more

Websitedatascraping.com is enough capable to web data scraping, website data scraping, web scraping services, website scraping services, data scraping services, product information scraping and yellowpages data scraping.

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Internet Data Mining - How Does it Help Businesses?

Internet has become an indispensable medium for people to conduct different types of businesses and transactions too. This has given rise to the employment of different internet data mining tools and strategies so that they could better their main purpose of existence on the internet platform and also increase their customer base manifold.

Internet data-mining encompasses various processes of collecting and summarizing different data from various websites or webpage contents or make use of different login procedures so that they could identify various patterns. With the help of internet data-mining it becomes extremely easy to spot a potential competitor, pep up the customer support service on the website and make it more customers oriented.

There are different types of internet data_mining techniques which include content, usage and structure mining. Content mining focuses more on the subject matter that is present on a website which includes the video, audio, images and text. Usage mining focuses on a process where the servers report the aspects accessed by users through the server access logs. This data helps in creating an effective and an efficient website structure. Structure mining focuses on the nature of connection of the websites. This is effective in finding out the similarities between various websites.

Also known as web data_mining, with the aid of the tools and the techniques, one can predict the potential growth in a selective market regarding a specific product. Data gathering has never been so easy and one could make use of a variety of tools to gather data and that too in simpler methods. With the help of the data mining tools, screen scraping, web harvesting and web crawling have become very easy and requisite data can be put readily into a usable style and format. Gathering data from anywhere in the web has become as simple as saying 1-2-3. Internet data-mining tools therefore are effective predictors of the future trends that the business might take.

If you are interested to know something more on Web Data Mining and other details, you are welcome to the Screen Scraping Technology site.

Source: http://ezinearticles.com/?Internet-Data-Mining---How-Does-it-Help-Businesses?&id=3860679

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

Why Online Coverage Matters

To track online coverage is not just a fad these days. It is one of the tools that everyone can use to maintain a good image; monitor responses from guests or clients; and sell your ideas, products or services. It is one of the innovations of the computer age that has really made online presence a very strategic place to gain success in business, research, and all other ventures that one can think about.

The benefits that tracking online brings can never be measured by money because it in itself is an investment that no one can steal from you. You control it and you make good things happen to you and your business beyond your expectations.

Maintain a Good Image

A good image is something everyone works hard to achieve which with just one simple error of judgment or destructive criticism may ruin it in just a split second. As with all the best efforts you put on yourself to look good and attractive, you should also exert time and energy to make your online presence appealing and pleasing to all viewers regardless of age, nationality, and preferences.

Maintaining online presence can be done by the owner him or herself if the company is easy enough to  single handy or you may need an expert to do it for you at a reasonable coast. If you do not know how to do it, you read a lot of instructional articles and blogs or you can research the providers who can do the job for you efficiently and effectively.

Source: http://www.loginworks.com/blogs/web-scraping-blogs/online-coverage-matters/

Sunday, 15 March 2015

The New Gold Rush: Exploring the Untapped ‘Data Mining’ Reserves of Top 3 Industries

In a bid to reach new moms bang on time, Target knows when you’ll get pregnant. Microsoft knows Return on Investment (ROI) of each of its employee. Pandora knows what’s your current music mood. Amazing, isn’t it?

Call it the stereotype of mathematician nerds or Holy Grail of predictive analysts of modern day, Data Mining is the new gold rush for many industries.

Today, companies are mining data to predict exact actions of their prospective customers. That means, when a huge chunk of customer data is seen through a series of sophisticated, formatted and collective data mining process, it can help create future-ready content of marketing and buying messages, diminishing scope of errors and maximizing customer loyalty.

 Also a progressive team of coders and statisticians help push the envelope as far as the marketing and business tactics are concerned by collecting data and mining practices that are empowering.

Mentioned below is a detailed low-down of three such industries (real estate, retail and automobile) where LoginWorks Software has employed the most talented predictive analysts and comprehensive behavioral marketing platforms in the industry. Let’s take a look.

Real Estate Industry Looks Past the Spray-And-Pray Marketing Tactic By Mining User Data.

A supremely competitive market that is to an extent unstructured too, the real estate industry needs to reap the advantageous benefits of data mining. And, we at LoginWorks Software understand this extremely well!

Our robust team of knowledge-driven analysts make sure that we predict future trends, process the old data and rank the areas using actionable predictive analytics techniques. By applying a long-term strategy to analyze the trend and to get hold of the influential factors that are invested in buying a property, our data warehouses excels in using classical techniques, such as Neural Network, C&R Tree, linear regression, Multilayer Perception Model and SPSS in order to uncover the hidden knowledge.

By using Big Data as the bedrock of our Predictive Marketing Platform, we help you zero-in on the best possible property available for your interest. Data from more than a dozen of reliable national and international resources to give you the most accurate and up-to-the minute data. Right from extracting a refined database of one’s neighborhood insights to classic knowledge discovery of meaningful l techniques, our statisticians have proven accuracy. We scientifically predict your data by:

•    Understanding powerful insights that lead to property-buying decisions.

•    Studying properties and ranking them city-wise, based on their predictability of getting sold in the future.

•    Measuring trends at micro level by making use of Home Price Index, Market Strength Indicator, Automated Valuation Model and Investment analytics.

Our marketing platform consists of the mentioned below automated features:

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Image source: http://www.smartzip.com/corp/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/marketing-automation1.png

Data Mining Techniques for Customer Relationship Management and Customer Retention in Retail Industry

Data mining to a retailer is what mining gold to a goldsmith would be! Priceless, to say the least. To understand the dynamics and suggestive patterns of customer habits, a retailer is always scouting for information to up his sales and generate future leads from existing and prospective consumers. Hence, sourcing your birth date information from your social media profiles to zooming upon your customer’s buying behaviour in different seasons.

For a retailer, data mining helps the customer information to transform a point of sale into a detailed understanding of (1) Customer Identification; (2) Customer Attraction; (3) Customer Retention; and (4) Customer Development. A retailer can score potential benefits by calculating Return on Investment (ROI) of its customers by:

•    Gaining customer loyalty and long-term association

•    Saving up on huge spend on non-targeted advertising and marketing costs

•    Accessing customer information, which leads to directly targeting the profitable customers

•    Extending product life cycle

•    Uncovering predictable buying patterns that leads to a decrease in spoilage, distribution costs and holding costs

Our specialised marketing team targets customers for retention by applying myriad levels of data mining techniques, in both technological and statistical perspective. We primarily make use of ‘basket’ analysis technique that unearths links between two distinct products and ‘visual’ mining techniques that helps in discovering the power of instant visual association and buying.

Role of Data Mining in Retail Sector

Image Source: http://www.coolavenues.com/sites/default/files/Data%20Mining%201.jpg

Image Source: http://www.coolavenues.com/sites/default/files/Data%20Mining%201.jpg

Spinning the Magic Wheel of Data Mining Algorithms in Automobile Industry of Today

Often called as the ‘industries of industries’. the automobile industry of today is robustly engrossed in constructing new plants, and extracting more production levels from existing plants. Like food manufacturing and drug companies, today, automakers are in an urgent need to build sophisticated data extraction processes to keep themselves all equipped for exuberantly expensive and reputation-damaging incidents. If a data analytics by Teradata Corp, a data analytics company, is to be believed then the “auto industry spends $45 billion to $50 billion a year on recalls and warranty claim”. A number potentially damaging for the automobile industry at-large, we reckon!

Hence, it becomes all the more imperative for an automobile company of repute to make use of enhanced methodology of data mining algorithms.

Our analysts would help you to spot insightful patterns, trends, rules, and relationships from scores and scores of information, which is otherwise next to impossible for the human eye to trace or process. Our avant-garde technicians understand that an automative manufacturing industry does not interact on one-to-one basis with the end consumers on a direct basis, hence we step into the picture and use our fully-integrated data mining feature to help you with the:

•    Supply chain procedure (pre-sales and post-sales services, inventory, orders, production plan).

•    Full A-Zee marketing facts and figures(dealers, business centers, social media handling, direct marketing tactics, etc).

•    Manufacturing detailing (car configurations/packages/options codes and description).

•    Customers’ inclination information (websites web-activities).

Impact of Big Data Analytics of Direct Vehicle Pricing

Image Source: http://www.slideshare.net/FrostandSullivan/impact-of-big-data-on-automotive-industry

Image Source: http://www.slideshare.net/FrostandSullivan/impact-of-big-data-on-automotive-industry

Bottom line

To wrap it all up, it is imperative to understand that the customer data is just as crucial for an actionable insights as your regular listings data. Behavioural data and predictive analysis is where the real deal lies, because at the end of the day it is all about targeting the right audience with the right context!

 Move forward in your industry by availing LOGNWORKS SOFTWARES’ comprehensive, integrated, strategic and sophisticated Data Mining Services.

Source: http://www.loginworks.com/blogs/web-scraping-blogs/can-identify-buying-preferences-customers-using-data-mining-techniques/