Google AI Search 2026: What Businesses Need To Change Now
Google AI Search is becoming agent-first, interactive, and more personalized. Here is the technical playbook businesses need for SEO, AEO, ecommerce, content, and measurement.
Technical articles from Lunover on web engineering, architecture, performance, testing, and SEO implementation.
Google AI Search is becoming agent-first, interactive, and more personalized. Here is the technical playbook businesses need for SEO, AEO, ecommerce, content, and measurement.
A practical guide to the orchestration layer behind reliable AI agents, including tools, memory, permissions, verification, observability, and multi-step workflows.
UCP is an open standard that lets shoppers buy directly inside Google’s AI surfaces like AI Mode in Search and Gemini. Here’s what it is, what changed in 2026, and how merchants can prepare.
What EmDash CMS is, how it works on Cloudflare, and what to know about content types, data models, MCP automation, publishing, plugins, and SEO workflows.
Next.js 16.2 introduced a stable Adapter API and a shared test suite for deployment providers. Here’s what that means for teams shipping Next.js on Cloudflare, AWS, Netlify, and beyond.
A production-ready checklist for Next.js 16 SEO: metadata, canonicals, hreflang, sitemap hygiene, robots rules, schema, and release QA you can automate.
A practical framework for deciding when you need a CMS (and when you don’t), what to use instead, and why ‘building your own CMS’ is usually the wrong move.
In 2025, AI crawlers and answer engines reward the same fundamentals: readable HTML, clear structure, strong internal linking, and proof-of-work content. Here’s the playbook.
A technical teardown of what actually matters when building a support chat widget: retrieval failure modes, document-as-files navigation, caching, access control, and guardrails for reliable answers.
A scalable architecture pattern for agency delivery: content boundaries, reusable sections, deterministic routes, metadata helpers, and internal-link rules.
A practical testing strategy for teams shipping quickly: critical-path tests, route integrity checks, metadata assertions, and deploy gates that prevent regressions.