
waldo at vqronline
Apr 17, 2008, 12:11 PM
Post #8 of 8
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On Apr 17, 2008, at 2:38 PM, David E. Wheeler wrote: > On Apr 17, 2008, at 11:30, Waldo Jaquith wrote: >> There are a few reasons. The first is that it wouldn't make sense >> within the scope of our directory structure. We keep all of the >> content for all issues in /articles/year/season/slug/. It's simply >> illogical to present it as /articles/category/year/season/slug/ or >> as /category/year/season/slug/. (It implies a division of our >> content, site-wide, by the genre of the work. That's not a division >> that we make or care to make.) > > In that case, I personally wouldn't use /articles. I'd just put > everything in the root category, so you got /year/season/slug. / > articles/ is just redundant. The only reason I'm using /articles/ now is that our existing CMS requires *something* that stands between the articles hierarchy and the root. Because, yeah, /articles/ makes me cringe, too. :) That may be the one change that I make during this transition. >> The third is that the URLs would become entirely too long. And the >> fourth is that the additional information, while more descriptive, >> wouldn't add any substantially useful information for our readers. > > It's not for your readers, it's for the search engine (although I > personally get a lot out of descriptive URLs, but I'm a geek). What I should have said that it wouldn't add any substantially useful information *that would be worth the longer URLs*. (Thus conflating points 3 and 4...but it's so *nice* to have a whopping four points to make. :) I have to wonder how useful that genre data is to search engines. Surely they don't treat nonfiction and fiction separately. And I don't know that folks searching for "fiction," in general, are ever going to find our publication appearing prominently, no matter how awesome our Google-fu is. :) This is the kind of thing that Dublin Core is really meant for...though, thanks to spammers, site-defined metadata is basically useless. OTOH, providing more metadata to search engines (or Greasemonkey, or whatever) is *always* good. Hmm. >> Simon and Chris, thank you very much for your suggestions. In >> particular, Chris, it hadn't crossed my mind that keywords could be >> useful for this purpose, but it makes perfect sense. I'm not sure >> which of the two approaches that I'll take, but in importing all of >> my existing content, I believe I'll allow for each possibility. > > I think that key words are better for this, unless you're also using > them for something else (like keywords for your documents), in which > case I'd go with the secondary category solution (which I first did > for Macworld back in the day). That is a bit of a conundrum for me. Keywords are an awfully useful thing, for using internally, and I'd hate to give that up. OTOH, it seems like a fantastically useful thing, to just generate categories from keywords. Bricolage, like Perl, seems to have a real strength in providing multiple methods of accomplishing the same thing, so I'll figure something out. :) Best, Waldo --- Virginia Quarterly Review One West Range, Box 400223 University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA 22904-4223
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