November 9, 2010: 4:16 am
I like my website url to be all words and short. |
October 7, 2010: 9:13 pm
Thanks for the informative posts. I really appreciated it. |
October 5, 2010: 6:28 am
Very informative post. Thanks for sharing this! |
October 5, 2010: 2:38 am
Good and informative post,it helped me as well as my friends, I really appreciate it. Thanks for sharing. Data in URL should not be significant. |
September 28, 2010: 12:32 am
Assuredly yours is the bestest site I have read... |
July 22, 2010: 1:47 am
First time i have visited this site.I have read this blog,i noted that there are mostly good points which increase the importance of the blog.Nice work.Keep it up to write more good information. |
July 2, 2010: 4:55 pm
I also agree. |
June 30, 2010: 4:46 am
A nice blog.i think that this session will take a good, hard look at everything cool. |
June 26, 2010: 8:14 am
good one. |
June 20, 2010: 11:36 am
Thanks for taking the time to discuss this, I feel strongly about it and love learning more on this topic. If possible, as you gain expertise, would you mind updating your blog with more information? It is extremely helpful for me. |
June 9, 2010: 12:23 pm
In my opinion, time is not some redundant information to be haphazardly buried at the bottom of a random page. Au contraire. A timeline is essential to provide an immediate context to a post. Your post lack such a context. Instead it provides 89 random characters to cope with. Nothing to relate to. Quite a loss. |
June 9, 2010: 12:21 pm
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June 3, 2010: 12:38 am
I have read this post.It's really awesome.I have noted some point which make this post excellent. I hope you will keep continue to write other informative and interesting post.Thank you. |
May 20, 2010: 12:41 pm
amazing stuff thanx |
April 18, 2010: 10:27 pm
I am very interested in this subject, I would like more information |
March 30, 2010: 12:08 am
This plug in provides an option to disable "nofollow" in the most efficient way possible without altering any WordPress code. |
March 25, 2010: 12:59 pm
It's easy to tell that this is top notch information on the subject. Please post more like this for our education. |
March 25, 2010: 12:58 pm
Thanks for the post. You have a nice take on the subject and I will be looking forward to more. I have bookmarked the site. |
March 24, 2010: 1:41 pm
Great article. I tell my clients the same thing. Glad im not the only one that shares this opinion |
March 24, 2010: 2:14 am
Compare Oz Credit Cards is a free comparison blog offering news, reviews and comments on Australian credit cards. Here you may register and participate in online discussions related to finance and in particular credit cards |
March 11, 2010: 11:33 pm
Good and informative post,it helped me as well as my friends, I really appreciate it. Thanks for sharing. |
February 26, 2010: 8:08 am
Yes date in URL's is not much significant. |
February 20, 2010: 9:28 am
Thanks for the URL info, very helpful! |
February 17, 2010: 5:18 am
This is one of the best post I have ever read, I would love to read more in future. Keep up the good work. |
February 16, 2010: 5:45 am
Great post.keep posting us this type of wonderful information.We always look forward towards your post. |
February 11, 2010: 6:37 am
It was another joy to see your post. Really useful Post. Great stuff as usual. |
February 11, 2010: 4:40 am
I want to have the Date/Time (timestamp) embedded onto a group of digital photo's I took. My Camera (GE A730) does no support this feature so I need a computer application that will somehow use the date/time from the file attributes and imprint them (in a location of my choosing - upper left corner)..... Is there such a program? Thank you. |
February 8, 2010: 9:45 pm
thanks for posting here |
December 16, 2009: 6:34 am
very nice post. This is very informative . Thanks for posting this here. |
December 9, 2009: 3:52 am
time is always play a big part on doing in word press because this is the very important step in doing it. |
November 30, 2009: 9:44 am
Well put mat, I couldnt agree more |
July 17, 2007: 5:09 am
If matt says it that must be a google friendly url.And your points are right on spot. |
October 30, 2006: 2:54 am
[...] XDForum (example: Anaconda Forum) is a nice basic forum software which works seamlessly with WordPress blogs (download our free theme and plugins). Unfortunately it works out-of-the-box with default permalinks only. Most site today use nice permalinks. This mini-tutorial will teach you how to use XDForum with nice permalinks (how to enable; tips and more). [...] |
March 15, 2006: 1:47 pm
[...] Yikes, what a title, eh? For those of you who know, Google loves keywords in your URL. For those of you who don’t, I won’t be explaining it here. [...] |
December 11, 2005: 10:42 pm
[...] By default WordPress uses a query string to identify a post. This is neither search engine friendly nor human friendly. A better way is to use a custom URI to better identify your posts. Many bloggers include a date as part of the permalink. I advise against it. The date of the post is not so important as to be part of the URI! [...] |
November 23, 2005: 6:52 am
[...] I set up Permalinks to include the date, and as soon as I did that I came across this article discouraging it. One of it’s arguments is that “It is redundant information as date is already part of the post information and need not be additionally within the url”, which is true if you actually go to the URL to begin with. The whole idea I thought was that if you send a link via email, or post it in a forum, for example, “https://blog.m-ph.com/11/14/2005/general/art-ilano/its-out/”, you’ll automatically see the date (along with the category, author and post title in this case), without having to click it, saving you time. At any rate, dealing with the .htaccess file is easy enough, so I’ll just fix that up if I change my mind. [...] |
June 11, 2005: 11:04 am
Ugh. Thanks. :) |
June 11, 2005: 7:31 am
@Hilary None that I know of. |
June 11, 2005: 1:05 am
Hi. I just imported hundreds of Blogger posts into Wordpress and now the permalinks are all different, so the posts that link to other posts don't link properly. Anyone know of a way to automatically make them match up or do I need to do it manually? Thanks! |
June 6, 2005: 3:02 pm
[...] ow, Google loves keywords in your URL. For those of you who don’t, I won’t be explaining it h [...] |
June 3, 2005: 8:55 pm
@dgold Hey, we all make mistakes, no biggie :) |
June 3, 2005: 8:00 pm
@dgold I thought the effect was cool, so I experimented with it :) |
June 3, 2005: 3:53 pm
Angs, I apologize -- I posted the last comment in the wrong thread on your blog. I had too many windows open at once, and meant to post it under the Dashboard plug-in page. |
June 3, 2005: 3:50 pm
Angsuman, I was just curious why you put the shadows on your screenshot for the reduced-dashboard? Is it just to make your screenshot thumbnail look interesting, or is it your watermark method? Thanks for the plug in and info. |
March 20, 2005: 1:51 pm
> This entry was posted on Sunday, March 20th, 2005 at 4:01 am and is filed under Technology, CMS, Internet, WordPress, WebLog. Time is always part of a WordPress post. Kubric Theme just publishes it in a paragraph after the post. However one can always make it much more visible by putting it in top say by using the old WordPress template. |
March 20, 2005: 9:39 am
Hmmm... ironically enough... the very first thing I was looking for when viewing this post was... the publication date... which at first glance was not visible anywhere... introducing a great deal of confusion on the relevance of this post. In my opinion, time is not some redundant information to be haphazardly buried at the bottom of a random page. Au contraire. A timeline is essential to provide an immediate context to a post. Your post lack such a context. Instead it provides 89 random characters to cope with. Nothing to relate to. Quite a loss. |
March 20, 2005: 6:15 am
@Bob True, I make my subject descriptive. It would be better if WordPress creates an excerpt to make the URL. However even as it stands now I wouldn't want date information to make it even bulkier. @Dave No, I am not. The subject (hopefully excerpted in future) provides much more useful information then either ?p=62736 or 2004/10/12 or /6737. You however make a very good point. However how would you convey to the people that using this format you can get the posts of any particular day. If you write some documentation then I could equally argue that why not convey them to use a query string format as is available in WordPress. If you want to provide access through a widget like calendar then why not use the same query string format. In short I am unable to see any added value even in this case. Please let me know if I am missing something. |
March 20, 2005: 5:30 am
I just find point #5 somewhat ironic, given the current URL: https://blog.taragana.com/index.php/[Really Long URL]-cms/ |
March 20, 2005: 5:22 am
So are you saying that having a url like https://www.example.com/archives/2004/10/12 is OK then? I can see where having that date plus an individual post name is redundant, but the above example allows folks to look at all the posts for a given day, month, or year. Kind of useful if you don't want to track down the Archive links on the site. |
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