Thursday, May 30, 2019

My Issues With Word-press Subjects

It all began in the late 90's. We learned about linklicious.me alternatives by browsing Bing. I wanted to place some information on my website. A record. A listing of forthcoming events. I began with basic HTML. One-page, with sections for each and every post. Simple. I learned about better than linklicious by browsing Bing.

Then I learned about 'sites' and 'blogging.' Being intelligent, I picked Wordpress, the most used application. How clever, I thought. Anyone could put up a website, should you have the WYSIWYG editor going. Very democratic.

This prompted my to create my outermost thoughts; o-n London, politics, and personal gripes. As a webmaster, I watched to see Google index them. 'Here we go', I thought, 'quickly, my treasures of extrospection will belong to the ages.'

Except Google did not like my weblog. It'd perhaps not index much beyond the front page. Why, why, why?

Duplicate material? I set it to put only one post per page.

No improvement.

I checked out what Google was indexing. Then I looked over the HTML. Soon, all became clear.

In sum:

- Word-press was still copying my information, and

- It had no right META tags, and

- There was a lot irrelevant HTML, and

- the content was obscured by The layout.

I'd an instant search on Google to find search engine marketing recommendations. There is a plug-in 'head-meta information' ( http://guff.szub.net/plugins/ ). Dig up more on our affiliated article - Browse this web site: linklicious vs backlinks indexer. But I didn't use that, oh no.

For some reason, I got the notion a complete design will be the solution. I tried modifying an existing one myself. Better, but not perfect. Google was starting to index more pages, however they all had the same title. My missives to an uncaring world were being overlooked.

So I got someone else to accomplish one, centered on my criteria, which were:

- Grab a META 'concept' from your article 'title';

- Grab a META 'information' from the website 'excerpts';

- Put a ROBOTS 'noindex' tag in non-content pages.

But that was not enough. For best SEO results you must configure Wordpress extremely. You've to be _mean_ to it. You have to _man_ enough.

I did a bit of re-search and developed to following tips. Clicking reviews on linklicious likely provides warnings you might use with your pastor.

WARNING: They're intense. Making major changes to-your URLs may possibly influence them, If you already have good ratings. In my own case:

- Moving my website http://www.ttblog.co.uk towards the root web listing,

- MOD_REWRITING its URLs, and

- Removing a 301 redirect,

... caused my PageRank to go to 0. BUT, site indexing was untouched.

This is temporary, as Google found it as 'suspect' behaviour. My site had been radically changed by me.

Listed below are the ideas, for true _men_, who will try the face area of internet death and laugh:

1. Activate permalinks by visiting 'Options/Permalinks.' You might have allow Apache MOD_REWRITE on your own website consideration.

1a. Shorten the rule to just-the variable. Do not work with the time codes. This keeps your URLs small.

2. Place your website within the uppermost index possible. http://www.ttblog.co.uk surpasses http://www.ttblog.co.uk/wordpress/

Therefore a normal article would seem like

http://www.ttblog.co.uk/Im-hard-as-nails-me/

As opposed to

http://www.ttblog.co.uk/wordpress/2006/08/03/Im-hard-as-nails-me/

3. Then install an SEO'd theme.

My blogs are increasingly being indexed beautifully. The Google 'site:' command returns all my posts, and little else.

For my next concern, I turn it into an os, and accept Windows XP..

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