Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-16 Thread stevertigo
Greg wrote:
 There are many indirect effects as well— Less search engine
 hits means less readers means less editing means less content  and probably 
 less neutral content.

Ha!

In reality, one could just as well argue that less hits and less edits
might mean a *perfect article will remain perfect and will not be
whittled down into nothingness by some drop-in busybody.

-Steven
PS: Sorry, for mentioning articles on Foundation-l

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-14 Thread Ray Saintonge
Aryeh Gregor wrote:
 On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Cox, Seritaserita@bridgespan.org wrote:
   
 Google's new search engine, Caffeine, is supposedly kicking Wikipedia
 entries further down results page. Thoughts? Comments?
 
 So what?  Wikipedia's goal isn't to get high search rankings.  It's to
 be a useful resource within its domain.  


That principle is too easily forgotten.

Ec

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-14 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 2:40 PM, Ray Saintongesainto...@telus.net wrote:
 Aryeh Gregor wrote:
 On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Cox, Seritaserita@bridgespan.org 
 wrote:

 Google's new search engine, Caffeine, is supposedly kicking Wikipedia
 entries further down results page. Thoughts? Comments?

 So what?  Wikipedia's goal isn't to get high search rankings.  It's to
 be a useful resource within its domain.

 That principle is too easily forgotten.

It's an over-simplification.


A resource that no one can find isn't a useful resource.  Things like
usability and simple awareness can have a major impact on the
fulfillment of the mission even if they don't directly impact the
content.  There are many indirect effects as well— Less search engine
hits means less readers means less editing means less content and
probably less neutral content.

It also means less funding, and while the site wouldn't need as much
funding with less traffic there would still be less money for things
like software development where cost is not a function of traffic.

So— So what? is the wrong position.  Good search positioning is not
mutually exclusive with useful content. 'Content' is the first
priority, but getting that content into peoples hands can't be far
behind if we're to do something worthwhile.


Cheers,
Greg

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[Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread Cox, Serita
Google's new search engine, Caffeine, is supposedly kicking Wikipedia
entries further down results page. Thoughts? Comments?
http://software.silicon.com/applications/0,39024653,39484015,00.htm
Thank, Serita
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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Cox, Seritaserita@bridgespan.org wrote:
 Google's new search engine, Caffeine, is supposedly kicking Wikipedia
 entries further down results page. Thoughts? Comments?
 http://software.silicon.com/applications/0,39024653,39484015,00.htm

[from my comments in #wikimedia-tech the other day]
So— I tried 20 random words, and the WP result was lower in four of
them, the same in the rest.
No pattern really...  We still have the problem with article at funny name;
redirect from common name; common name search on google gives squat,
which I consider to be much more major.

When you're at the top there is no place to go but down. A larger
comparison would be nice, but I didn't seen any reason to think that
it was a major change.  I generally expect the SEO people to
over-react to, well, just about everything.


(I went on, on IRC, to point some examples of the behavioural change
that happened towards the end of 2007 (per my cruddy memory) where
non-widely-linked redirects basically fell out of the google index...
search terms like Jesus bug or many other things like
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Category:Redirects_to_scientific_names
 ... if we cared about the traffic flux from google we'd see what we
could do to fix that)

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread Brion Vibber
On 8/13/09 12:23 PM, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
 (I went on, on IRC, to point some examples of the behavioural change
 that happened towards the end of 2007 (per my cruddy memory) where
 non-widely-linked redirects basically fell out of the google index...
 search terms like Jesus bug or many other things like
 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Category:Redirects_to_scientific_names
   ... if we cared about the traffic flux from google we'd see what we
 could do to fix that)

Worth looking into; have we got some collected info and sample queries 
to poke at? [I would recommend moving further detail discussion on this 
end of things to wikitech-l.]

-- brion

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread David Goodman
Perhaps we should try using the titles for things that other people
use--not for g-rank, but as signs that we recognize that an
encyclopedia is made for the readers.

David Goodman, Ph.D, M.L.S.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:DGG



On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 4:56 PM, Brion Vibberbr...@wikimedia.org wrote:
 On 8/13/09 12:23 PM, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
 (I went on, on IRC, to point some examples of the behavioural change
 that happened towards the end of 2007 (per my cruddy memory) where
 non-widely-linked redirects basically fell out of the google index...
 search terms like Jesus bug or many other things like
 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Category:Redirects_to_scientific_names
   ... if we cared about the traffic flux from google we'd see what we
 could do to fix that)

 Worth looking into; have we got some collected info and sample queries
 to poke at? [I would recommend moving further detail discussion on this
 end of things to wikitech-l.]

 -- brion

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread Gregory Maxwell
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 5:09 PM, David Goodmandgoodma...@gmail.com wrote:
 Perhaps we should try using the titles for things that other people
 use--not for g-rank, but as signs that we recognize that an
 encyclopedia is made for the readers.

Eh— It's unsolvable in some cases... People frequently use multiple
terms for the same thing. And what happens when one term is really
common in Canada and one is really common in the US? Do we always use
the US version because the US is more populous than Canada?  It would
be a fair decision by one reasonable metric, but deeply biased by
other reasonable metrics.

An alternative argument is that When a 'more correct' name exists, we
should use that because we're an encyclopaedia and we're supposed to
educate people on these things.  Perhaps you don't agree— but
hopefully you can see why others can reasonably hold that position.

The real answer to this problem is ALL names should work equally, and
with redirects they do.  Except, it seems, that search engines
behaviour may be undermining this to some extent. ... but changing the
naming in response to the symptom rather than a response to the real
problem.

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread geni
2009/8/13 Cox, Serita serita@bridgespan.org:
 Google's new search engine, Caffeine, is supposedly kicking Wikipedia
 entries further down results page. Thoughts? Comments?
 http://software.silicon.com/applications/0,39024653,39484015,00.htm
 Thank, Serita


There is evidence that Google has pushed wikipedia down in the past. I
doubt it will have much impact in the long term.

-- 
geni

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread Angela
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 5:23 AM, Gregory Maxwellgmaxw...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Cox, Seritaserita@bridgespan.org wrote:
 Google's new search engine, Caffeine, is supposedly kicking Wikipedia
 entries further down results page. Thoughts? Comments?
 http://software.silicon.com/applications/0,39024653,39484015,00.htm
 [from my comments in #wikimedia-tech the other day]
 So— I tried 20 random words, and the WP result was lower in four of
 them, the same in the rest.
 No pattern really...  We still have the problem with article at funny name;
 redirect from common name; common name search on google gives squat,
 which I consider to be much more major.

A simple solution to this is using the canonical tags which all major
search engines started supporting earlier this year.

http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/canonical-link-tag/?
Wikia's GPL code to add this to MediaWiki is available here:
https://wikia-code.com/wikia/trunk/extensions/wikia/CanonicalHref/CanonicalHref.php?
More info on it in Nick's blog post at
http://www.techyouruniverse.com/wikia/google-canonical-href-with-mediawiki

Angela

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread Chad
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Cox, Seritaserita@bridgespan.org wrote:
 Google's new search engine, Caffeine, is supposedly kicking Wikipedia
 entries further down results page. Thoughts? Comments?
 http://software.silicon.com/applications/0,39024653,39484015,00.htm
 Thank, Serita
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As long as all sites are getting treated equally, it's fine in my book.
I only take issue when results are skewed because Google bumps
results up/down arbitrarily.

-Chad

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Re: [Foundation-l] Question to post...

2009-08-13 Thread Aryeh Gregor
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 2:56 PM, Cox, Seritaserita@bridgespan.org wrote:
 Google's new search engine, Caffeine, is supposedly kicking Wikipedia
 entries further down results page. Thoughts? Comments?

So what?  Wikipedia's goal isn't to get high search rankings.  It's to
be a useful resource within its domain.  If a search for flat screen
TV starts ranking online stores higher than [[Flat panel display]],
say, that's not something we should be worried about at all.  Good for
Google for improving its search quality results.  (For that particular
query it already returns stores, POV reviews, and so on -- which is
entirely correct.)

If Google is starting to rank us lower than our actual *competitors*
-- other sites that aim to provide neutral explanations of factual
topics -- then we should be looking at what people might prefer about
those sites that would cause Google to rank them higher.  It's not
like Google is doing anything but matching demand, as far as it can
gauge it.  If Wikipedia gets moved to fourth place for a certain
query, and then everyone skips the first three results to click on the
Wikipedia link, I very much doubt we'd stay in fourth place for too
long.

So, in short: forget about Google.  Make a site that people want to
read, and you'll get popularity not just from search engines, but also
from word of mouth and every other means under the Sun.  It's not like
we're making ad revenue off people who come to Wikipedia but would
really prefer to be someplace else.

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