I always remind people if music auto starts the potential customers
can't come to your site at work because they won't want their boss to
hear the music blaring.
Michael Horowitz
Your Computer Consultant
http://yourcomputerconsultant.com
561-394-9079
dwain wrote:
On 3/17/08, *kevin
]
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Sent: Monday, March 24, 2008 11:18 AM
Subject: Re: [WSG] SEO, fact or fiction
I always remind people if music auto starts the potential customers can't
come to your site at work because they won't want their boss to hear the
music blaring.
Michael Horowitz
Your
hi,
Im doing a site for a nightclub. So im doing a hybrid.
The owner has demanded a music track playing continuously.
What would you lot do if you had to put in a continually playing music
track?
I mean the only solution that is a frameset right but i just want some
feedback of the dangers of
I'd use flash. http://www.gothamsounddesign.com/ is a fairly good
example of an 'unobtrusive' flash player.
On 18/03/2008, at 3:10 AM, kevin mcmonagle wrote:
hi,
Im doing a site for a nightclub. So im doing a hybrid.
The owner has demanded a music track playing continuously.
What would you
If you can't talk the guy out of it then try and get him to at least allow
the USER to start the music. If not that then I would suggest teh next
course is a flash player but at half volume and make SURE that the START and
STOP button is easy to find.
I wouldn't use a frameset for anything.
On
On 3/17/08, kevin mcmonagle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hi,
Im doing a site for a nightclub. So im doing a hybrid.
The owner has demanded a music track playing continuously.
What would you lot do if you had to put in a continually playing music
track?
i would suggest allowing the user to
-223-3651
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.BrickMarketing.com
Read Daily Updates In My Blog:
http://www.SearchEngineOptimizationJournal.com
- Original Message -
Subject: Re: [WSG] SEO, fact or fiction
From: John Hancock ;[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Mon, March 17, 2008 12:26
I'd
On Mon, 17 Mar 2008 16:10:31 +, kevin mcmonagle wrote:
hi,
Im doing a site for a nightclub. So im doing a hybrid. The owner has
demanded a music
track playing continuously. What would you lot do if you had to put in a
continually
playing music track?
Hi Kev - Because I am on dial-up
I will throw my 2 cents in and say that nothing is more annoying than going to
a web site and suddenly being bombarded with loud music you don't want to hear.
In face, I got an add-in for Firefox so that I could safely use MySpace
without a cacophony of noises playing without my control.
hi,
i think if i cold sell him on a player that would be user controlled.
I will tell him he can put in more tracks by his dj's.
Sorry i meant to change the title of the post.
thanks a million.
-kevin
***
List Guidelines:
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ADMIN
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Hi all,
We have had some complaints that this SEO, fact or fiction thread is
off-topic.
We have left it alone till now as the list has been surprisingly (spookily)
quite for the last week. However, the thread has now gone on long enough.
Hello Everyone,
Thanks a bomb for all your thoughts! You've been most helpful.
In future I'll be more careful with keeping any queries more obviously
standards-centric.
Thanks again,
Dannielle
On 9/3/08 7:46 PM, Mark Harris [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
tee wrote:
On Mar 7, 2008, at
On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 16:11:53 -0800, tee wrote:
Anybody knows about this? The robots text is good for search robots,
but I read from somewhere, that robots text no longer is needed when
Google Sitemap is implemented for the site.
For Google bots, there are some elements of Google Sitemaps
tee wrote:
On Mar 7, 2008, at 12:36 AM, Stuart Foulstone wrote:
Hi,
Search robots are essentially blind users.
Anybody knows about this?
I think what Kevin meant is that the googlebot takes no notice of
graphical navigation or information, much as a blind user is unable to
see it. The
I believe you got it somewhat wrong.
The basic purpose of a robots.txt file is to tell a search engine what
not to index - and you can issue different instructions to each robot
separately. It does not tell the robots which pages to index, except for
the basic tenet that anything not
I didn't know robots text
was important for accessibility, however I learned from the
accessites team that it is.
Tee,
The reasons we (Accessites) look for a robots.txt file is because it keeps
honest bots from wasting their time and your bandwidth indexing
directories/files you don't want
] SEO, fact or fiction and myths
I didn't know robots text
was important for accessibility, however I learned from the
accessites team that it is.
Tee,
The reasons we (Accessites) look for a robots.txt file is because it keeps
honest bots from wasting their time and your bandwidth indexing
That seems incredibly arbitrary when a robots.txt is purely optional -
especially as the default spider behavior is to index all unless told
otherwise. So you're penalizing people by having your robot behave in the
opposite manner? And regarding PICS labels, most people don't know how to
set them
Nice to hear again about PICS. I use to label all my websites, but I've
ofter wondered if I'm the last one using this (and P3P...).
djn
Mike at Green-Beast.com wrote:
That seems incredibly arbitrary when a robots.txt is purely optional -
especially as the default spider behavior is to index
Okay then. What is an example of an accessible robots.txt file? Are you also
talking about the site map link you see on large web sites?
Angus MacKinnon
Infoforce Services
http:ééwww.infoforce-services.com
It is impossible to rightly govern the world without God and the Bible.
George Washington
On Mar 7, 2008, at 12:36 AM, Stuart Foulstone wrote:
Hi,
Search robots are essentially blind users.
Anybody knows about this? The robots text is good for search robots,
but I read from somewhere, that robots text no longer is needed when
Google Sitemap is implemented for the site. I
, People and Technology
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Michael Horowitz [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, 7 March 2008 2:53 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] SEO, fact or fiction
Not trying to infer anything. I
, People and Technology
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Michael Horowitz [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, 7 March 2008 2:53 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] SEO, fact or fiction
Not trying to infer anything. I
On 3/5/08, Keith Steinacher [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What I meant by 1 set fee was I'll get you top rankings on all search
engines and fix all your woes for $99.99!!
i see what you mean now.
While anyone can learn how to do SEO from a book or an online class, it
doesn't necessary mean that
What are the SEO issues in web standards?
Michael Horowitz
Your Computer Consultant
http://yourcomputerconsultant.com
561-394-9079
Keith Steinacher wrote:
What I meant by 1 set fee was I'll get you top rankings on all search
engines and fix all your woes for $99.99!!
Charging by the page
I don't really understand your question.
On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 8:59 AM, Michael Horowitz
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What are the SEO issues in web standards?
Michael Horowitz
Your Computer Consultant
http://yourcomputerconsultant.com
561-394-9079
Keith Steinacher wrote:
What I meant
Hi Michael,
I take the perspective that a site built to web standards provides a
framework for content which doesn't have any 'points' deducted from
it. SEO in my experience is divided up into the main sections
1) inbound links and references
2) linking structure
3) page build quality
4)
PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Keith Steinacher [EMAIL
PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, 7 March 2008 1:36 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] SEO, fact or fiction
I don't really understand your question.
On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 8:59 AM, Michael Horowitz [EMAIL
PROTECTED]mailto
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
*Sent:* Friday, 7 March 2008 1:36 PM
*To:* wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
*Subject:* Re: [WSG] SEO, fact or fiction
I don't really understand your question.
On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 8:59 AM, Michael Horowitz
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What are the SEO
] On Behalf Of Michael Horowitz [EMAIL
PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, 7 March 2008 2:53 PM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] SEO, fact or fiction
Not trying to infer anything. I really was wondering how standard
affect SEO. I tend to focus on content and using keywords in the
natural
Hello Michael,
Accessibility is far more important to SEO than most standards, affecting
SEO directly, that is. Think of Googlebot as a blind user and you can see
why I mention accessibility.
I have gotten emails before, filled with promises of being number one on
Google (but under what
On 3/4/08, Keith Steinacher [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I wouldn't pay much attention to anyone that says they can solve all of
your site's problems for 1 set fee.
why not? i charge by the page and do the seo myself. there's a free class
at: http://www.gnc-web-creations.com/seo-optimization.htm
What I meant by 1 set fee was I'll get you top rankings on all search
engines and fix all your woes for $99.99!!
Charging by the page or per hour (as I do it) is more legitimate. Some
projects you can't really charge by the page though. I have one client
who's site has 600,000 pages or more.
I think that they are useful, but I am biased because I am a SEO
Consultant. However, we are not all created equal. I wrote a very short
article on this that you can read here:
http://www.mustainconsulting.com/docs/prs2007novdec.pdf
Basically, you need to research a SEO professional, just like
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