Posts Tagged ‘Search’:

WordPress 2.3 Tags not indexed on Technorati?

Tagged with: , , , , , — John @ 12:16 am

Update:

Changed the permalink structure (options->permalink) to custom so that permalinks are of the form:

/%year%/%monthnum%/%day%/%postname%

Rather than using the “date and name” option which looks much the same but has the trailing slash.

This also strips the trailing slash from the tags link. I’ll try this for a while and see how it works – WordPress accepts the requests and drops the slash if requested. Hopefully technorati will re-index the posts and pick up the tags.

/Update

For the last few days I’ve been attending the Forrester Consumer Forum in Chicago, and blogging a fair amount about what I saw there. While doing so, I religiously tagged my posts with fcf07, as recommended by Jeremiah.

Yet my posts were not getting indexed, or aggregated, or even found as part of the technorati tag fcf07.

Why not?

I think there is a conflict between WordPress 2.3’s tagging feature and Technorati’s expectations for tags.

On Technorati’s Tagging with Links page, they explain:

1. The tag link must occur within the boundaries of a weblog post to be included in Technorati’s index.
2. The constructed link must define a link relationship of “tag” by adding rel=”tag” to each post link you would like Technorati to include in its tag index.
3. The referenced URL must have content after the final forward-slash (“/”).

It’s that third one I’m wondering about. On my blog, the tags WordPress generates have links which end with a trailing slash. For example, the tag for fcf07 appears in those posts like this:

<a href="http://www.openparenthesis.org/tag/fcf07/" rel="tag">fcf07</a>

Note that trailing slash after fcf07. I think this trailing slash prevents Technorati, which does index my posts, from seeing these as valid tags.

Anyone else seeing similar behavior with WordPress 2.3 and posts getting indexed by technorati but the tags being ignored?

Liveblogging Enterprise 2.0 – Enterprise Search

Tagged with: , , , , , — John @ 8:01 am

Enterprise Search

* Moderator – Larry Cannell, Enterprise Technology, Ford IT
* Speaker – Aaron Brown, Program Director, IBM
* Speaker – Lee Phillips, Senior Director, Knowledge Discovery Solutions, FAST
* Speaker – Matt Eichner, Vice President of Strategic Development, Endeca
* Speaker – Seth Gottleib, Principal, Content Here

Larry: This won’t be a pure demonstration – but I have asked the panelists to record some screencasts and show a bit about what their products do.

Quick demos from the vendors, followed by Seth and I leading a Q&A session.

Search itself has become critical to just about everything. In some reports, 90% of navigation is search. (I even sometimes use the find command in the browser to find search, if the search box isn’t obvious).

New VW site – a competitor of my employer – but notice the prominence of search. (vw.com)

Anecdote – his wife never types a url in the address bar – she searches on the company name – that way, instead of one option, she gets many and is more likely to hit what she wants (try Ford as an example – www.ford.com versus Ford in a google box).

Intranet search versus Internet search – why is it so hard to get Intranet search right? Isn’t search just search?
(more…)

About Me

Open Parenthesis is a blog about free and open source software, next generation internet strategy, and the assembled web, written by John Eckman (me).

John Eckman

I'm a Sr. Director at Optaros, a professional services firm offering strategy, design, development, and consulting services to enterprises interested in leveraging free and open source software.

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