- From: Kee Hinckley <nazgul@utopia.com>
- Date: Thu, 25 May 1995 07:20:24 -0400
- To: gtn@ebt.com
- Cc: Multiple recipients of list <www-talk@www10.w3.org>
At 8:46 AM 5/21/95, Gavin Nicol wrote: > http://www.ebt.com/collection/book/doc=1/chap=2/sect=3 > http://www.ebt.com/collection/book/1/2/3 > http://www.ebt.com/collection/book/1 ... >PS. I should note that the above naming scheme is very, very useful in >our case, but it drives spiders wild.... That actually brings up an issue I've been meaning to mention somewhere (the robots list would be appropriate, but I don't have time to join a mailing list in order to post one issue). We use a technology we call Dynamic View(tm) to present large amounts of information in managable chunks, without creating a large hierarchy. For instance a mailing list might be broken into chunks by months, where you would only see the details for the current month, and the rest would expand when you click on the month name (see http://www.utopia.com/mailings/edupage/ for an example). This is great for people, however when a robot indexer comes to call I don't want to confuse things. At best the structure will slow down the indexing process. At worst it will look at a URL like http://www.utopia.com/mailings/edupage/?NAME=April+95#April 95 and decide not to follow it at all. So what to do? If we recognize the user-agent as a known robot, we give it a flat presentation of the structure. The catch of course, is that there is no standard way to recognize a robot. Some convention in the UserAgent field would be sufficient, but.... Has anyone considered a move in that direction? (Note, this also has a bearing on URL-based shopping carts - I'd like the robot to be able to browse the store without acquiring an ID, since you don't want the ID to end up in some index somewhere. There of course, the problem is due to a hack, so finding a solution is less critical if you're in a purist camp :-). Kee Hinckley Utopia Inc. - Cyberspace Architects 617/721-6100 nazgul@utopia.com http://www.utopia.com/ I'm not sure which upsets me more: that people are so unwilling to accept responsibility for their own actions, or that they are so eager to regulate everyone else's.
Received on Thursday, 25 May 1995 09:09:57 UTC