Content Management Systems (CMS)
Content Management? What's that you may ask - especially when
you are already saturated with HTML, DHTML, PHP, ASP and the lot.
Content Management is basically a system that automates most of
what you do manually on-line without ever opening...
Content Management Systems (CMS): What They Are And Why We Love Them…
There is a buzz in the online community about a technology that empowers the average computer user with the ability to create and maintain their very own web presence. In the past, individuals who took interest in having and operating their own...
New Customizable JavaScript Menu for Web Applications
Minsk, Belarus, October 11, 2005 -- Software development company Scand released its new product - dhtmlxMenu v1.0 .
This JavaScript menu enables web developers to design and edit a simple DHTML menu in a very convenient way.
dhtmlxMenu has...
Web Design for the No-Talent Artist
Not everyone can hit a 90 mile per hour fast ball 400 feet. That's why there are so few major league baseball players. Most everyone enjoyed art class while in school, but we also realized there was probably only one in each classroom who actually...
Website Colors
In 1994, Netscape defined 216 colors that have priority in
browsers based on the 256 colors displayed by an 8-bit system.
40 colors display differently between PCs and MACs and are
therefore eliminated.
These 216 fixed colors, known as web...
Can I Optimize A Site Designed With Frames?
Can you optimize a sitedesigned in frames? Of course you can! The question should be, "how effectively can I optimize a web sire designed in frames?" Framed sites – in my opinion – have little use in today's web design. There are so many better ways to design a site. For example, you have HTML, DHTML, Flash, and other design formats.
Besides being hard to optimize, framed sites also:
* Makes it harder for a visitor to bookmark your pages, or add them to their favorites. The bookmark will always point to your home page, which might not be the page they want to bookmark.
* Limit the viewing space your visitor has on the page.
* Often when a search engine lists your framed page, it will display without the frame on the left. This means that your visitor will not be able to see the navigation menu.
Of course, you can go the route of the "noframe" tag, created to help visitors whose browsers can not read frames. Nowadays most browsers can, and so this tag is used more for SEO optimization and search engines. A few keyword-enriched sentences, and – BAM!: Content spiders can read. This may not be the best method, however it does work. Plus, it is "good SEO."
There is also another method, requiring a dynamic frameset page:
Using this method above does not include the "noframes" tag. There is no need for it. There is also some javascript the needs to be imported. To learn more about how to use this method, visit: http://www.webmarketingplus.co.uk/seo_positioning/problem_sites/frames_sites.html. This article by Ammon Johns will give you a step-by-step break down on how to use this method.
Now, I have been around a while. In the web design field, as well as SEO, there are many that suggest that framed sites have trouble ranking high on search engines. So the decision is yours to make: if your site is in frames, you may want to consider one of the aforementioned options, or redesigning your site in HTML. Also, try optimizing your site with keywords, before the other methods. Changes made to your site will reflect in your search engine results. See what works best!
For more information on SEO visit http://mr-seo.blogspot.com
Or, http://mrseonewz.blogspot.com/ for the latest on SEO news. For a freewebsite evaluation visit http://www.mr-seo.com
Joe is also a merger-partner of Web Presence, a full-service web design firm exclusively serving small businesses nationwide. Visit his website at: http://www.jnb-design.com