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authorjoey <joey@0fa5a96a-9a0e-0410-b3b2-a0fd24251071>2007-03-25 18:16:51 +0000
committerjoey <joey@0fa5a96a-9a0e-0410-b3b2-a0fd24251071>2007-03-25 18:16:51 +0000
commite951c475c475fca6872f4fa44f5f3c4682679e33 (patch)
tree737cdbfb546dfbca7d908d95cb29f00487bdd9f4
parent7bdb9846379c5f410662c0a84785e52152a4d434 (diff)
web commit by http://ressukka.net/
-rw-r--r--doc/todo/Google_Sitemap_protocol.mdwn4
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/doc/todo/Google_Sitemap_protocol.mdwn b/doc/todo/Google_Sitemap_protocol.mdwn
index 8fa14d8c9..d1e465bd8 100644
--- a/doc/todo/Google_Sitemap_protocol.mdwn
+++ b/doc/todo/Google_Sitemap_protocol.mdwn
@@ -14,3 +14,7 @@ produce a map of pages that other pages do not link to, if you're worried
about having such pages not found by web spiders.
--[[Joey]]
+
+While pages are very interlinked, most people use ikiwiki for blogging. Blogging produces pages at random intervals and google apparently optimizes their crawls to fit the frequency of changes. For me it's not so often that the contents of my blog changes, so google indexes it quite infrequently. Sitemaps are polled more often than other content (if one exists) so it's lighter for the site and for search engines (yes, google) to frequently poll it instead. So it's not that pages can't be found, but it's lighter for the site to keep an up to date index.
+
+-- Sami \ No newline at end of file