[b]Bar Graph MDI (bar graphs in web browsers)[/b]
[b]Headlines MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Pioneer Report MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Tree MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Soft Award Bar Graph MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]Soft Award Headlines MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]Soft Award Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]Soft Award Tree MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]22Blog.com GRML web browsers[/b]
[b]22Blog.com GRML (web browsers)[/b]
[b]GRML Blog-City (web browsers)[/b]
[b]Browsers Blog[/b]
With a website consisting of articles and newsletters around a main topic, how do you create a 'theme' website?
You have the content and I suggest this is where you want to begin. What makes a site interesting and unique is you and what you have to offer. Much of what your theme will be about comes from this pool. Therefore, your research begins here. Use content to determine what your site is.
Break this information into the base of what it is your site will ultimately be. From here, find your most import sub-topics and keywords. As you are taking this information apart, patterns begin to emerge. There will be gaps where you will want to develop additional content to fill.
This is where I usually start my research. From each section you begin to develop here, seek out what others are doing (competitors or industry leaders). This is to support their interpretation of that particular section. Sometimes it?s their keywords or how they break down the individual sections that are useful in filling those gaps.
With each section, break these down into the individual pages needed to support that section. These are often individual products, or specific services, or an answer to a specific question. This is where you figure out the headings, what text links you need to use to get there, and what title and description to use for the page. All of these features support the theme of the section. Develop each section as a stand-alone whole. However, when attached to other sections, it not only makes sense, but also supports the more universal theme of the site.
Low traffic considerations.
Don?t worry about low traffic when first building a theme site, though it is always a part of the picture. Be sure to have text links with theme relevant text, since they are crucial. With themes you want to stay on target.
What type of traffic do I want?
Targeting your visitor is simply a way of pre-qualifying them before they visit. You are making it easier for qualified customers to find you. This does not exclude the more universal market. However, relevant text links and a theme website applies especially to the targeted market.
How do you organize search terms into a theme hierarchy for a site?
Having followed the suggestions from the original question, you have broken down the website to separate sections. Each section breaks down to the individual parts. These are where you find your keywords. Add to this, the research you do industry-wide and using whatever tools you currently use. It?s not the individual keywords making the theme, but the themes (developed from the content) determine the keywords. Work from what you offer and not some outside force to force fit your product/services.
If you develop each section to stand-alone, determine the most effective way to tie those individual sections so...
1. they support each other and the universal theme of the site.
2. They make sense. For pets, you may need a section on cats, one on dogs, and one on birds. This doesn?t mean these sections directly connect to each other. A common section may be needed to pull these together without diluting the individual parts. Such is true with any industry, at least from my experience.
Some see themes as a pyramid and it makes sense. My vision is different. Themes are a solar system or a planet with revolving satellites. Some satellites connect to each other, not necessarily up-line. They all connect to the main planet. It?s how you go about connecting them that supports and strengthens the universal theme.
[b]Bar Graph MDI (bar graphs in web browsers)[/b]
[b]Headlines MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Pioneer Report MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Tree MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]GRML (web browsers)[/b]
There is no great significance to underscores. They are used as part of an overall SEO process of slapping keywords in everywhere possible. Filenames of a page certainly could be one factor in ranking well in the search engine results. BUT, it does not hurt. If you need to separate keywords in the filename, use dashes, rather than underscores.
A secondary benefit of keyword filenames is if anyone links to you using your URL, rather than link text, the keywords are there. This comes in handy when submitting to directory sites, press release websites, download websites, or other websites republishing your content.
For example, using an underscore, link text is "your_keyword.htm" instead of "yourkeyword.htm". Using a dash is better, so change it to "your-keyword.htm". The difference in value between a dash and underscore changes over time, but the dash always seems to be more generally acceptable.
Personally, I use underscore and dash keyword filenames. It is just an easier way to recongize files when messing with my site!
Data entry appears to be functional using Pioneer Report MDI. GRML, for data entry, allows editing of the source using cut/copy/paste operations in Notepad. These changes show as expected using GRML web browsers. This includes using dimensions (or names) in the parent tags for columns and results.
With the 3.7 release of Pioneer Report MDI, the big bugs with dimensions have been eliminated. There are a few problems with reading GRML still present in the parser. However, the next version will resolve these remaining issues. This is the plan for setting the stage for the next incremental version of GRML. It is all about adding sorting and grouping.
Download Seeker links...
[b]Bar Graph MDI (bar graphs in web browsers)[/b]
[b]Headlines MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Pioneer Report MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Tree MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
The web browsers problem using dimensions is not what was initially expected. It seemed the dynamic control was adding items from a GRML file or web page in reverse order. Instead, what seems to be happening, is items are added alphabetically. For example, if banana, orange, and apple are names used in a GRML file or web page, they appear as apple, banana, and orange in GRML file or web browsers.
More links for GRML web browsers:
[b]Headlines MDI (listbox, GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Bar Graph MDI (bar graphs, GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Tree MDI (tree, GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Pioneer Report MDI (list, GRML web browsers)[/b]
A new blog has been launched. It is [b]GRML (web browsers) Blog Lines[/b].
A few more download links are...
[b]Headlines MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Tree MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Pioneer Report MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
Thoughts:
For the 1st time since the invention of the shop sign, there is a direct way to count how many people see the ads and how many of them respond in some positve way. The resutls aren't even close to the typical guesses used in the advertising game to sell ads. So, they simply say the web stats are wrong and go back to their old ways that say more commercials are needed. Too bad the real stats show that consumers are overstaturated and ignore most ads. The problem is that consumers don't buy ads.
It is the large comapines that buy the ads and they don't know if its going to work or not. That means the compaines trust the ad providers to provide useful stats and then trust them even if it disagrees with market data. It is like giving your accountant all your money and asking them if any is missing. Basically, companies are putting themselves at the mercy of the ad agency. If you think some of the professional website tracking software is broken, take a look at traditional ads (tv, radio, print, billboard, etc.).
Creating support for dimensions in GRML (General Reuse Markup Language) file and web browsers has not been without error. Other formats do not have a facility for associating different sets of data in one file. Adding this capability requires a facility to display the different sets of data in the file or web browser using each dimension.
Pioneer Report MDI 3.68 uses dimensions from the "name" attribute of GRML. These links allow downloads.
[b]Soft32 Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]Share Up! Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]Top Shareware Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]Gold Software Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]Drizerz.Net Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]File Forum Beta News Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]My Zips! Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
[b]Files32 Pioneer Report MDI GRML, CSV, and delimited file and web browsers[/b]
Pioneer Report MDI is a GRML, CSV, and text delimited file and web browser. GRML, or General Reuse Markup Language, supports forms, hyperlinks, text, and images. There are four views, Report, Horizontal List, Vertical List, and Thumbnail.
Related links:
[b]Download Bar Graph MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Soft Award Tree MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Download Pipe Pioneer Report MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Sharewareville Tree MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]File Guru Pioneer Report MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Soft Hypermarket Pioneer Report MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]File Light Pioneer Report MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]File Light Headlines MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]My Zips! Tree MDI (GRML web browsers) [/b]
[b][link=http://www.superdownloads.co.uk/download110-orderbyhitsA.html]Super Downloads! (GRML web [b]browsers)[/link][/b]
[b]File Boost Tree MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Download Seeker Bar Graph MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Brothersoft Bar Graph MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
[b]Download-by Tree MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
and for good measure...
[b]Bar Graph MDI (GRML web browsers)[/b]
There are a few blogs on the web covering General Reuse Markup Langauge (GRML), CSV, and delimited formats. They offer news, information, development, and comments.
A few of these blogs are:
[b]GRML Blogspot[/b]
Republishing articles about General Reuse Markup Language (GRML), comma separated values (CSV), and delimited foramts.
[b]GRML 22Blog.com[/b]
Comments and observations about GRML technology, releases, and support.
[b]GRML EBloggy[/b]
[b]GRML BlogDrive[/b]
The blogs about GRML web browsers discuss the product lines, define features, and provide paths of development. There are product summaries and links to product sites.
These blogs are below.
[b]LiveLogCity GRML File and Web Browsers[/b]
Links and descriptions of GRML file and web browsers.
[b]22 Blog GRML File and Web Browsers[/b]
Links and summaries of articles appearing on GRMLBrowser.com.
[b]Blog-City GRML File and Web Browsers[/b]
Descriptions, revision history, and documentation for file and web browser releases.
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