We are working with a site that has what appears to be a frame in the middle but it is not targeting a new html page it is just a div hiding content until you use the scroll bar.
What are best practices for working with this?
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We are working with a site that has what appears to be a frame in the middle but it is not targeting a new html page it is just a div hiding content until you use the scroll bar.
What are best practices for working with this?
I see. The SEOMoz tool is displaying this. I would report it to SEOMoz then.
I don't need them. The client has them and I wanted to get a consensus before I suggested that they rip them down.
But isn't this really for things like Google Analytics code? The code I am talking about is stuff like CSS and Javascript that could be in external files but are not currently.
But isn't this really for things like Google Analytics code? The code I am talking about is stuff like CSS and Javascript that could be in external files but are not currently.
In the old days frames were a problem because they could end up being orphaned pages that get indexed and appear in the SERPS but had to navigation so they were useless. Are frames still a problem with Google and if so what are the suggested solutions?
What are best practices for moving code into other folders to help speed up a crawling for bots? We once moved some javascript from an SEO's suggestion and the site suddenly looked like crap until we undid the changes. How do you figure our what code should be consolidated? What code do you use to indicate what has been moved and to where?
Don't know about the dates yet Mat but you are right about the links!
Thanks Keri,
I am just now coming aboard so I don't know what changes were made but I do know that they outsourced SEO to some Asian company that may have been linking in a "rather unnatural" way
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