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SEO, Nothing changed.

Gilbert (one of the original guys behind prooving Silverlight + SEO) of  had a great write-up outlining some depth thought around this whole SEO buzz that Adobe unleashed early this week.

https://bits.samiq.net/2008/07/seo-for-ria-status-few-days-later.html

I like this quote:

Microsoft has .XAML and the .XAP extensions, the second been just a zip file renamed; which pretty much are open for anyone to consume, crawl and index; all this available to the world from day 1. XAML at its end is XML and it remains XML once deployed (different to MXML that gets pre-compiled to AS3 and later to binary format for it to be published); which could allow savvy developers to XLST the markup to XHTML, provide a site map as per normal practices and best part, one the content owner, will have the chance to decide what the bot gets to see and what remains invisible.

The discussion put forward is at the end of the day, nothing has changed, the problems of yesterday still exist today and the part hat hits home for me, is the fact you don't need to hire a team of engineers to help you understand our formats - .xap and .xaml.

As for deep linking, same principals apply here for both Adobe and Microsoft; you still need to figure out how your end users move in and out of the solution you’ve built. This still requires a RIA Architect to decide how this composition comes together. Google is unlikely to automate this for us, as in the end this is what the sales pitch during this week has been.

Correct. Google isn't the magic bullet here, you still need to the same amount of work you did prior to Adobe's announcement(s). You still need to figure out how the various views/screens come together, how folks can bookmark (albeit Deep Link) to that point in time. Otherwise you will have as Gilbert outlines in this diagram:

SEO Flash

In some cases this may work, in most RIA it's pretty much a case of "guess where I live" game.

I think this last quote summarises the state of play perfectly

The problem at hand still remains unsolved (so don't think on throwing that SWFObject nor the SWFAddress code away, just yet), all that happened really is Adobe took out some insurance to keep the .SWF extension relevant through the welcoming arms of Google and Yahoo!

Read more here:

https://bits.samiq.net/2008/07/seo-for-ria-status-few-days-later.html

Comments

  • Anonymous
    July 03, 2008
    Finally a descent response from Microsoft and one that illustrates how Adobe did search no favours this week.

  • Anonymous
    July 03, 2008
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    July 03, 2008
    I love the quote "take out some insurance to keep the .swf extension relevant through the welcoming arms of Google..."   The funny part is that it so craftily implies that .swf is somehow not relevant... or facing an impending doom.  But... if that were even close to true, why would you have to be making such an effort to tell people that's happening?  Seems to me (if it were true) you could just sit back and watch it die.  I daresay your prediction is years premature.

  • Anonymous
    July 07, 2008
    Phillip your videos are disturbing.. yet i can't stop watching them.. does that make wrong?

  • Anonymous
    July 09, 2008
    I find it very comforting that Microsoft employees still need to resort to talking down other technologies in a failed attempt to make their own look better. It's a clear sign that Silverlight has a long way to go, or you'd be highlighting its benefits backed up by some cool showcase applications instead. I'm still waiting for those, and particularly the ones that did not receive MS funding. Why don't you show us what your technology can do, rather than sitting in your armchair criticizing? The fact of the matter is that there is no Silverlight content out there that needs to worry about SEO.

  • Anonymous
    July 17, 2008
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    July 17, 2008
    Deep Linking can mean many things to many people. In my view Deep Linking isn't always about "Goto this URL and the application will automatically navigate you to that proposed state". Deep Linking can be like New York Times reader. You search the hard drive of your computer for an article, you find the article, click on it and the GUI around NYT is contextually aware of what you just clicked on and reacts. Same methodolgy applies with Microsoft Word. Click on a docx file and it self inflates inside Office and you're able to not only have the document open within context, but it will resume your last known state. RIA and SEO isn't something I find fitting for future, it's again essentially kicking over the bee hive to get to the honey?..

  • Anonymous
    July 17, 2008
    The comment has been removed