| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year, 10 months |
| seen | yesterday | |
| stats | profile views | 41 |
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Jul 8 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Jul 8 |
accepted | SEO: targeted or generic URLs performance |
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Jul 7 |
comment |
SEO: targeted or generic URLs performance Thanks. However I do not comprehend the last sentence (the one in parentheses). Derived question: if you implement both options 1 & 2 at the same time (and use canonical URLs to avoid duplicate content), does Google choose the page which option (i.e. URL) ranks best for a particular search (if not, how does it decide)? I'm having a hard time thinking this is the case, since it would be easy to create many pages with well-ranking URLs to guarantee good page rank whatever users are searching for, which I guess is one of the things Google are trying to avoid. +1 for your profile description. |
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Jul 7 |
awarded | Student |
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Jul 7 |
asked | SEO: targeted or generic URLs performance |