> From: Seth J. Morabito >> having stuff scattered across a zillion personal pages (be they blogs, >> or whatever) is going to make it hard to find the useful one when >> needed
> The sheer vastness of content available, combined with a Google > monoculture, combined with a concerted attempt to GAME the Google > monoculture, is making search and discovery hard An additional issue, I think, is that Google is deprecating sites that use HTTP, versus HTTPS. I can't comment more, lest I start ranting at the utter stupidity of forcing everyone to use HTTPS. But if those blogs are using HTTP, that will push them down the results. > I honestly don't know what to do about it. I don't have a better idea, > unless we go back to something like a directory-style curated > experience, a-la Yahoo! circa 1998-ish. I'm not sure that would scale to cover detailed pages on obsolete computers; why is a manual indexer going to cover them? Anyway, the whole 'how do we find the info' is a part of why I started working on CHWiki, once I discovered it - in addition to the usual advantages of wikis (good for collaboration, good for adding stuff incrementally), it would put all the info in one place, a 'one stop shopping' for old computer info. But when I tried to convince people to post stuff there, instead of on their blogs, I got at least one person who was pretty vehement that no way in h*** were they going to stop putting their stuff in their own blog. Noel