Friday, 30 August 2013
Press release - OSX productivity app receives facelift
I'd like to introduce you to Clipassist.
It's not a clipboard history but easy access to frequently-used bits of text, which it handles as plain-text.
I wrote it for my own productivity. While using any other app I can simply hit an F key and cmd-V and in two keystrokes I've pasted a block of frequently-used text with no formatting issues.
It's been available to everyone else for a while for free. I've recently given it a facelift as well as some useful new features (eg searchbox, New from clipboard) and released version 3.2 to the web (still free) and to the App Store (a mere 1.99)
Friday, 23 August 2013
Using canonical href to exclude duplicates from your xml sitemap
Here's the problem. Scrutiny is finding the same page on your site twice, each with a different url, and including both in your sitemap.
Duplicates in your xml sitemap may not be such a problem according to Google.
However, the same article explains that Google like to know which version of your url they should rank and which page they shouldn't.
The canonical href is the answer. Here is the explanation from Google, but in short, you need to insert a meta tag like this:
This line means 'this is the url I'd like you to rank for this content'. (The page at the url given should obviously have the same content.)
From version 4.3, Scrutiny will pick up this canonical href. You'll find it listed in the SEO table but the column may be way over to the right, or you may need to switch it on in Preferences > Views. Note (as with any of the columns in Scrutiny) if you're interested in this column you can move it by dragging:
You can see in the screenshot above that the index page in this example now has the canonical href. After re-crawling the site, the problem at the start of this article has gone away. Scrutiny's Sitemap tab now only excludes pages where canonical (if present) doesn't match the url of the page. When I export my XML sitemap, only the http://peacockmedia.co.uk version will be included.
Note that Scrutiny will exclude pages according to canonical href in version 4.3.1 and higher
Duplicates in your xml sitemap may not be such a problem according to Google.
However, the same article explains that Google like to know which version of your url they should rank and which page they shouldn't.
The canonical href is the answer. Here is the explanation from Google, but in short, you need to insert a meta tag like this:
<link rel="canonical" href="http://peacockmedia.co.uk" />
From version 4.3, Scrutiny will pick up this canonical href. You'll find it listed in the SEO table but the column may be way over to the right, or you may need to switch it on in Preferences > Views. Note (as with any of the columns in Scrutiny) if you're interested in this column you can move it by dragging:
You can see in the screenshot above that the index page in this example now has the canonical href. After re-crawling the site, the problem at the start of this article has gone away. Scrutiny's Sitemap tab now only excludes pages where canonical (if present) doesn't match the url of the page. When I export my XML sitemap, only the http://peacockmedia.co.uk version will be included.
Note that Scrutiny will exclude pages according to canonical href in version 4.3.1 and higher
Find duplicate content (same content, different url) in your website using Scrutiny
[updated 24 Jun 2019]
Duplicate content on your website is sometimes said to harm your search engine optimisation. It may not be such a serious problem as this article explains.
Here's how to check for duplicate content on your site using Scrutiny. Integrity Pro also has this functionality and will look much the same.
1. First scan your site. If your site isn't already in the sites list, press 'New' and type your starting url. Press 'Next' to see the default settings, press 'Next' again to accept those settings. Press 'Go' beside 'Check for broken links'.
2. When the crawl has finished, switch to the SEO tab
3. Switch the 'Filter' to 'Pages with possible duplicates'
You'll now see possible duplicates in the main view. To see a list of the pages that Scrutiny thinks are duplicates for a particular url, double-click it to open the page inspector.
In this example, the problem has arisen because scrutiny has found links to the same page in two different forms - peacockmedia.co.uk/clipassist and peacockmedia.co.uk/clipassist/index.html
Duplicate content on your website is sometimes said to harm your search engine optimisation. It may not be such a serious problem as this article explains.
Here's how to check for duplicate content on your site using Scrutiny. Integrity Pro also has this functionality and will look much the same.
1. First scan your site. If your site isn't already in the sites list, press 'New' and type your starting url. Press 'Next' to see the default settings, press 'Next' again to accept those settings. Press 'Go' beside 'Check for broken links'.
3. Switch the 'Filter' to 'Pages with possible duplicates'
In this example, the problem has arisen because scrutiny has found links to the same page in two different forms - peacockmedia.co.uk/clipassist and peacockmedia.co.uk/clipassist/index.html
Dealing with duplicates
If you want to deal with this problem, use canonical meta tag in your pagesThursday, 1 August 2013
Categorising your items in Organise
Organise v7.1 adds categories to Items. Items can be in one or more categories, or none. If you don't need to use categories then just ignore the categories box and all will work as before.
1. Categorising your items
You can type a category into individual items. For more than one category, separate using a comma:
Alternatively, you can set the category for more than one item by selecting them (hold down shift to select more than one item in the table, use the search box to find your items, ctrl-click or right-click to call this context menu):
Note that you can remove multiple items from a category using the same method. To remove a category completely, choose it from the Filter box, select all items in the list and use the Remove menu item.
2. Using categories
The filter drop-down box will contain all the categories that you have entered. Simply select a category to see all items in that category. Alternatively you can type the category into the search box:When adding an Item to an Order, you can type a category into the search box:
Reports that work on your inventory can now be tweaked to select items from a category: