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It happened recently, more details here [webmasterworld.com].
Can you please give us more informations on if those sites where updated after submission?
I was wondering if this was just bad luck or if other people have had the same thing happen recently.
I'm still a bit confused on lizzies example, I've read the whole thread a number of times and all I can see is Lizzie saying she dropped from yahoo webpages..
[webmasterworld.com...]
After you read it, try to surf thoses sites with JavaScript turned off on your browser. If everything works OK, and you can't see a reason why Yahoo directory dropped them, feel free to sticky mail me your adresses. I will try to find something.
IMHO they should be pushing 'the latest' to the fore rather than penalising those that choose to target users above a certain browser threshold etc. I also think that consideration should be given to the category requested in relation to the audience that may use the site. One of my sites refused via Biz Express was for a web design client who extensively used DHTML and Java and the only error was a slight mis-positioning in Netscape 4.7. Even this did not obscure or prevent information being clearly visible. It really was a very good, informative site.
Would someone searching for, or looking at, a site from a Web Design agency expect them to produce a site which was fully functional using 3.0, Java dodgy browsers?
Yet to see any of my 'archive' sites disappear (fingers crossed)!
The receipie is simple: You start with plain vanilla HTML site.
You provide the site with a external JavaScript redirect to the JavaScript version. If the visitor is without JavaScript he will stay with the plain vanilla HTML site, just like SE spiders. About 95% of real visitors will be redirected to this JS version without noticing it. This way 101% (due to rounding) of people have what they like to have.
If you insist on delivering a site with all the wizzbang you like, please provide the site with all wizzbang detection you need. So people not liking what you like at least get the plain vanilla HTML version.
OK, Yahoo is alergic to peanuts. It represents at least 30% of traffic. Is it a good idea trying to force some down his troath?
*Bobby is a free service provided by CAST to help Web page authors identify and repair significant barriers to access by individuals with disabilities.*
You can download Bobby to test a whole site,or get an online report for a single page.The report is pretty detailed, I submitted the home page of a Y! listed site, and was quite surprised at how many "improvements" were suggested.
While not suggesting you should comply with everything suggested, it's a useful tool to identify what they, and possibly Y!, see as problem areas.
Macguru, would that external JS redirect file have any negative implications with the SEs?
I do not use external JS redirects from doorways or from other domains. You can read a couple of interesting ideas and techniques on using framesets to improve positions here [webmasterworld.com]. Of course it is a little more work, but I get good resutls this way.
I've been out of the loop so I have no idea why or how. I emailed Yahoo about a couple of these to try and identify what's going on.
These sites use minimal java or css or any of these techniques. My only other guess is load time.
I'll post what I discover.