Am 01/10/2013 10:59 PM, schrieb Rob Weir:
On Thu, Jan 10, 2013 at 4:36 PM, Marcus (OOo)<marcus.m...@wtnet.de>  wrote:
Am 01/08/2013 09:37 PM, schrieb Andrea Pescetti:

On 07/01/2013 Marcus (OOo) wrote:

Am 01/07/2013 09:54 PM, schrieb Rob Weir:

http://www.openoffice.org/porting/mac/
So I'd recommend either keeping the page and updating it. Or
replacing it with a page that says that the Mac port is now full
integrated with our releases and then link to the download page. Or
put in a 401 redirect from that URL to the download page. ...

OK, then I prefer to use a redirect to the download area.


Sounds good. Actually, we can redirect everything under

http://www.openoffice.org/porting/mac/

to the homepage, since links on the old page include support,
screenshots, downloads... all resources directly available from the
project homepage.


Then I would like to volunteer to try this on Sunday.


Hi Marcus,

I took a closer look at the data and I have some concerns from an SEO
perspective.

We get a large number of visits from users who query Google for terms like:

openoffice for mac
open office mac
openoffice mac
free office for mac
download openoffice for mac

Try these queries in your browser.   See the porting page is the
number one hit.  For me the 2nd hit is CNet and then we start hitting
malware sites.  We don't get another openoffice.org web page until
position #10 in the search results.

If we redirect to the home page, which does not mention "Mac"
anywhere, then the next time Google updates its index it will see that
as the contents of /porting/mac and judge it to be far less relevant
to queries like "openoffice for mac".

Does it help to leave some keywords on the "/porting/mac/index.html"?
The the Google indexing bot recognize it, redirects then to the new webpage and we keep the search hits.

So I think we should consider this carefully.

Of course.

> Is there anything
actually wrong with the /porting/mac page as it is?

Ahm, besides totally outdated and no longer needed data not. ;-)

When I look around there is nearly nothing that should be kept (links, screenshots, X11 <--> Aqua, release news about older versions, FAQs).

Here's an alternative idea.  If the issue is that this is no longer a
"porting" project, then maybe we could do something like this:

1) Create a new landing page for users interested in OpenOffice for
Mac. Maybe it is at http://www.openoffice.org/mac.  Maybe it is based
on whatever is relevant still from /porting/mac.  It doesn't need tons
of content, but enough to be relevant.

2) Redirect /porting/mac/* to /mac/index.html

3) Delete the old /porting/mac

Why does a Google search behave different here? Sorry, I don't see the difference to just redirect.

PS:
I want to get rid of the old content but of course not loose the Google search hits.

Marcus

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