![]() | |
![]() |
| | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
| |||
| |||
|
|
"Andrew Thompson" <SeeMySites (AT) www (DOT) invalid> wrote in comp.infosystems.www.authoring.site-design: On Wed, 7 Jul 2004 23:56:26 +0100, phil hunt wrote: How does "stable link guarantee" grab you? 'Stable Link' solves the 'Links Table' problem, but I feel 'stable link guarantee' is just too wordy. Try saying it 10 times fast. What about "pledge" or "promise" instead of "guarantee"? |
#22
| |||
| |||
|
|
On Thu, 08 Jul 2004 00:28:41 GMT, Randall Bart <Barticus (AT) att (DOT) spam.net> wrote: 'Twas Wed, 07 Jul 2004 11:14:21 GMT when all comp.infosystems.www.authoring.misc stood in awe as jim (AT) jibbering (DOT) com (Jim Ley) uttered: Stable makes sense to me, and I definately think it makes more sense than coining a new word. "Stable link" means a link that is unchanging. "Link stable" means a place for housing links. Or: (a) link (which is) stable. |
|
But I agree it is potentially misleading, and therefore a sub-optimum term. How about "Real Link", as text to go on a button? |
My dislike of the term still stands,
#23
| |||
| |||
|
|
But I agree it is potentially misleading, and therefore a sub-optimum term. How about "Real Link", as text to go on a button? I don't like this one. It makes me wonder what a "Fake Link" would be. I imagine something like this: span style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;">clicky!</span |
(okay, my example is a joke! ![]() |
|
Finding a short name for "I will do my best to keep this URL pointing at this content for as long as I can" seems like quite a hard proposition. |
#24
| |||
| |||
|
|
The campaign (whether it'sa called Link Stable, or Stable Links, or Real Hyperlinks, or whatever) is about 3 things: 1. ensuring that when someone follows a link they get to the content behind it not some annoying registration scheme 2. giving some assurance to people who link to a page that the page isn't likely to go away or be hidden behind registration 3. ensuring that pages stay up and are addressable via an unchanging URL I can't use "permalink" because it's an already existnig word and has already aquired a meaning other than what I am looking for |
#25
| |||
| |||
|
|
phil hunt wrote: The campaign (whether it'sa called Link Stable, or Stable Links, or Real Hyperlinks, or whatever) is about 3 things: 1. ensuring that when someone follows a link they get to the content behind it not some annoying registration scheme 2. giving some assurance to people who link to a page that the page isn't likely to go away or be hidden behind registration 3. ensuring that pages stay up and are addressable via an unchanging URL I can't use "permalink" because it's an already existnig word and has already aquired a meaning other than what I am looking for Actually, no, a permalink guarantees to be a *permanent link* much like the 3 points you state above. Why do you think it's so different? Because it's blog-terminology? |
#26
| |||
| |||
|
|
Permalink is a work with already existing connotations, roughly "this is a link from the front page of the blog to a page just containing this one story". Of course, it also involves the notion of permanence, which is one of the things I'm looking for, but my concept includes other ideas as well, such as "don't link to pages that are encumbered by registration, if you can avoid it". |
#27
| |||
| |||
|
|
I've now produced some logos for "Link Stable" (aka "Campaign for Real Hyperlinks"). |
|
I've put the logos on my blog at: |
|
http://www.zen19725.zen.co.uk/weblog/art_257.html Let me know what you think... |
#28
| |||
| |||
|
|
http://www.zen19725.zen.co.uk/weblog/art_257.html Let me know what you think... I think the first link ("My previous weblog article") in that blog entry leads to a 404 error message. |
|
It all seems a bit of a farce to me. HTTP-link permanence is one of the things that can never really be guaranteed, because (ultimately) it depends on the permanent allocation of domain names. |
|
Unfortunately, domain name allocations depend on agencies (the registrars and registries) who have no vested interested in link-stability. (In fact, as the registration system stands now, registrars make more money from multiple short-term registrations of a given domain than they would from a long-term registration.) Hell, the URLs in your blog still use file extensions, which is a strike against their true long-term stability: http://www.w3.org/Provider/Style/URI If you really want URI permanence, you need to step outside the DNS system, start thinking about URNS, and start developing URN-based resolvers. That's a pretty big project. A lot bigger than a couple of logos. |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |