What I did, from my WordPress blog I imported all of my blogger blogs . At WordPress blog under 'User Tools', click 'Import'., all were very well done.
The specific purpose of a 301 redirect is to change the URL of a page without breaking all the links coming to it.
Why would you advise a site owner to be responsible for the maintenance of backlinks beyond his control when there is a perfectly good system already in place?
If your answer implies that you will continue to devalue redirected links then okay, but I wish Google was smart enough to find the bait-and-switchers without ignoring the basic mechanisms of the internet in the process.
I wonder why Google guys use the word "Microsoft" instead of "Bing"
erfanullahjan 2 months ago
i think i'll stick to one good site.
zhenio 1 year ago
[...]you download the list of links from Google or Yahoo or mmh or uuur...mh ooor Micorsoft.
Loved that part...
francescolaffi 2 years ago
What I did, from my WordPress blog I imported all of my blogger blogs . At WordPress blog under 'User Tools', click 'Import'., all were very well done.
MichaelDadona 2 years ago
I merged to two blog*spot blogs into one big wordpress blog.
My blog1 had PR~3/4 & my blog2 had PR~2.
Now merged new blog is on PR~1
:((
chempranav 2 years ago
That's a good explanation. Thank you.
thehousebuilder 2 years ago
The specific purpose of a 301 redirect is to change the URL of a page without breaking all the links coming to it.
Why would you advise a site owner to be responsible for the maintenance of backlinks beyond his control when there is a perfectly good system already in place?
If your answer implies that you will continue to devalue redirected links then okay, but I wish Google was smart enough to find the bait-and-switchers without ignoring the basic mechanisms of the internet in the process.
iwasrobot 2 years ago
actually some of the PR is lost via 301 redirects.
erfanullahjan 2 months ago
Have always wondered about this and will be tackling the issue soon. Thanks Matt.
JulianYoungVideos 2 years ago