Not to mix quality of th esite with Google results, but you can improve the
"I'm feeling lucky" results by improving your Google page rank. That goes
up
the more people click your site when they type in keywords that match your
meta or site contents mixed in with the number of folks that link to you.
Plus a dash of pepper, and what I think is nutmeg.
For what it's worth, "fedora", "fedora core" and "fedora
linux" take me to
> On Wednesday 07 June 2006 05:17, Naoki <naoki(a)valuecommerce.com> wrote:
>> Don't flame me, just making an observation and voicing an opinion ( and
>> we all know about those ).
>>
>> I typed the following terms into google and hit "I'm feeling
Lucky" and
>> this is what I felt about the results..
>>
> ...
>> "fedora" - Without doubt the most disappointing, and least exciting
>> result of the bunch.
>>
>> Of the fedora sites I tend to lean towards
fedoraproject.org being the
>> nicest, fedora.info coming in second, while fedora.us is down for me so
>> I can't tell.
>>
>> I tend to think the same as Bill Hicks when it comes to marketing but
it
>> would be nice if Fedora was better represented.
>>
>> Is anybody working on perhaps improving the situation or would this be
>> deemed low priority / unimportant ?
>>
>
> There's not too terribly much more we can do about this. Google's
results
> are
> largely determined by their PageRank formulas a few other automated
> factors,
> and the standing of results can change at any time. fedora.redhat.comwas
> long the official Fedora website, and the migration to
fedoraproject.org
> has
> been slow in many regards. As more people and websites begin pointing
to
>
fedoraproject.org instead, that domain will rise in the results. Having
> the
> external references split between the two domains has a negative impact
on
> the standings of each. If you want to help, the best thing you can do
is
> tell people to direct their links to the
fedoraproject.org domain.
>
> --
> Patrick "The N-Man" Barnes
> nman64(a)n-man.com
>
>
http://www.n-man.com/
>
> LinkedIn:
>
http://www.linkedin.com/in/nman64
>
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I believe Naoki was referring to the quality of the Fedora sites. The
Fedora sites do not have nearly as much information and documentation as
the other sites. We know that much of the excellent Redhat documentation
applies to Fedora as well, but within the Fedora sites there is almost no
documentation. For example, there is no "Fedora User Guide" in the Fedora
sites. Also, if you take a look at Recent Changes in the Fedora Project
site, most of the activity has to do with this group. There is very little
activity in the "real information" area.
As a long time Fedora user, I have often turned to other places to find
information on how to run my Fedora Linux systems. Most often I turn to
Redhat, or
tldp.org. Very seldom do I find answers in
fedora.redhat.com,
or fedoraproject.com... The answer, of course, is that some of us have to
pick up that ball, and run with it!
Saludos,
Irving Bennett
Panama
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