Lou Rosenfeld’s Bloug

When cheapest estrace vaginal cream most people talk about bioidentical hormones, they are usually talking cafergot online stores about these un-FDA-regulated custom-compounded formulations The American College of Obstetricians buy cialis from canada and Gynecologists, the Endocrine Society, and the North American Menopause nexium for order Society have also issued statements against custom-compounded hormones. Also, there buying generic cheapest are currently no long-term studies or tests available that have cheap methotrexate looked at the use of bioidentical hormones. If more research best price (ovral into bioidentical hormones is carried out in the future, they cafergot online stores may prove to be safe enough for people to use. discount methotrexate Bioidentical hormones have the exact chemical and molecular structure as buy dexamethasone without prescription the human body's hormones while other types of lab-made hormones order cheapest artane no prescription consultation do not. Due to the controversy still surrounding the safety buy in us of bioidentical hormones, most women going through perimenopause may want buy zofran to consider other treatment options first. The doctor will determine what.

In today’s Bloug, Lou says we should introduce the memetic web concept to search vendors. That will be our next step.

He cleverly notes that they could tap into the memespaces by recognizing an area code (or some other existing taxonomy like ISBN) and then prepending the memespace identifier, when they know it.

Our simple proposal for ISBN is just MEMOISBN-0596000359. This is the meme ID for the Polar Bear book (Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, by Lou and Peter).

See the memespaces page for others.

Search engines will also be key players in the control of meme ID spamming.

Any good contacts to recommend at Google et al.?

2 Responses to “Lou Rosenfeld’s Bloug”

  1. matthew smillie Says:

    If a search engine could reliably recognise (say) an ISBN, why would it need the memespace prefix at all? Could it not just recognise a probable ISBN in the query, and then search its index of ISBNs it’s previously recognised on pages?

  2. Administrator Says:

    Matthew,

    The presence of an ISBN on a page does not mean the page is “about” the book, only that the book is mentioned there.

    Right?