Lou Rosenfeld’s Bloug

This lowest price cephalexin can cause a person to develop prolonged muscular paralysis from allopurinol prescription standard doses of these medications. This will reduce your risk viagra without a prescription of injection-related side effects, such as bleeding or pain at buy generic diclofenac online the injection site. Once the individual connects to a doctor, buy cheap augmentin online they can get advice on long-term treatment plans, such as estradiol valerate prescription suggestions on changes in diet or exercise or mental health lasix follow-ups. A person should contact their doctor if they experience purchase serevent online any symptoms of DVT, such as pain, swelling, cramping and buy generic synthroid cost oral darkening of the skin of the affected leg. Preventing people order cheapest cialis dose from accessing safe abortions performed by trained healthcare professionals in celexa sale sanitary conditions does not change their reasons for needing one aldactone no online prescription and does not reduce the number of abortions. In most cases,.

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?