On September 10th, durumis updated with search functionality, scheduled publishing, and canonical link settings.
The search function improves upon the inconvenience of the existing wiki search, enabling blog post searches within durumis.
Scheduled publishing and canonical link settings were added to improve blog management efficiency and search engine optimization. In particular, canonical link settings can help with the exposure of multilingual translated articles.
Hello.
It seems like it's been a while since I posted a notice. I haven't been able to post many notices lately because I've been working on improving the speed of the durumis page. I will do my best to improve in the future.
Below are the update details.
The update is complete and September 10, 2024 (Tuesday) (UTC + 9) was completed.
Update Schedule Notice
Search Function (Update Completed)
Search Button Screen
There is a search bar currently. durumis: Wiki is a site (English, Korean, and Japanese only), and if you searchthere, blog posts are also searchable. Of course, it was inconvenient. Whether to move to the wiki or to set a separate address for the search bar... So, the search bar function has finally been updated.
Scheduled Publishing (Update Completed)
Scheduled publishing is possible by clicking the [Schedule] button at [Publishing time].
Until recently, when writing a post, only 'Publish Immediately' was available. So, if you wanted to write 10 posts and publish them sequentially, you had to access and upload them each time. The scheduled publishing function has been updated. When you click [Reserve], the button name changes to [Scheduled Publish], and you can write a reserved post up to 365 days in the future and publish it at that time.
Reserved posts will appear in the list when you click the [Write] button, so you can modify them before publishing.
Original Link (Canonical URL) Setting (Update Completed)
Canonical Link Setting Screen
First of all, since most blog services do not provide canonical settings, we have simplified the name to [Original Link]. Then, I think I should explain the canonical settings first.
Canonical settingsmeans 'a method of informing search engines which post is the true original when multiple identical or similar posts are uploaded to different places, and which post should be prioritized in search engine results.'
For example,
Blogger Z uploaded a post to blog A and blog B. If Z wants blog B's post to be prioritized in search engine results, they can set the canonical setting in blog A to indicate that blog B's post is the original.
News reporter Y uploaded a post to their company's news site C and also to blog D. In this case, Y can set the canonical setting in the blog D post to indicate that the news site C post is the original, ensuring that news site C appears in search results and blog D does not. However, if blog D is durumis blogthen itwill be displayed in 17 translated languagesinsearch results.
We have also updated the no-index feature, which completely prevents posts from appearing in search results, but it reduces the chance of linked translations being displayed. Therefore, instead of using no-index, setting the canonical setting only for the original post increases the likelihood of translated posts being displayed.