>Hi, Stuart.
>
>>thanks for that certainly makes sense to me :)
>
>Yes, dynamic pages are perfectly indexable (I have many websites like that) and you can even apply SEO (Search Engine Optimization) techniques to them.
Hi,
I know very little about this but find it intriguing. Assume that I have a database of 10,000 pictures of people and a website page that allows a user to enter a name and (dynamically) get a page containing the relevant image. How do you ensure that someone entering the name 'Fred Bloggs' into a search engine such as Google will get a link to my site at all (let alone to the correct URL to retrieve the image)
Regards,
Viv
>However, there are cirmcumstances in which generated static pages are a good solution. Not sure if that applies to that case, but when you have:
>
>- infrequent updates
>- high consumption
>- needs for distribution networks (like Akamai)
>- needs to port the content to different platform servers
>
>then you can make good use of statically generated content. Indeed, many media websites (like newspapers) have their home pages statically generated every 5 minutes or so. You can always put that contained within a more common web site, but static HTML is the most scalable solution in many cases.
>
>Regards,
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