bostonherald.com and its one-sentence pages
Teddy Kokoros gets annoyed at the way so many Herald stories online end with a page that has just one sentence on it:
... It seems to me they could just fit the entire article on one page, but they try to spill it over to two pages a lot to increase page hits/add revenue. ...
Ed. page-break note: I work for a trade publication that also breaks its online stories into multiple pages (small example). And we ran into a similar problem as the Herald. Turns out it's fairly tricky to design an algorithm that can deal with all these cases (for example, "If the last page of a story would only have one sentence, just skip it and append that sentence to the page before"). Takes a good programmer, in fact (of which we're lucky to have a bunch), so I suspect what's going on with those annoying one-sentence pages is more an issue of a mediocre algorithm than a desire to increase revenue.
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Comments
That happens here at Universal Hub, too
Sometimes I make a post that is just long enough for your software to generate a "Read more". This requires the user to click and see one more sentence, or occasionally nothing more at all.
And my ad revenues skyrocket!
OK, no.
The default "Read More" algorithm here is incredibly simple: Count up the number of characters, then, when it's reached, put a "Read More" break in. There are page-break modules that are supposedly more sophisticated, but installing them would take actual work.
There's also a super-sekrit codeword you could use to override the default behavior. Since you actually post articles here, I could e-mail you the word, on the provision that if you're ever captured by the enemy, you bite down on the cyanide-laced fake tooth I'll also send.
Thanks for the info. The
Thanks for the info. The template I use on my blog has a similar word count feature before it hits reads more. However, I falsely assumed that it would be easy for someone with more expertise to fix that on a website like the Herald.
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