One Rockin Site Map Generator WordPress Plugin for Your Blog
ByCheck out this rockin plugin for your WordPress-driven blog or church website called Really Simple Site Map.It lists every post and page you’ve ever published and a solution to a more polish sitemap than the Google Sitemap Generator plugin (which still rocks).
See how it works by looking at my site map — and every post I’ve blogged about here.
I get dizzy looking at it … lots of sleepless nights!
[Found via Weblog Tools Collection]
Update: Lorelle of the famous and insanely useful Lorelle on WordPress blog stopped by to correct some things about this post. She gave me an education … and I’m just honored she stopped by! Here’s what she said in the comments that I don’t want you to miss:
Just a little clarification is needed here. There is a LOT of confusion between the terms “sitemap” and “site map”.
A “site map” is a listing of your blog posts on your blog, like a table of contents. This is what the poorly named “Really Simple Sitemap” does. It should be “Really Simple Site Map”.
A “sitemap” is a hidden XML file that is read by Google, Yahoo, and other search engines as a guide to all your blog posts. It isn’t “readable” by humans since it is inside a bunch of code. That’s what the Google Sitemap Plugin does. That’s correctly named.
You might want to fix your post to correctly label what does what. You offer such great information, I’d hate to see this confusion be perpetuated.
Thanks and keep up the great work.
Just a little clarification is needed here. There is a LOT of confusion between the terms “sitemap” and “site map”.
A “site map” is a listing of your blog posts on your blog, like a table of contents. This is what the poorly named “Really Simple Sitemap” does. It should be “Really Simple Site Map”.
A “sitemap” is a hidden XML file that is read by Google, Yahoo, and other search engines as a guide to all your blog posts. It isn’t “readable” by humans since it is inside a bunch of code. That’s what the Google Sitemap Plugin does. That’s correctly named.
You might want to fix your post to correctly label what does what. You offer such great information, I’d hate to see this confusion be perpetuated.
Thanks and keep up the great work.