Wednesday, 17 October 2007
2 messages
Hi Andrew.
The downloading process requires that the widget be added to all individual permalink pages that are to have their content analysed. If too many of these pages are downloaded without the widget being present, it means we will not have enough content to generate any useful tags, so we halt the download process and flag the error you saw until the problem can be fixed.
In your case, while the widget is on the home page, it has not yet been added to the individual permalink pages. For example: http://www.andrewbaisley.com/2007/10/mac-vs-pc-on-web-20-websites.html does not have the Jiglu widget on it.
If you can put the widget on these pages, then log into Jiglu and click on the link to "Change the site details", then click Save, the download process will try again.
I can see how the error message you got hasn't made things very clear, and we will look into phrasing that better. The 5 is a bit of a red herring in this case, it is actually 5 non-html pages which the process will completely ignore anyway. The only important bit about the log in your case is the bit about the fact it couldn't find the widget on the permalink pages.
Hope this has helped. Please let us know if you have any further problems or questions.
Best regards,
Graham.
Hi Sharon.
The best way to do this is to create a space within Jiglu specifically for the blog you wish to tag alone, then manage it through that space rather than the links on your home page. Here are a few step by step instructions:
1. Create a new space in Jiglu.
2. Make it public to view, but private to join.
3. Go to the new space home page, then click on the "Settings" tab.
4. Click on the Tagged sites link.
5. Click on "New site".
6. Enter the site details like you would normally, then click save.
7. Add the autotag widget to the blog as you would for your other sites. Jiglu should do the rest.
The tags will be generated and can be managed under the space you just created. Please let us know if you get any problems.
Best regards,
Graham.






