Thanks Terry, That’s what I was trying to transfer from my brain to my fingers, but I think I came off more talking in circles than anything. 😉
Also, if I may ask, I know you said that having the /comments/ in the URL isn’t search engine friendly… if you ask me, it’s not search engine unfriendly and I don’t see it as a big deal to have the extra segment in there. Can you provide a link or anything where you’ve read that having the extra segment in there causes problems in search engines? I always was under the impression that having the odd dynamic characters like “?” in the URL made it unfriendly, not text segments.
You can read the book SEObook from SEOBOOK.com, written by the top expert in this field. The further back from the domain name that the article title is, the worse. Logically, I guess, you can see how a search engine would assume it is less important the further down the directory chain in a URL it is.
The index.php part is very bad and I’m surprised that EE still has it this way and in fact removing it is “unsupported.” Interestingly, you see the majority of professionally designed, high end EE blogs not having the index.php and not having the /comments/, which to me if I owned EE, would indicate the desires of the designers to change the default.
The SEOBook is the absolute best $79 (maybe it’s higher now, I bought it two years ago) you’ll ever spend. It’s a huge ebook packed with very critical information for increasing traffic.
By the way, I have found the answer to my own post. I’m surprised that no one mentioned this EE Wiki page considering a lot of people are following it:
http://expressionengine.com/wiki/Cruft_Free_URLs/