On
database driven applications like Kartris, a single page such as
Product.aspx is used to display every single product in the store. Since
extra information needs to be passed to it to tell it which product to
display, the URLs (web addresses) typically contain extra parameters and
values passed to the page.
As more
information is passed, the URL can become longer and
messier.
To overcome this, Kartris at default
creates 'friendly' URLs, which appear like static page addresses (rather
than a single page with dynamic information passed to it as parameters).
When properly configured, this will make the site appear (both to users
and search engines) as a collection of 'static' pages in a folder
hierarchy, just as if every product was on its very own page and these
pages were sorted into folders.
Despite what
many SEOs believe, there is little if any evidence that the format of
the URL has any influence on search results (though it may well have
done many years ago). Google's official blog says that it doesn't, and
even goes as far as to suggest not rewriting
URLs.
The format of Kartris's 'friendly' URLs
still includes numbers, just before the .aspx at the
end. It is not possible to remove this as the numbers are used by the
system to locate the content. This is very similar to the URL format
used by Amazon and the BBC, that uses numbers within a static format of
URL.