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As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

##Update

Update

So, after several days nobody has had anything to say on webmasters, so I'm going to make a bold step and state that it's OK for mod_rewrite questions to be migrated, based on the following template:

Consider the following typical scenario: a paid hosting environment (either IIS or Apache, Windows or Linux, whatever).

  • If it's something you CAN do without getting your host involved, then YES it belongs on webmaster.se
  • If it's something you CAN'T do and need to get your host involved, then NO it's not for pro webmasters and should be closed or migrated to SF

As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

##Update

So, after several days nobody has had anything to say on webmasters, so I'm going to make a bold step and state that it's OK for mod_rewrite questions to be migrated, based on the following template:

Consider the following typical scenario: a paid hosting environment (either IIS or Apache, Windows or Linux, whatever).

  • If it's something you CAN do without getting your host involved, then YES it belongs on webmaster.se
  • If it's something you CAN'T do and need to get your host involved, then NO it's not for pro webmasters and should be closed or migrated to SF

As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

Update

So, after several days nobody has had anything to say on webmasters, so I'm going to make a bold step and state that it's OK for mod_rewrite questions to be migrated, based on the following template:

Consider the following typical scenario: a paid hosting environment (either IIS or Apache, Windows or Linux, whatever).

  • If it's something you CAN do without getting your host involved, then YES it belongs on webmaster.se
  • If it's something you CAN'T do and need to get your host involved, then NO it's not for pro webmasters and should be closed or migrated to SF
replaced http://meta.webmasters.stackexchange.com/ with https://webmasters.meta.stackexchange.com/
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As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over therestart a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

##Update

So, after several days nobody has had anything to say on webmasters, so I'm going to make a bold step and state that it's OK for mod_rewrite questions to be migrated, based on the following template:

Consider the following typical scenario: a paid hosting environment (either IIS or Apache, Windows or Linux, whatever).

  • If it's something you CAN do without getting your host involved, then YES it belongs on webmaster.se
  • If it's something you CAN'T do and need to get your host involved, then NO it's not for pro webmasters and should be closed or migrated to SF

As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

##Update

So, after several days nobody has had anything to say on webmasters, so I'm going to make a bold step and state that it's OK for mod_rewrite questions to be migrated, based on the following template:

Consider the following typical scenario: a paid hosting environment (either IIS or Apache, Windows or Linux, whatever).

  • If it's something you CAN do without getting your host involved, then YES it belongs on webmaster.se
  • If it's something you CAN'T do and need to get your host involved, then NO it's not for pro webmasters and should be closed or migrated to SF

As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

##Update

So, after several days nobody has had anything to say on webmasters, so I'm going to make a bold step and state that it's OK for mod_rewrite questions to be migrated, based on the following template:

Consider the following typical scenario: a paid hosting environment (either IIS or Apache, Windows or Linux, whatever).

  • If it's something you CAN do without getting your host involved, then YES it belongs on webmaster.se
  • If it's something you CAN'T do and need to get your host involved, then NO it's not for pro webmasters and should be closed or migrated to SF
added 616 characters in body
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Mark Henderson
  • 69.3k
  • 1
  • 32
  • 59

As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

##Update

So, after several days nobody has had anything to say on webmasters, so I'm going to make a bold step and state that it's OK for mod_rewrite questions to be migrated, based on the following template:

Consider the following typical scenario: a paid hosting environment (either IIS or Apache, Windows or Linux, whatever).

  • If it's something you CAN do without getting your host involved, then YES it belongs on webmaster.se
  • If it's something you CAN'T do and need to get your host involved, then NO it's not for pro webmasters and should be closed or migrated to SF

As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

As a mod on webmasters, maybe I can shed some light.

.htaccess and mod_rewrite rules are a real grey area, even on the webmasters site. Our definition of a webmaster is someone who takes care of the day to day running of a website, which does NOT include:

  • Server configuration
  • Apache/IIS installation
  • Apache/IIS configuration

As these are generally taken care of by a sysadmin. Basically, if it's something your hosting provider takes care of for you, then it's not a webmaster problem.

But you raise an interesting point. I will start a meta discussion over there and try and bring it up again. Feel free to throw in your $0.02 on the webmasters meta.

##Update

So, after several days nobody has had anything to say on webmasters, so I'm going to make a bold step and state that it's OK for mod_rewrite questions to be migrated, based on the following template:

Consider the following typical scenario: a paid hosting environment (either IIS or Apache, Windows or Linux, whatever).

  • If it's something you CAN do without getting your host involved, then YES it belongs on webmaster.se
  • If it's something you CAN'T do and need to get your host involved, then NO it's not for pro webmasters and should be closed or migrated to SF
added 185 characters in body
Source Link
Mark Henderson
  • 69.3k
  • 1
  • 32
  • 59
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Source Link
Mark Henderson
  • 69.3k
  • 1
  • 32
  • 59
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