I can’t actually access the article from just a URL you send over. You’ll need to paste in the full article text, or at least share the main points, key paragraphs, or a summary with important details—stuff like findings, data, quotes, dates, or any big takeaways.
Once I’ve got that, I can turn it into a unique, SEO-friendly blog post around 600 words, and I’ll follow whatever formatting you want.
Here’s what I’ll need from you to get started:
– The article title you mentioned, so I can get the formatting right (don’t worry, I won’t use an H1).
– The actual article text, or a solid summary with the most important points—think quotes, numbers, methods, results, and the main conclusion.
– Any keywords you want woven in for SEO, plus whether you care about internal or external links.
– Any special angle you want me to lean into, like policy implications, real-world uses, future research, or controversy.
Once you send that over, here’s what you’ll get:
– A fresh, SEO-focused blog post of about 600 words.
– No H1 header—your title will be the page title in your CMS.
– An intro paragraph that sums up what the article covers.
– Clear structure, with:
–
sections that introduce the big ideas or findings.
–
subsections for details, with a couple of sentences between each
and
.
and
.
Just let me know when you’re ready!
For readability.
Wrap paragraphs in <p></p> tags for clarity.
Use bold for emphasis and italics where it makes sense. If you need bullet points, try using
for each item.
Keep the language clear and accessible. Sure, it’s science, but let’s not bore everyone—engagement matters, even for a broad audience.
Try to blend SEO keywords naturally. It’s important, but don’t let it mess with scientific accuracy or how readable the piece is.
If you can’t share the article, I can whip up a generic SEO template on whatever topic you want. Or, if you prefer, I can draft a quick summary post based on a topic you throw my way.
Just let me know how you’d like to go forward.
Here is the source article for this story: The largest programming community on Reddit just banned all content related to AI LLMs — r/programming is prioritizing only high-quality discussions about AI