Thursday, January 17, 2008

 

Blogger Vs Wordpress

Blogger and Wordpress are both useful blogging platforms, and each has their fans. I happen to use both of them and thought I'd briefly go through what I perceive to be some of the pros and cons of each in order to work out which is best.

The Case For Blogger
Blogger is a simple to use blogging system from Google. It's free to use and allows someone to very quickly get a blog up and running, either under the blogspot.com domain or under a custom domain name of their own choosing. I prefer to publish by FTP to my own website. You login to the Blogger website and publish posts, which generate static HTML files. Because it generates HTML files, you can publish these to any web server to which you have access by FTP.

The Case Against Blogger
There's no technical reason for it, but Blogger blogs often don't look as good as Wordpress blogs. There are a variety of templates available, but I genuinely haven't seen many with a "wow" factor. The method of commenting on a Blogger blog isn't great either. To add a comment requires you to be taken off the blog site and to a blogger hosted page. This gives a slightly fractured feel to the user experience when adding a comment. Making a change to a large blog, or publishing a new post can be really slow because each static page needs to be recreated (if you are using FTP publishing).

The Case For Wordpress
Wordpress is really nice to use with some features - it actually makes blogging a pleasure. A wide variety of attractive themes is available, and switching between them is a doddle. There's loads of useful plugins available that extend the functionality of Wordpress.

Another thing I like Wordpress is that I can write posts in advance that don't show up until on or after the timestamp that I give them. I'm currently writing a blog about a TV show airing on BBC one. I've already seen all episodes in advance, and can write blog posts recapping episodes, and timestamp them so that the posts will automatically show up after the show has been aired.

Wordpress allows you to take control of the URL structure and create SEO friendly pages. The ability to create "pages" as well as "posts" gives Wordpress makes it feel more like a CMS than just a blog.

The Case Against Wordpress
Wordpress often needs updating, as new versions come out or security risks are discovered. Because it's run from a database, if there's any problems with the server hosting the database, the whole blog goes down. Whilst you can run mySQL and Wordpress on Windows web hosting, you can only get the benefit of SEO-friendly URLs by using mod-rewrite, which is available on Apache web server which is usually part of a LAMP hosting environment. Setting up Wordpress is a bit more of a technical challenge than Blogger, although some hosts do offer a "one click" installation.

In summing up, both Blogger and Wordpress are useful tools which will allow anyone to get a decent looking site up and running and allow them to concentrate on content. My own personal opinion is that if I am creating a new site which is a dedicated blog, I will plump for Wordpress. If I am adding a blog as a section to an existing site, and probably just using it as a means to regularly add content, I tend to use Blogger.

Using the logic above, this website should actually be on Wordpress and I do hope to migrate across sometime this year.

Let me know if I missed an advantage of disadvantage of Wordpress or Blogger...

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Wednesday, January 02, 2008

 

The Joy Of Wordpress: New Look Site In A Few Clicks

One of the best things about Wordpress is all the themes that are available, which you an easily get hold of and apply to your site in just a few clicks. Ok, there's nothing new there - we all know that. But I just gave a site a total new look and thought I'd share the example.

I started a personalised gifts website in the months before Christmas and applied a Christmas theme. Now with Christmas out of the way, the site has regenerated like something out of Doctor Who, and with a few clicks, now has the look of a personalised gifts website for Valentines Day.

Before...


After...


Once the new theme was applied, there was a bit of tinkering to be done to get it just right, and I need to edit the text on a couple of pages where it directly mentions Christmas, but essentially I have a totally new look website all ready for the next major gift giving occasion with virtually no effort.

Here's a great 101 on Wordpress over at Kirsty's blog. By the way, after putting that link to Kirsty's site, I couldn't remember the origin of the term "101" so Googled it and found this out from Wikipedia: "101 (one hundred [and] one) is the natural number following 100 and preceding 102". Thanks Wikipedia, where would we be without you!

p.s. Happy new year.

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