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Category: Blogging (page 5 of 9)

Comparing Tumblr and Posterous

Comparing Tumblr & Posterous | 40Tech

Today, 40Tech is pleased to present a guest post by Karma.

You suave and debonaire 40Tech readers likely know all about microblogging. If you like the ease of sharing things through Facebook and Twitter but wish you could post longer entries with more formatting, Tumblr or Posterous might be what you need. Alternatively, if you want to start a blog but have been overwhelmed by WordPress, Movable Type, or Blogger—Tumblr and Posterous are a dream come true. Posting to both sites allows all the standard features of a blog post: you can toggle between rich text and HTML, customize your theme, split your entries into multiple pages and alter the formatting. However, these sites are taking the lead over traditional blogging platforms because it is much easier to get up and running. They also have some features that leave those other blogging sites in the dust.

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The Amazon Crash and Burn, And How It Affected an Ordinary Blogger

Amazon crash and burn.jpeg

What a week for the cloud. On April 19, Sony took down the PlayStation Network in the face of hacker attacks that compromised the network. Two days later, large portions of Amazon Web Services crashed and burned, due to technical glitches. Amazon has since recovered, but the PlayStation Network is still offline. Much has been reported about the effect of the Amazon outage on major sites like Quora, reddit, and Foursquare. But many “ordinary” bloggers use Amazon services as well. How did it affect them? We spoke to a blogger whose sites were taken offline by the outage, and learned a few things.

 

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Hey Loser! (Why Does Internet Anonymity Give Rise To Jerks?)

rude

Did you finish grade school or are you just another illiterate ghetto punk?

No, I’m not talking to you. That first sentence is a comment from one reader to another on a local news site. It’s an example of “internet muscles.” You know what I’m talking about – the attitude and language of some people, when they speak to someone online in a manner quite different from how they’d act if they met that person face to face. Read more


Mac Blogging App Comparison – MarsEdit vs. ecto vs. Blogo

mac blogging app comparison

September 27, 2011: I’ve reconsidered the decision that I made in this post. Check out my update, where I explain why I’ve now switched to MarsEdit.

The hardest part of making the switch from Windows to Mac is often on the software side of things. While there are many great OS X apps, sometimes it can be hard to find the perfect replacement for an app that you’ve used on Windows. Since I’m not dual booting or running virtualization on my MacBook Air, I ran into that issue when searching for a replacement for Windows Live Writer. Cast whatever stones you want at Microsoft for other reasons, but Live Writer is an excellent blogging app. My search for a replacement for Live Writer focused on three choices: Blogo, MarsEdit, and ecto.

All three apps offer a fully functional trial version, so you can try out each and decide which one you prefer. You should do that, as there’s no right or wrong answer here. Each app has strengths and weaknesses, so your choice will come down to your workflow and your personal preferences. Don’t expect any of them to be as easy to use as Live Writer, though, as none of the apps offer an easy way to import your theme for WYSIWYG editing, as with Live Writer.

What I was looking for was an app that handled images easily (especially padding between the image and the text), something that integrated well with WordPress, and something that just let me write. I know that some of you are coders, and like handcrafting each post, with minute control. Not me. I just want to write, without thinking about HTML.

 

Blogo

When I first started, I thought that Blogo would be my choice. It has the most attractive interface of the three, and is also the most simple. That simplicity can be good, but also comes at a price. Unlike MarsEdit and ecto, Blogo just doesn’t give you as many options to tweak to your liking. If Blogo works for you out of the box, great. If it doesn’t, you’re kind of stuck.

Blogo’s image handling is as simple as the rest of the interface. You drag an image (I did it from LittleSnapper, but you can do it from Finder as well) into a post, and then specify the image size. Short of editing the HTML of your post, there are no other options readily available to tweak an image, such as adjusting padding and margins.

Blogo

Blogo’s other functions are basic, with buttons to bold, italicize, underline, or strikeout text, and to block quote text, create a list, and insert a link. You can also select your blog’s categories from a dropdown list. From the interface, you can publish a post to your blog (immediately, or scheduled for a future date), send a draft to your blog, or preview the post. The preview functionality is quite good, giving you a look at what the post would look like on your site. It’s a shame that this look couldn’t be carried over to the editing interface, like Live Writer’s WYSIWYG mode.

Blogo’s simplicity initially appealed to me, but over time I found too many limitations. I wanted more control over images, and, worse yet, I encountered a few bugs. On one occassion, I couldn’t get my cursor back to the Title box to edit the tile. Also, I’ve found that toggling between Rich Text mode, and back again, would add white space between paragraphs. Worse, this switching between modes inserted HTML code into my posts.

Blogo was an attractive, simple blogging app, but it left me wanting more. It can be purchased for $25.

 

MarsEdit

While using Blogo, I also was using MarsEdit. MarsEdit isn’t as simple as Blogo, but provides more options. MarsEdit has a dropdown formatting menu, that allows you to easily format your text. The image editing options are as basic as Blogo’s, and pale in comparision to what is found in Live Writer. You can set image size and alignment, but can’t do much more than that. As of this writing, I still haven’t found a way to edit an image once it is inserted into a post (short of editing the HTML, or deleting and reinserting the image). This is such basic functionality, that I may just be missing it.

MarsEdit

MarsEdit allows you to easily select post categories from your blog, and to input tags. While MarEdit retrieves your category list from you blog (or, at least it did with my WordPress blog), it does not do so with tags. This means that you have to recall your tags from your own memory, assuming you want to be consistent with your tags on your site.

MarsEdit has a nice Server Options interface, where you can use a dropdown menu to set a post’s status as published or draft. I preferred this over the interfaces in Blogo and ecto, where I sometimes held my breath clicking a button, not sure if I was unwittingly sending an unfinished post to 40Tech.

MarsEdit is a well-rounded app, and a strong choice for someone who likes to tweak options. Ultimately, though, I wasn’t happy with the image handling options, and how MarsEdit handles tags. If MarEdit suits you needs, you can purchase it for $39.95.

 

ecto

The third and final app that I tested was ecto. ecto is closer to MarsEdit than it is to Blogo. As with MarsEdit and Blogo, you can select categories from a list, but you also can select your blog’s tags from a list as well (at least on a WordPress blog you can). This gave ecto a leg up on the competition.

ecto1

The expected text formatting options, such as bold, italics, and text justification, are present in a smaller toolbar in the editing window. One selection that isn’t present is the ability to designate a heading for text. For example, the word “ecto” at the start of this section of the article uses heading 4, which is set by a tag in 40Tech’s CSS. Blogo didn’t have this option either, but it was present in MarsEdit. That doesn’t mean you’re out of luck with ecto. You can use this heading selection, if you know some basic CSS. All it took was setting up a custom tag using the “Custom Tags” button. In my case, I had to insert the letters “h4” into the custom tag field, give it a name, and highlight text and select that tag whenever I wanted to implement that text styling.

I liked ecto’s image handling the best of the three apps. When you drop an image into ecto, you can select the image margins, padding, float, border, and class. You can also scale the image, and select the file format and quality level.

ecto

At first glance, ecto doesn’t appear to let you post only a draft to your site. If you look closely, though, you’ll see a button (among other buttons) at the bottom left of the composition window that lets you change the behavior of the “Publish” button, so that you only publish a draft to your site. You can also set a publish date and time from within the app. To be safe, though, I went into ecto’s settings and set the default behavior to only publish drafts to the site.

ecto wasn’t perfect, but came closest to what I was looking for in a blogging app. Fortunately for me, ecto is also the least expensive of the three apps, at a current price of $19.95.

 

Conclusion

Each of the apps have other features and tweaks not mentioned here, that may or may not be important to you. Your best bet is to download the trial of each, and see which one works best for you. For me, ecto won out, due to its image handling, and also because of how it handles tags.

Do you use blogging software, or compose your posts directly on your site’s backend? If you do you use software, what do you use?


WordPress Backup to the Cloud, Made Easy

updraft

Earlier this month, we took a look at 4 ways to backup your WordPress blog.  That post covered steps you could take to backup your site, including the use of WordPress plugins.  We’re always on the lookout for better ways to get things done, and when it comes to backing up a WordPress blog, we’ve found a gem.  Updraft is a dead simple plugin that will backup the contents of your site to the cloud (such as Amazon S3) or to an FTP server.  You can even have the backup emailed to you.

What makes Updraft so awesome is how simple it is.  When I set it up for 40Tech, it automatically set a backup directory on the server.  I only had to set the backup interval (daily, weekly, monthly, or manual), and fill in my Amazon S3 account details.  When I log into my S3 account, I can see the backup files sitting there.

You can set Updraft to email you when a backup is complete, and to delete the local backup on your server (prior to uploading the backup to the cloud, Updraft generates it in a folder on your server).  You can also specify how many backups to keep.  Perhaps the best part of Updraft is that your backup can be restored with the click of a button.

updraft backup

One word of warning: if you’re using Amazon S3, don’t use any non-alphanumeric characters in your bucket name.  When I first set up Updraft, the backups were sitting on the server, and not being transferred into S3.  I had been using a bucket that had an underscore in the name.  When I changed that to a simple name, the backups started working as intended.

Updraft is pretty awesome.  Have you found anything better?

Updraft [via MakeUseOf]