Edición de «Can Disqus And Profy Set Bloggers Free»

Saltar a: navegación, buscar

Advertencia: no has iniciado sesión. Tu dirección IP se hará pública si haces cualquier edición en estas condiciones. Si inicias sesión o creas una cuenta, tus ediciones se atribuirán a tu nombre de usuario, además de otros beneficios.

Puedes deshacer la edición. Antes de deshacer la edición, comprueba la siguiente comparación para verificar que realmente es lo que quieres hacer, y entonces guarda los cambios para así efectuar la reversión.
Revisión actual Tu texto
Línea 1: Línea 1:
I am in Blogger jail right now.<br><br>[https://ecosia.zendesk.com/hc/articles/201657341 zendesk.com]And the capital "b" in Blogger was intentional -- because I'm talking about Google's blogging platform<br>.<br><br>I feel like I am in jail because I want total blogging platform portability, and Google locks me in. I want a product that will allow me to suck in everything I have written in Blogger into an independent database. And I want that for my comments as well. Then I want that database to be able to save my blog universe to Typepad, or Wordpress, or whatever. The good news: I may get this sooner than later.<br><br>Step one: Freeing my comments. Disqus<br>is an interesting commenting system that allows you to provide much more full featured threaded discussions in place of the default commenting system on standard blogs. Disqus is particularly interesting to me because their commenting system is totally disconnected from any specific blogging platform. So your comments are not in Wordpress jail, or Blogger jail or whatever. You can take your blog to another platform and your comments can come with you.<br><br>There are problems with Disqus: If people search for a word that is in your comments, those page views will go to the Disqus web site and not to yours. That's good for [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-du-lich-myanmar/ tour myanmar giá rẻ] Disqus and bad for me, but I've heard that they are going to fix that. I also need them to let me suck all of the old comments that people have made directly on my blog into Disqus. If they can pull that off, I'm in.<br><br>Step two: Make it easy to move my articles to any platform I want. There are decent tools for moving from Blogger to Wordpress, and [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-du-lich-myanmar/ Tour du lịch Myanmar từ hà nội] for other individual platform switches, like TypePad to Movable Type. But this is, for me, only half a strategy. I'm much more interested in solutions like Profy<br>, a [http://Www.ajaxtime.com/?s=blogging%20platform blogging platform] that lets you produce your blog there, [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-du-lich-myanmar/ tour myanmar từ hà nội] but export it to other blogging platforms.<br><br>When twittering with Cyndy Aleo-Carreira<br>, Profy's blog spokesperson, I asked her whether they were going to be able to go in the other direction -- and actually suck blogs into Profy. She wouldn't make any promises, but made it seem like a possibility.<br><br>If Profy did go ahead with that, I think it would radically change the blogging landscape, and make things much more competitive. And it would really make me feel like I own my blog, not Google. <br><br>SAI Contributor Hank Williams is a New York-based entrepreneur. He writes Why Does Everything Suck? Exploring the tech marketplace from 10,000 feet.
+
I am in Blogger jail right now.<br><br>And the capital "b" in Blogger was intentional -- because I'm talking about Google's blogging platform<br>.<br><br>I feel like I am in jail because I want total blogging platform portability, [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-du-lich-myanmar/ tour myanmar từ hà nội] and Google locks me in. I want a product that will allow me to suck in everything I have written in Blogger into an independent database. And I want that for my [http://www.channel4.com/news/comments comments] as well. Then I want that database to be able to save my blog universe to Typepad, or Wordpress, or [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-du-lich-myanmar/ homepage] whatever. The good news: I may get this sooner than later.<br><br>Step one: [http://www.51Ideas.com/?s=Freeing Freeing] my comments. Disqus<br>is an interesting commenting system that allows you to provide much more full featured threaded discussions in place of the default commenting system on standard blogs. Disqus is particularly interesting to me because their commenting system is totally disconnected from any specific blogging platform. So your comments are not in Wordpress jail, or Blogger jail or whatever. You can take your blog to another platform and your comments can come with you.<br><br>There are problems with Disqus: [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-du-lich-myanmar/ tour myanmar giá rẻ] If people search for a word that is in your comments, those page views will go to the Disqus web site and not to yours. That's good for Disqus and bad for me, but I've heard that they are going to fix that. I also need them to let me suck all of the old comments that people have made directly on my blog into Disqus. If they can pull that off, I'm in.<br><br>Step two:  [https://www.kynghidongduong.vn/tours/tour-du-lich-myanmar/ Tour du lịch Myanmar từ hà nội] Make it easy to move my articles to any platform I want. There are decent tools for moving from Blogger to Wordpress, and for other individual platform switches, like TypePad to Movable Type. But this is, for me, only half a strategy. I'm much more interested in solutions like Profy<br>, a blogging platform that lets you produce your blog there, but export it to other blogging platforms.<br><br>When twittering with Cyndy Aleo-Carreira<br>, Profy's blog spokesperson, I asked her whether they were going to be able to go in the other direction -- and actually suck blogs into Profy. She wouldn't make any promises, but made it seem like a possibility.<br><br>If Profy did go ahead with that, I think it would radically change the blogging landscape, and make things much more competitive. And it would really make me feel like I own my blog, not Google. <br><br>SAI Contributor Hank Williams is a New York-based entrepreneur. He writes Why Does Everything Suck? Exploring the tech marketplace from 10,000 feet.

Ten en cuenta que todas las contribuciones a Wikis2i pueden ser editadas, modificadas o eliminadas por otros colaboradores. Si no deseas que las modifiquen sin limitaciones, no las publiques aquí.
Al mismo tiempo, asumimos que eres el autor de lo que escribiste, o lo copiaste de una fuente en el dominio público o con licencia libre (véase My wiki:Derechos de autor para más detalles). ¡No uses textos con copyright sin permiso!

Cancelar | Ayuda de edición (se abre en una ventana nueva)