• I’m moving my Blog from TypePad to WordPress

    Posted on February 11th, 2009 Alan No comments

    After almost 6 years I am looking at moving my blog over to WordPress from TypePad.com.  I feel TypePad is always a  little  behind the curve in functionality.  It took them a while before they supported Pages.  They do not support category/label feeds unless you have a Pro account and you have to jump through some hoops to make it work even then. 

    I’ve been using FaceBook lately and was excited to learn that I could get FaceBook to automatically pull in as notes, my blog posts.  I really only want to pull in general posts and not my geeky programming posts which is why I really want to be able to specify a category feed.  I think  this is something TypePad should include in my Plus account which I pay $71.60 per year.  Other services offer it for free and you don’t have to do anything, the feeds are just there!

    The last straw was when I contacted TypePad support to share my views on this and got a less than satisfactory response.  Their support has always been pretty good though the answers were often unsatisfactory (we don’t support that, maybe one day).  I stated I felt the category feeds should be a basic feature and they replied they would be happy to pass my note on to their engineers for suggestions on future improvements.   This isn’t an improvement, it is a sales/marketing issue.  Yeah, I’m just starting to feel like a number with them and feeling I can actually get a better product with an opensource solution!

    My hosting service LunarPages, which I love, offers to install WordPress for free which I did and I was able to import my TypePad blog without issue.  I’m not done yet, and I still have a bit of work to do but I think I’m going to be happy with the switch. I never did set the domain mapping in TypePad so I have more work  to fix all the links and links to images.  

    TypePad doesn’t offer FTP publishing which Blogger offers.  I don’t feel like I truly have control of my own content, until no!

     

    Here  are some useful links:

    Painless switch from  TypePad to WordPress

    How to move from TypePad.com to WordPress.com

  • Microsoft RSS Platform

    Posted on February 3rd, 2006 Alan No comments

    I’m keeping an open mind regarding the new Microsoft RSS Platform introduced in IE 7.0. It will be a standard component of Windows Vista.  I’m perfectly happy having the OS maintain the feeds store and helping with synchronization and letting applications focus on the display of content.  After all, the SocialDynamX software never was a true RSS aggregator.  It basically served as a consumer of a service, just as Microsoft is suggesting applications do in their new platform.  The service in FM Radio was the local Userland Radio server running on the PC.  We simply picked up the data locally from Radio using XML-RPC.

  • Microsoft’s RSS Platform

    Posted on February 1st, 2006 Alan No comments

    The What

  • River of News

    Posted on December 30th, 2005 Alan No comments

    Not sure why any news aggregator worth its salt would make users choose between the so called "River Of News" or NewsPaper views, and supporting folders to organize your feeds.  Support both! "River Of News" works for me at times but I often prefer the folder view.  Often, bloggers refer to nearby posts and if I’m behind on my reading (always), I want to be able to focus on a single blog’s posts.   The folders also allow me to read certain "types" of news depending on my mood.  I have a folder titled "People" that I read most often.  A "News" folder is often optional reading for me and I often empty it without reading it.  Same with my "Technology" and "Entertainment" folder.  Even a newspaper has sections of news.   You have your Front Page, your Metro, your Sports and Lifestyle.

    Other opinions: 1 2 3

  • Is one blog enough?

    Posted on December 27th, 2005 Alan No comments

    I often review whether to branch off onto other blogs for more targeted subjects.  I thought categories with RSS feeds might be the solution but they aren’t.  Too many categories and it’s too much to ask people to select and subscribe to them.  I use categories for my convenience.

    I’m considering posting programming related posts on another blog.  I don’t mind mixing personal stuff with technology/software related stuff but specific posts and links about C++, C# or WSDL, SQL etc. I think I would be better filtered out from my main blog.  If I ever WERE to have a significant following that seems to be the logical split in my targeted audience.

  • Many paths to information

    Posted on December 21st, 2005 Alan No comments

    I enjoyed subscribing to Tim Hussey’s blog while it lasted. He has a lot of good stuff to say.  It was the first feed I tried that had embedded ads. I’m not going to criticize the practice or the business of placing ads in RSS feeds. Certainly it is the author’s prerogative. However, with so many feeds to choose from, I choose to not degrade my experience by having to navigate through ads. Seems to defeat the whole purpose of using an aggregator to "save time" in consuming information.  As long as there are alternatives, I also will make it a policy to not subscribe to feeds containing ads.  The blogsphere is great isn’t it?  So many choices it starts working like the Internet infrastructure itself, many paths to getting to the same place; or in my case, the same information.

  • TypePad service outage

    Posted on December 19th, 2005 Alan No comments

    I’ll join the chorus of TypePad customers wishing to support Six Apart in the aftermath of the recent outage.  Granted, I don’t run a business using TypePad.  I don’t even have a loyal following that I know of.  My blog is written for myself and I can withstand a few days of down time.  But I agree with Brent and Robert that no technology or service is fool-proof.  I knew when I signed up for digital phone service with Time Warner that I couldn’t expect the reliability of the land-line SBC phone system.  Just two weeks ago, some bonehead technician came to disconnect a neighbor and managed to disconnect my Cable TV, Phone, and Internet access.  It happened in the evening and it was restored by the following evening.  My first reaction was to get angry and demand some type of compensation.  But I quickly cooled and chose to cut them a break.  Recently, Barton Creek Mall here in Austin had a power-outage blamed on a squirrel!  It’s a company’s response that should be judged more than isolated incidents (assuming they are isolated and not reoccurring).

  • Newsgator Online

    Posted on December 14th, 2005 Alan 5 comments

    I’ve switched my online news aggregator from Bloglines to Newsgator.  First, I wanted to try it out and compare it to Bloglines.  I like the interface better, especially in how you mark things as read.  I’ve swithched for good.  I mainly switched so that I can continue using RSS Bandit and get the benefit of syncing between it and an online news aggregator (supported in latest RSS Bandit 1.3.0.38 release)

    Warning, when you export your subscription list from Bloglines in order to import into Newsgator, you’ll want to edit it and remove the high-level "Subscriptions" node, otherwise all your subscriptions will be created inside a folder called subscriptions.

  • RSS Autodiscovery

    Posted on November 8th, 2005 Alan No comments

    How to add RSS autodiscovery to your site
    RSS Autodiscovery tag generator
    Publishers RSS Help Center
    Evolution of the Link tag as used for RSS autodiscovery

  • Blog publishers

    Posted on September 19th, 2005 Alan 1 comment

    Client Apps

    Ecto – supports TypePad, MovableType, MetaWeblog, Blogger and Atom.  "ecto fully supports Blogger’s implementation of the Atom interface, and basic support for TypePad’s implementation. File upload is not supported yet for TypePad."

    NetNewsWire – Favorite Mac RSS Reader & Publisher.  Uses MetaWeblog API & Bloger API

    Qumana – Qumana works with all major blog hosts, including Blogger, TypePad, Movable Type, Blogware and WordPress. The following are the currently implemented APIs: metaWeblog , Blogger, MoveableType

    wBlogger – w.bloggar supports several blog tools and services. It also supports any custom tools that implements Blogger API or metaWeblog API (list of supported services).

    Zempt – "So only tools that support MT’s API will work with Zempt. This includes not only Movable Type and TypePad, but Wordpress and others as well."

    Services

    TypePad supports both the blogger and metaWeblog XML-RPC APIs, along with the extensions supported by Movable Type. Recommended clients.

    Testimonials

    BlogJet & wBlogger support for dasBlog