For my two new blogs I started out looking for a rails plugin, to add into plainlystated.com. I didn't find anything that looked mature, and I didn't feel like coding it myself (since these things always end up taking a lot longer than they initially seem when you add in captchas, admin features, layouts, etc). I got the latest version of Typo, but it was running at almost 60 megs of RAM, which is a lot for my little VPS. Plus, "satellite blogs" (two separate blogs running on one Typo) aren't even supported "yet", so it was gonna be a matter of hacking Typo (maybe with a third-party plugin), or running two instances, and both options seemed like a waste of semi-precious resources.
So, as you can see, I broke down and went with a free hosted solution. I looked briefly at wordpress, blogspot, and livejournal, but they all seem "good enough" so I went with ole' reliable: Google.
In this case, there seem to be some substantial benefits to going with Blogspot:
- I don't use my own resources,
- I don't have to worry about security, system maintenance, etc.,
- I get automatic security updates and feature upgrades,
- I get plenty of free templates,
- It "just works".
Hopefully this decision will end up making me more comfortable with taking advantage of all the great free providers out there (maybe I'll be linking to a PicasaWeb album before long).

1 comments:
An open source project I'd really like to find is a "data-in-the-cloud" backup program. Basically something that has plugins for the myriad different "web 2.0" systems out there, and pulls down your data periodically (so it can be backed up by a "normal" backup program. If you discover something like that, let me know. :-)
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