Although many web designers and some blogging lawyers prefer WordPress, I've been a fan
of Typepad from the very start.
Not exact matches
The website should be powered by
TypePad or Wordpress for easy manageability, and the domain name should include the name
of the business.
I can fish them out
of the spam filter when it's my own post, but it means I have given up commenting on other people's posts, both here and on other blogs, if they use
Typepad.
Typepad - my blog hosting service - apparently had quite a rough day, and my pre-written and scheduled blog post got sucked into the abyss
of the internets, never to be seen again!
She follows the link to the original article, and using a standard blogging tool like
TypePad or Blogger, she posts a quick summary
of the review and links to the Amazon page for the book from her blog.
From this point on, I did a lot
of research into blogging, looking into other options such as
Typepad, Joomla and WordPress.com, the latter is not to be confused with WordPress.org.
The
TypePad is the pick
of these as the keys have real travel, making it much easier to use.
Until the product is made quite a bit more robust, I can't imagine paying for it or choosing it over the combination
of ecto2 and
TypePad.
I currently have a website and a
Typepad blog and the idea
of merging them has been on the back burner.
Larry Bissonnette, subject
of the acclaimed documentary Wretches and Jabberers, spoke at the opening
of the exhibit through his
typepad (Larry has extreme autism).
From Loic: Ublog becomes the exclusive agent
of Six Apart in Europe, Middle - East and Africa and has started distributing its leading weblogs publishing products,
Typepad...
Ublog becomes the exclusive agent
of Six Apart in Europe, Middle - East and Africa and has started distributing its leading weblogs publishing products,
Typepad and Movable Type.
For those
of you who wondered where I was yesterday — or why you couldn't find any Law.com blawgger with a
Typepad account — I recommend you read SixApart's
Typepad News blog.
Some
of that you can do in
TypePad, but WordPress is far more flexible.
TypePad does a fine job
of putting text on the Internet.
If you want to start a blog as easily as
TypePad, just use WordPress.com until you are ready to host your own copy
of your blog using WordPress.org.
And I don't actually think WordPress is any more difficult than
TypePad to set up, particularly because
of the vast community
of WordPress users our there who are writing about how to do things on WordPress.
With a little bit
of nail biting as I waited for the new settings to take hold, I have succeeded in setting things up such that this weblog can now be reached through www.declarationsandexclusions.com, without the necessity
of using the old and lengthy (but still efficacious)
TypePad URL.
Dennis recently posted on his blog his answer to the increasingly - common question
of whether to start with a blog or a website: «[M] y current response is definitely a blog and, in most cases, hosted on
TypePad.
Because the very nature
of blogging involves regularly posting content, blog platforms such as Blogger,
TypePad, and WordPress have long used RSS to distribute content.
Hey Melissa... I'm not waiting until October;) Just couldn't... I'm in the process
of re-organizing my blog and changing servers from
typepad to wordpress... (ugh;{ remind me later that I wanted this;) anyhow... I've heard about Darren Rowse and Pro-Blogger and his book 31 - Day To A Better Blog... so today I bought it and downloaded it and a now I'm off to get started.