I’m thinking of starting a blog to document a new project, having not blogged at all in probably about ten years at this point.

Was hoping someone who has already researched this stuff might be able to save me some time and give a tldr of the Fediverse-friendly platform options and their various pros and cons?

I know obviously WordPress has ActivityPub now, but am not sure exactly how well it works or how integrated it really is. Then there’s something called WriteFreely? Any others? Which do you prefer and why?

Really appreciate any pointers on this, and if this thread doesn’t turn up anything useful I promise to come back and do my own writeup after finding out the answers by myself.

Cheers!

  • @mote@lemmy.world
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    102 years ago

    This seems like maybe a resource you’re looking for as it has many, many choices in this space: https://codeberg.org/fediverse/delightful-fediverse-apps

    I don’t blog, but this one catches my eye as an interesting platform (in that you don’t have to self host it but you can if desired): https://fediverse.blog/ (Plume is the engine, https://github.com/Plume-org/Plume)

    I do a ton of wiki work though, and one thing is cemented in my brain: data portability is a must-have. Choose a solution which has data which can be exported/imported in some standardized format - mediaWiki may be great software, but the pain of converting it’s deep markup language into something else (say, Markdown) is just painful. My workplace switched wiki software must be 3, 4 times over the years and just migrating data from one to the other (say, mediaWiki to Confluence) is just… pain and suffering.

    • @thegiddystitcher@lemm.eeOP
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      22 years ago

      Brilliant first link thank you, will take some time to go through that list for sure.

      I’d heard of Plume but there’s a notice on the project homepage saying they’re no longer in active development and to consider other options instead. Understandable, but definitely a shame.

      (also, yes absolutely, making sure I can export and transfer is a big priority for me too!)

      • @mote@lemmy.world
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        42 years ago

        Yah to both you and @KinNectar@kbin.run that example just caught my eye as “in the spirit of the asked question, looks cool” but I don’t have any actual knowledge about Plume (or any of the blogging options).

    • KinNectar
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      22 years ago

      @mote Pretty cool. Out of curiosity do M.Bin or Lemmy have access to Plume posts?

      It’s unfortunate that Plume is on pause from active development.
      @thegiddystitcher

  • @kalkulat@lemmy.world
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    52 years ago

    Since I joined Lemmy a couple months back, one of the ideas I saw mentioned by the Lemmy people for blogging is this: start a Community and make yourself the only poster. You can invite people to be co-posters.

    Yes, it has the limits of Lemmy posting. No making your own HTML or fancy backgrounds. But so far as -text- is concerned, the sky’s the limit.

    • @thegiddystitcher@lemm.eeOP
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      12 years ago

      I thought about this, but without hosting my own instance it could be kind of annoying to export and backup.

      Also considered a dedicated Mastodon account somewhere with a decent character limit, but I’m not sure what form their content export takes and whether it would be usable as a backup, more research needed there.

      Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @russjr08@outpost.zeuslink.net
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    32 years ago

    I myself haven’t done any major blogging in a while (Last year I started one and just used Hugo as a static-site-generator so no ActivityPub integration, but also ended up not really posting much), but from what I’ve always heard about WordPress the major “selling” point would be its vast ecosystem of plugins and themes.

    But that ecosystem is a double-edged sword, because there is tons of malware for WordPress that comes in the form of plugins (I know WP itself used to be exploited a lot in the past, not sure what its reputation on its own codebase is these days).

    I’ve not ever seen WriteFreely before, but I doubt its ecosystem is anywhere the size of WP. Whether that’s a roadblocker is of course only a decision you can make.

    I’m sorry that I didn’t have much more to offer as an answer, but hopefully it’s something at least!

    • macniel
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      32 years ago

      the one thing that could hinder adoption of writeFreely for blogging is the lack of interactivity. Sure you can share via activitypub your posts but that was all you can do with it.

    • ares35
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      2 years ago

      wordpress, and especially its plugins, is definitely still exploited, and targeted–heavily. mod_security works overtime here just from attempts to get at exploits in them. i don’t even have a wordpress install, but that doesn’t stop the tries–about half of all ‘visitors’ to my http servers are bots looking for one to exploit.

      if you’re gonna wordpress, using them (their service, at wordpress.com) as your host is the best option, i think. let them deal with maintaining the server, software, security and stuff.

    • @thegiddystitcher@lemm.eeOP
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      22 years ago

      No worries, appreciate the reply! I actually used to work as a WP developer so am fine setting that up if it ends up being the best option. But it’s been a while, so I just have no idea if it is.

      One thing I’ve turned up so far is that WriteFreely doesn’t seem to have any kind of commenting, so that’s a big downside for a blog.

      Hoping these aren’t the only two possibilities!

    • theJWPHTER88
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      22 years ago

      I also have tried this rather minimalist jotting site called thoughts.page a while back. Moreso a personal repository of rambling, quick thoughts than one alike Tumblr or Cohost, yet it’s generally seamless, most of the time.

  • sj_zero
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    22 years ago

    WordPress is an option, so is writefreely, but so is just using a normal activitypub compatible platform and just increase your maximum character limit.

    One thing with wordpress, make sure that you test it. I had one plug-in installed, and it claimed to be federating okay, but then I subscribed to my own feed and there was just nothing.

  • @wiki_me@lemmy.ml
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    22 years ago

    I have used friendica for a while, It’s pretty good has not character limit and RSS support, what turned me off is that it kept logging me off and i had to keep reenter the username and password (but maybe that was an instance specific problem or is already fixed).