Post by account_disabled on Oct 26, 2023 0:44:45 GMT -6
There are hundreds of blog platforms, so here I will describe the most popular ones, the ones I know best, the ones that, unless there are particular needs, are good for of people who are preparing to publish ideas and content on the internet. In particular I will describe the pros and cons of: blogger Google's blogging platform wordpress WordPress hosted service wordpress WordPress self hosted Other platforms worthy of being analyzed are typepad, squarespace, expressionengine, joomla, etc but I believe that the three.
I have listed can meet the needs of the blogger who wants a tool that is immediately available, supported and easy to use. manage. Let's look at them specifically. blogger It is the blogging platform offered by photo editor Google: this alone can give security and peace of mind. It is simple to manage, it has no hosting costs, the platform updates are paid for by blogger: in short, it is a pre-packaged solution, available immediately and simple to use.
But why doesn't everyone use it, in fact most professional bloggers don't use it? Because it is a hosted and proprietary platform . it is a non-shared technology, of which we cannot see the sources. By "hosted platform" we mean that blogger takes care of managing all the infrastructure and software: those who use it only have the task of inserting and managing posts, and defining an adequate template. This is all great, but it's also limiting. Here is a list of the cons: – You have no control over the features If I want to add an unexpected feature, there is no hope: on a self-hosted platform I can at most pay a programmer to implement it for me, in blogger this is not always possible.
I have listed can meet the needs of the blogger who wants a tool that is immediately available, supported and easy to use. manage. Let's look at them specifically. blogger It is the blogging platform offered by photo editor Google: this alone can give security and peace of mind. It is simple to manage, it has no hosting costs, the platform updates are paid for by blogger: in short, it is a pre-packaged solution, available immediately and simple to use.
But why doesn't everyone use it, in fact most professional bloggers don't use it? Because it is a hosted and proprietary platform . it is a non-shared technology, of which we cannot see the sources. By "hosted platform" we mean that blogger takes care of managing all the infrastructure and software: those who use it only have the task of inserting and managing posts, and defining an adequate template. This is all great, but it's also limiting. Here is a list of the cons: – You have no control over the features If I want to add an unexpected feature, there is no hope: on a self-hosted platform I can at most pay a programmer to implement it for me, in blogger this is not always possible.