our thoughts

Earlier this week, musician John Mayer closed down his Twitter account with millions of followers to focus on his Tumblr blog named “One forty plus”, a not-so-subtle reference to the maximum length of a tweet.

Of his decision he wrote:

“I had 3.3 million Twitter (Twitter) followers back in March April when I announced that I’d be predominantly posting on Tumblr, a site that takes all of 25 seconds to sign up for. Five months later I have just passed 50,000 followers, a fraction of my Twitter base… I will leave the opining up to you, but I think I made the right move.”

While many speculate why someone would shut down their Twitter account when they could still focus on blogging and, say, just auto-tweet new blog posts to a massive audience, I want to focus more on something I’ve been noticing as of late: a renaissance to blogging from those who have been hooked on Twitter.

At the recent New Zealand Wordcamp conference, I heard Courtney Lambert refer to your blog/website as your “official channel” and the phrase resonated with me.

It’s all very well to have a Twitter account, Facebook fan page, LinkedIn profile etc (or whatever the next big buzz is) and be connected with lots of people, but there’s always an underlying usefulness and need for a central place which is easy to access, find via search engines and search internally for archives (not easily done with Twitter or Facebook) for an audit/record of things said in the past. A site you are in complete control of and can point people through to whenever you need to say something a bit more than 140 characters.

It’s been fascinating to see more and more of my friends and those I follow on Twitter taking up blogging – the desire to communicate publicly and with more freedom than is offered in Twitter and Facebook reminds me of the importance of blogging, even though it’s been around so much longer than the other two.

Perhaps this is what John Mayer has been discovering.

What is #30daysofme?

September 15 2010
by Rachel

Tagged

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There’s currently 89 New Zealanders largely women – taking part in a communal daily blogging meme called #30daysofme which started in New Zealand on September 7th. Follow or subscribe to all the blog posts here.  It’s the first time I’ve seen such a blogging meme here in New Zealand.

Bloggers are following a list of topics to blog about each day but each may be on different days.

The originator of the #30daysofme meme is Wellingtonian Suzi Heath (aka @pebblesy) however the list of topics was found elsewhere online as a motivation to help get back into blogging:

Day 01: A recent picture of you and 15 interesting facts about yourself
Day 02: The meaning behind your Blog name
Day 03: A picture of you and your friends
Day 04: A habit that you wish you didn’t have
Day 05: A picture of somewhere you’ve been to
Day 06: Favorite super hero and why
Day 07: A picture of someone/something that has the biggest impact on you
Day 08: Short term goals for this month and why
Day 09: Something you’re proud of in the past few days
Day 10: Songs you listen to when you are Happy, Sad, Bored, Hyped, Mad
Day 11: Another picture of you and your friends
Day 12: How you found out about Blogger and why you made one
Day 13: A letter to someone who has hurt you recently
Day 14: A picture of you and your family
Day 15: Put your iPod on shuffle: First 10 songs that play
Day 16: Another picture of yourself
Day 17: Someone you would want to switch lives with for one day and why
Day 18: Plans/dreams/goals you have
Day 19: Nicknames you have; why do you have them
Day 20: Someone you see yourself marrying/being with in the future
Day 21: A picture of something that makes you happy
Day 22: What makes you different from everyone else
Day 23: Something you crave for a lot
Day 24: A letter to your parents
Day 25: What I would find in your bag
Day 26: What you think about your friends
Day 27: Why are you doing this 30 day challenge
Day 28: A picture of you last year and now, how have you changed since then?
Day 29: In this past month, what have you learned
Day 30: Your favorite song

Feedback from those involved has been really positive – from people getting to discover other local bloggers to others taking up blogging for the first time.

Here’s some of the things people wrote about on day 4 – a habit they wished they didn’t have:

The most commonly mentioned bad habit was procrastination, followed by nail biting.

Other ones included:

  • always late for work
  • smoking
  • interrupting people before they finish talking
  • telling long-winded stories
  • being a control freak
  • having to read books to get to sleep
  • talking too much
  • eating too much
  • being addicted to reality TV and YouTube
  • being a shopaholic
  • flaking out on meeting up with people
  • bad taste in men
  • always saying yes to people
  • being too loud

3 News Interview on Twitter

September 13 2010
by Rachel

Tagged

Last night I was interviewed by David Farrier on 3 News about Twitter and the recent Christchurch earthquake. It was a shame more of the interview didn’t go to air where we talked about some of the interesting interactions, but that’s the nature of the soundbite.

Rachel Cunliffe - 3 News

You can see the video clip here.

In August, I had the pleasure of being the second speaker at WordCamp NZ – a large gathering of Kiwi WordPress enthusiasts, users, designers and developers.

I spoke on creating custom WordPress themes and talked about some of the sites we’re working on and have recently worked on and here’s the second part of my talk notes.  The first part is available here.

One of the sites we have worked on is popular Australian surfing and photography website Aquabumps with tens of thousands of subscribers who get a mid-morning pick-me-up email showcasing photos taken that morning between 6am and 7am.

Aquabumps

Each day, a new blog post is added to the site for people to comment on and share and the email newsletter is automatically created from the latest blog post using a completely different template. The newsletter template pulls in the latest listings in their noticeboard, picks a random photo from their gallery of prints for sale, re-uses the ad from the blog post but in a different layout.  This makes the administrator’s job of sending out the email using a 3rd party newsletter system a breeze.  This is all done via a custom template with lots of nice PHP code in there to pull in the various bits and pieces.

The site’s noticeboard section uses TDO Mini Forms – a large and powerful plugin which enables you to add customizable forms to allow the public to submit and edit posts and pages – subject of course to moderation if you wish – and content is checked using the standard anti-spam plugin Akismet.  People use TDO Mini Forms for all sorts of things like ad managers, contact managers, community contributions etc.

Another Australian site we worked on called The Colour had a bit more complexity with the TDO Mini Form:

The colour

This time, it’s using a lightbox, connecting with Facebook and Twitter and uploading images which were processed and scaled to the right size:

The Colour

Popular sport site The Roar is a massive community site running on WordPress and enables the public and members to contribute articles to the site using TDO Mini Forms:

The Roar

Back to other features of Aquabumps,  this was all done before custom post types but each photo added to the blog can be bought in various formats and this buy page is automatically created for each photo added:

Aquabumps

The site also has special gallery prints for sale – this was all done before custom post types.

The site’s authro creates a new page with a description of the image as content, uploads the images with custom fields for the various bits, chooses a portfolio and location categories and other special places it could be promoted on the site and whether it’s a lead image or not.

This page shows all the main category lead images.

Aquabumps

Showing all photos in that category:



Aquabumps

… and showing individual details on a photo:

Aquabumps

… and allows you to preview the image on your wall at various sizes:

Aquabumps

…and view photo samples of each type of print:

Aquabumps

More from my talk in Part 3!

Last year, I started a blog on social archiving – about creating physical archives of digital memories. I’m still fascinated by that, but also wanted to revise again how I could archive in one spot (if possible) my personal blogs and interests online.

I’ve been blogging on a few different personal blogs since 2002 and have finally got around to aggregating them all together in one spot, over at rachelcunliffe.com. (I’m using the default WordPress design for now while I focus on content.)

Combining my blogs

It was surprisingly easy to take my original journal blog which had been offline for ages, it was running WordPress 1.5 (what a blast from the past seeing the old admin interface). That blog was my entry into the world of blogging and I met so many wonderful people through that. Ahh, the good old days of blogging where it was so fresh, so new and such a small world (it seemed).

To start resurrecting the blog, I updated the wp-config.php file to the new host database login information, disabled all the plugins, deleted all the spam, made a backup and uploaded WordPress 3.0. After seeing a number of problems upgrading WordPress in a big leap, I was pleasantly surprised to see my blog all back and running, using a theme I made in the summer of 2006! An export of the blog posts split up by about six month chunks (you don’t want the import files to be bigger than 2MB) and then importing into rachelcunliffe.com didn’t take long at all.

The next step was exporting from a WordPress.com blog I wrote on for a while in 2008 then abandoned. This time it was a much simpler process a quick export and import.

Importing my Tweets

I’ve been also investigating how to archive my tweets. Twitter tools is perfect for tweets you do after adding the plugin to WordPress, but I also wanted all my old Tweets stored in WordPress.

There’s a really simple plugin (Twitter importer) which actually imports all your old tweets into a certain category of your choice in one step – no need to worry about exporting your Tweets first. However, the plugin current currently has no options e.g. no filtering out of “@” replies or retweets. I got around this by quickly tweaking the plugin code:

Add:

if (substr($post_title,0,1) != "@" && substr($post_title,0,2) != "RT")

before:

$post_id = wp_insert_post($post);

I did notice that sometimes the plugin didn’t work first time around or didn’t pull them all in, wait a while and then run it again – you can run it multiple times and it won’t make duplicates.

Until I work out how best to display all these tweets, I’m using the Advanced Category Excluder plugin to hide all the old tweets from the homepage and the feed, and just put have on their own tweets category page.

Importing my Facebook Status Updates

Facebook is a little buggy when it comes to this, but I’ve made a simple script to export your Facebook status updates to a CSV file. It’s buggy because sometimes it works, sometimes later on it doesn’t work. It’s also buggy because it only pulls out actual status updates, not links you share or photos you add in your status box. Oh, and it doesn’t go back before about August 2008 when they released a new version of Facebook. That being said, it still exported out over 700 of my status updates.

I then played around with the CSV file a little to get it into the right format that the WordPress CSV importer plugin requires. These all went into my Facebook status updates category and are also hidden from the homepage for now. Going forward, I’ll either need to use Twitter again to update my Facebook status (using Selective Twitter or find a way to bring in status updates one-by-one automatically (just like Twitter tools does).

Last weekend I had the pleasure of being the second speaker at WordCamp NZ – a large gathering of Kiwi WordPress enthusiasts, users, designers and developers.

I spoke on creating custom WordPress themes and talked about some of the sites we’re working on and have recently worked on and here’s the first part of my talk notes.

While it was the title of the talk, we don’t see our job really as building “custom WordPress themes”. We see it more as building sites which are easy-to-edit and maintain – using WordPress as a content management system. This involves lots more than just creating a theme and pressing a few buttons to install it for clients.

Rather than looking at themes and seeing how these can be tweaked to a site, we start from the basics and think about the site’s purpose and the best way to present content – rather than trying to fit their site into pre-determined boxes. We try and encourage clients to not think in terms of “what cool widgets and plugins can I add to my site” but go back to basics of what are they trying to achieve through their site, then looking at ways to do that.

In fact, sometimes WordPress just isn’t the right tool for the job. Then we look at Drupal – which has a lot more flexibility and functionality for larger community-driven sites. (It’s not always the right tool either.)

Some of the common WordPress things we do include:

  • Putting together new WordPress sites from scratch
  • Redesigning WordPress sites
  • Converting existing sites over to WordPress from either another CMS (e.g. Blogger, TypePad, MovableType, Expression Engine) or none at all
  • Taking PSD design templates and build the WordPress or Drupal site from them
  • Writing our own plugins or using/evaluating/adapting ones out there already.
  • Maintaining sites – including upgrades, content, tweaks, and of course the fun job of security (which is becoming a bigger and bigger issue as WordPress’ popularity and code base grows).

A big part of many of our projects is actually dealing with content – managing and migrating it and making it easy to add content in the future.

Common things we do include providing multiple and creative ways of exploring content which are applicable to the site in question.

For example, we’re currently working on a gorgeous new redesign for The Naptime Chef (new site not yet live) and providing multiple ways to explore her yummy recipes.

We recently redesigned Vampy Varnish – a super popular varnish blog by Kelly Keaton. She wanted people to be able to explore her archives in multiple ways – and for her content, this made most sense by browsing her photos of the nail polishes by either brand or color.

Normally this could be done by just categorizing the posts by brand and color but she has multiple photos per post which are in different colors regularly and sometimes different brands.

The Media Tags plugin solved this problem by enabling tagging of images – so the gallery shows all images with a certain tag.

The only problem is this didn’t allow parent tags so we needed an automatic way to know which tags were colors and which tags were brands for the gallery overview page. The solution was to make the gallery page still look at post categories and list all subcategories of color and brand but then link through to show all images with a matching tag.

This worked well, as she was already categorizing all her posts for her category archives.

We also used a custom post type to handle the mastheads (headers) she designs each month on her blog. Adding content becomes a breeze: she gives the masthead a title, optional background color, optional background image and publishes – past months are automatically archived.

Another common feature of sites we’ve worked on are simple event handling – often this has been for authors we’ve worked with.

They want a simple way to archive their media appearances…

…promote their upcoming appearances:

There’s a great little plugin called The Future is Now which has been around for years but still works nicely for you to timestamp posts in the future but have them appear immediately.

Part 2 of my talk to be posted on my blog

A number of friends and relatives have recently started blogging and in every case, I noticed they created their blog with Blogger. Being immersed in the world of WordPress, I found myself a little surprised that it’s still the choice for many new bloggers today.

Curious to discover more, I asked a group of them the following four questions:

  1. When you started writing your blog, how and why did you decide which blogging tool to use (Blogger)?
  2. What are the main things you like about Blogger now that you’re blogging?
  3. What (if anything) have you found hard to use in Blogger?
  4. Had you heard about WordPress before choosing Blogger? If so, what made you decide to use Blogger?

Their answers were fascinating.

To those new to blogging, Blogger was actually all they’d ever heard of. I wonder if this a confusion with the term and name; ie. to become a blogger you use Blogger? Many hadn’t heard of WordPress at all, or had vaguely heard of it but didn’t know anything about it.

They found it incredibly easy to get going and start writing blog posts and adding photos in Blogger. They felt it was great for non-technical type people to just start writing. However, the majority said they found it hard to get the rest of the blog looking how they wanted it to (design and functionality) and complained that they needed to know HTML (which many didn’t) to change things around.

As more and more of the general population (read: non-technical) find a reason or two to start blogging, does WordPress need to find a new way to reach out to beginners, or is Blogger still an appropriate starting point for someone just wanting to get going? Is WordPress still too techy for someone new to the world of blogging? And does the name WordPress need more explaining to people? (“It’s the new Blogger?”)

To me, when I compare Blogger and WordPress, there really seems no competition. WordPress is much more powerful, flexible and still easy to use. You don’t have to be a technical person to use WordPress and benefit from all the vast code under the hood.

However, there’s probably still a long way to go before WordPress is the first tool people think of when launching their first blog.

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