I've been blogging
about technology for about 10 years now.
And the majority of that time has been on the Blogger platform. I went with Blogger back in the day, because
it was a simple platform that was flexible enough for what I needed without too
much hassle.
But now, in 2015,
I'm starting to hit some limitations. And sure, a lot of those limitations
might be worked around and I'm a geeky person, but the reality is - out of all
the things I like to geek out about, tweaking my blog platform and website
just…. isn't it.
Also, my domain
registrar starting charging for things that used to be free a while back (like
probably close to two years ago) and I've been so busy with "life"
that I just pay to keep the lights on so to speak, without really looking at
the offerings and seeing how that ties in with what I'm doing with my blog.
So I starting
thinking about how I wanted to manage it next… And never really thought about
it much until Troy Hunt put it into words a bit earlier this month.
So I started
thinking about my domain and blog related things that needed improvement. Some
points…
- I like the convenience of widgets and easy theme management.
- I've dabbled with WordPress in the past, but not sure I want to go with the hosted version or run my own web server in the cloud. And honestly, at the time I didn't really feel like learning another platform.
- I did take a peek at ghost.io, but didn't feel it had the dashboard management that comes with WordPress and I kind of want to stay away from CSS editing if I can help it for theme adjustments.
- I married a UX designer who's spent some time designing for WordPress (handy!).
So I quizzed the
hubby about what he thought and recognized the fact that I really want my blog
management to be as "non-techie" as possible, because it really has to be the
least of my worries. As fun as it might
be to self-host my own WordPress instance in Azure, I don't want to have to
deal with having to do any "webmaster" things - I don't want to be THAT responsible. I just want to post when I
need to post and change or update other elements of the site (like navigation
and colors) without having to dig into HTML or CSS.
So that being said…
I'll probably start looking at working out my migration to a new platform
before the end of the year. Let the side
project begin!
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