Personal & Random & Technology & Writing 23 Sep 2005 08:46 pm

I love WordPress, or I haven't actually written anything in a while

I've been neglecting my personal blog lately, opting to use it as a dumping ground for random stuff. This isn't to say that I've not been doing anything. Rather, I've been pouring much of my time and effort into polyscience.org, writing two and three posts per day on average. For the last two days I've written closer to four and five. This brings me to why WordPress rocks so much.

WordPress rules because it allows you to save drafts and whatnot, and it gives you a preview of what your entry might look like while you write it. When you're done writing it, if you set the posting time to some point in the future, when that time comes, WordPress will auto-publish what you've written. This allows me to, for example, do some writing about science news and information that isn't exactly time-sensitive, like a breaking story, to save for a later day when I might not have the time to write two or three quality entries. I did this for tomorrow: I have 3 entries queued and ready to go. The first will publish at 6.53am, the second at 7.53am, and the third at 8.53am. I do this because I've noticed over the last few days that my page views are much higher if my fresh content is ready to go in the morning. Spacing it out over three hours gives an appearance of actively working on it, despite the fact that I'll actually be at work when the entries are published.

WordPress also rules because of the plugins available for it. For instance, here on rianjs.net, I get an average of about 300 spam comments per day. Naturally you don't see any of them because Spam Karma 2 catches them all. One comment in about 2000 slips through, but since I get an email notification anytime a comment is posted, I nuke it as soon as I check my email. And I've never had a false positive. I've been meaning to write up a list of the plugins and things that I use with WP, but I just haven't gotten around to it. I'm thinking of making it an article for polyscience.org about polyscience.org and why I use it for a publishing platform.

So basically all of the effort that I used to put into rianjs.net has gone toward polyscience.org (plus a huge amount of extra effort that I've never put into anything here or anywhere). My personal blog still gets more page views than does polyscience, but the pendulum is beginning to come back the other way, and I suspect that traffic will continue to increase, particularly due to the inordinate amount of effort that I put into the writing there (compared to here, or anything else I do in my personal life). For once, I've actually been able to consistently put in effort on something long-term. Not that this is "long-term" — but it's certainly past the "first gear" stage that I excel so much at. Basically if you want something to get off the ground quickly, I'm your guy because I can pour an enormous amount of effort into something very easily, just don't expect it to last. In the case of polyscience.org, my effort has actually increased with time, which is something that has never before happened in my life.

In addition, I've found that writing on myriad topics broadens my horizons and makes me curious about a great deal more things than I would have discovered otherwise. The comments left often elucidate some aspect of a story that I may not be particularly familiar with, further making the whole venture more worthwhile. I've been talking to Ken at Ars, and he's considering moving Science.ars to a Journal format, which is cool. I've asked to write for him, but the more I work on my own, the more I want to keep building my own thing. The downside is that polyscience is not profitable, and I'd be paid for writing for Ars. The other thing is that if I were writing for Ars, I'd have several orders of magnitude more readers than I do currently, which certainly appeals to me. The downside to writing for Ars is that I would have to give up writing for myself, which I'm not sure I want to do.

What do you guys think? Some advice would be appreciated.

On a financial note, I paid off another bill today; one from my hospitalization back in February. I have one last bill and then I'm off Scott-free! As soon as they send me (another) invoice, I'll pay it off since I have the money sitting in my bank account. So other than student debt, I'll be free and clear. Woot!

:dance:

3 Responses to “I love WordPress, or I haven't actually written anything in a while”

  1. on 25 Jan 2006 at 10:34 am 1.polyscience.org » Grand re-opening… said …

    [...] I have decided that I want to write for myself again. Not because Ars is a bad place to write and hang out — it's not, by any means — but because I miss creating something that's truly mine. As you probably know, I use WordPress to do my publishing here and on my personal blog, and one of the plugins I use is wp-cron in conjunction with another plugin to send me a backup of my database every night. I've missed seeing it grow little-by-little. I mentioned on my personal blog back in September that I was reluctant to give up writing for myself. Well, the pull back towards doing my own thing has proved stronger than my desire to be paid for my writing and have a huge number of readers. That's the entrepreneur coming out in me, I guess. [...]

  2. on 23 Jan 2007 at 2:16 pm 2.Kisakookoo said …

    Hi! Why I can't fill my info in profile? Can somebody help me?
    My login is Kisakookoo!

  3. on 10 Feb 2008 at 1:29 am 3.Jim Mirkalami said …

    I have been visiting this site a lot lately, so i thought it is a good idea to show my appreciation with a comment.

    Thanks,
    Jim Mirkalami

    PS: I am a single dad. ;)

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