Consolidated Categories
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Image from here

Yesterday to help ease navigation around Creeva.com I consolidated my categories.   I went from over one hundred to just having twelve.   I used categories kind of like tags, but not really.  I was using them for specific organization methods, but over time that becomes unwieldy - especially when certain categories are not relevant or used any more.   So yesterday was a big consolidation that literally took hours.

One side effect I noticed that alot of old articles managed to get re-crossposted.   I’m not sure why  since nothing I did should have called that function in wordpress, but it did.   It honestly is as much of a pain for me the author as much as you the reader on this different sites.   Hopefully though you will find it easier to navigate different categories around the blog.   I also added a ton of tags yesterday so articles should link together better and keyword search should be stronger.


The World, The Flesh, and The Devil
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

I just finished watching The World, The Flesh, and The Devil which starred Harry Belafonte as a black man struggling with racial in a post apocalyptic world.   I don’t want to go over the full synopsis since you can get that here and here.   Overall it has the feel of The Omega Man and I am Legend - though it predates The Omega Man by twenty years (I Am Legend by over fifty).     The difference though is this movie has no zombie like creatures of any sorts.

It deals with the racial issues of the time combined with dealing with the loneliness of living in such a world.   If you wanted to look at the actual issues of loneliness and society at the end of the world I can say you should defintely hunt this movie down and watch it.


My Hosting Debacle and Resolution
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Last Saturday morning my blog was down for the count.  I had received an email from Are My Sites Up stating that Creeva.com was down.   It told me that my blog went down late night on Friday.    I verified on Saturday that it was still down, and I had wanted to do some writing on it.  I waited.    I attempted to call tech support but after being the first caller inteh queu for over an hour I surrendered.  Saturday came and went and no blog.   Sunday morning site was still down.

I called into tech support again Sunday afternoon.   I was fifth in the queu and I was moving forward about 15 minutes at a time.  Either people ahead of me were getting help, or they were giving up like I did the day before.   I held on and finally managed to get through to a person.  Upon talking to the tech support I learned that my hosting server had moved.   Not only had it been moved, it was moved back in October.

I had known that they were going to move servers, but the e-mail announcing this stated that most people would not notice an changes.   What this says to me is that a new server will be put up with the same IP address with very little down time in the migration.    This however was not done, so all of my data was moved to a new server.    Since October I had been updating my information and blog on the old server.   When I managed to correct my DNS entries at my registrar, I discovered my blog was out of date since early November.   I was missing literally hundreds of articles once you take into account my lifestreaming posts that don’t make the front page or RSS feeds.   I was livid.

I called back and they stated they would get it synced back up off of the old server.   Ten hours later there was no change.     I waited until Monday when I knew there would be more then just support in the office.   Since I’m a reader of the Consumerist I followed on of their recommended ways of dealing with this is, I sent an executive e-mail carpret bomb here is what I wrote:

To Whom Can Help Me,

I have been a customer with AN Hosting (anhosting.com) a division of Midphase Hosting (midphase.com) since 12/24/07.   In October you were planning a server consolidation/migration plan (notice sent out is given below my e-mail (removed from blog article)) - which stated that some of our accounts would be migrated to new servers.   At that time I created an offline backup of my domain. Things went on working as they normally did until Friday night 1/16/09 7:15 PM.  At this time my site went offline.  This was verified by the service Are My Sites Up? (aremysitesup.com).   I was not aware and didn’t check my email to be informed about this until Saturday 1/17/09 early evening.   I called the support line and though I was the first customer in the queue I waited over an hour before I gave up.

On Sunday 1/18/09 I called in with my problem.  It seems my “free” domain was working properly - I don’t really use this site so I hadn’t checked it.   My add-on domains however were not working at all.   My main site which is an add-on site (creeva.com) was not working.   The technician stated that I had been moved to a new server and the old server was turned off, but my data should still be available.   My old server IP address was  [REDACTED], the new server you had migrated me to was  [REDACTED].   The technician on the phone stated that if anything was wrong with the site to call back and they could pull the back-ups off the old server.  I thanked the technician and got off the phone to start relocating my DNS and testing the site.

Before I migrated my DNS I adjusted the local host file on my computer to make sure everything was working on my main site.  Upon loading it and checking the entries it seems at the closest date I could pin down my latest blog entry was written at 11/10/07.   It’s hard to pin down since in October due to other concerns I had written and scheduled blog posts for most of the month of November and some going forward to early December.   The data may even be from October because I use these functions of wordpress.  I called back in to the support line and explained the issue and asked if I could get the backup loaded that he previously mentioned.

He opened a ticket for me and stated he would get this assigned.   In the ticket language he was vague - here is was he entered on my behalf:
Hi, I am having issues with my addon domain(creeva.com). My account was migrated
to another box. I am not able to view the latest version of my website, its
pointing back to November 10. I’ve been posting updates to my blog. Can you
please look into my account?

thank you

I’m not sure why it had to be opened under my name using the “I” reference - since the technician opened the ticket (ticket number  [REDACTED]).  I would think this is misleading to the technicians working on the case.   I checked out the language after I got the auto-email generated when the ticket is assigned to another technician.    I added the following entries after the auto reply to clarify the situation:
None of my add-on domains to my account are up to date - these have been
constantly updated through the last few months - yet under the current server
migration I was told I was migrated about 3 weeks ago.  So there would still
have been a discrepancy of a month during hte migration.

The migration letter stated that it would be seamless to the end user -
normally in most scenarios this would include making sure that the data was at
the latest possible and maintaining the same IP address - since I’m sure I am
not hte only customer that use another registrar.  If monitoring this was made
more apparent in the letter going out about the migration I’m sure this would
have saved the technical support some headaches.

I was finished some major changes on my add-on site creeva.com at about 4PM
1/16/09 - if a backup of the previous server ( [REDACTED]) can be found after
that time that would be terrific.  Is it Midphase’s policy to make backups
before taking a server offline?

Also wanted to ad - my blog at creeva.com may seem up to date more Nov. 10 - but
everything going through a publishing right now was written to publish at a
future (now past date) and the blog is catching up with it’s scheduled posts.
The current date of the latest post is not an accurate reflection of the latest
data from a back up - the bet I can ascertain the date was at least Nov. 10th
if not earlier.

A while later one of your technicians had checked on the issue and issued this reply:
Dear Brent,

We have investigated your issue. We could find that your account was migrated
from our old server  [REDACTED] to our brand new server  [REDACTED]. Please let me know if
you are using any ftp clients to upload the files. If so please use the details
that we have mentioned below to upload the files and update your website. Please
check the settings of your FTP client.

Server name : [REDACTED]
Server IP :  [REDACTED]
Username : [REDACTED]

We have also checked the blog site creeva.com and entered a post and the post
was successfully updated. We have attached 2 screenshots along with this mail
for your reference. Please check it.

Please let me know the exact issue regarding your subdomains. It seems that you
are uploading the new updates to our old server. So please use the above details
in your ftp client so as to upload the files to the new server.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Regards,
[REDACTED]
Technical Support Representative.
Hosting Services Inc.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Since he didn’t seem to understand what I was asking I reiterated my request - also notice in  [REDACTED]’s reply that he gave me a third IP address that I should be using:
I need the data off of  [REDACTED] - which is where my add-on host was before
yesterday - I wasn’t using an FTP client - I was directly entering the data via
the wordpress interface - I checked my e-mail  logs and at no time was I alerted
there was going to be a server move where I would have had to adjusted the IP
address records of my add-on domains, if I had received that I would have been
more pro-active and migrated the DNS earlier.

The problem is I need the lastest information from Friday off of the
[REDACTED]  - one of the advantages on your home page is the fact that you
do nightly back-ups - so the backups should still be available.

I’m missing approxiamately 200 posts on my blog - affiliates update
information, theme updates - and that’s just for one add-on domain.  I also
find it odd that you give me the IP address  [REDACTED] - earlier tech
support gave me   [REDACTED] - which restored my access to the site  - I added
the IP address you gave me and added it to my hosts file locally before I
updated my registrar - I was hoping it would give me a more up-to date version
of my blog - it didn’t and just delivered me to a CGI page and the site doesn’t
load at all.

The problem is not access - and I can re-adjust my own FTP software - my
problem is data -freshness

Can I please get my data restored from the old server?

While you stated that during the migration - “In most cases, the migration is completely seamless. We have brought in a team of experienced migration experts to ensure this effort is handled with the best of care. If you should have a problem relating to your site, please do not hesitate to contact us: support@anhosting.com. We have a team standing by 24/7 to help out!”  I question the migration experts that performed this migration.  Currently at my place of employment we are performing similar actions with our infrastructure - and there was more customer outreach then you have given.   Since you know what are add-on domains are are your servers - any customer with a third party registrar should have been alerted by e-mail that their DNS records would have had to be adjusted.

Further action should have been done to sites on the old servers that were still getting traffic.  Since my site was receiving regular and steady traffic that should have been a tip off to action by your IT personnel that the customer should be alerted to adjust their DNS records.   This is all a failing on your team of migration “experts” by things that could easy have been prevented by a little due diligence on their part.

The biggest coincidence is that over hte last week I’ve been in discussion with someone to move over to your service.  I also had planned on migrating one of the non-profit organizations ove to your service next year to a VPS plan when their contract runs up.  Currently in good faith I can’t advise this to either of those accounts.   This disruption and loss of data is just not acceptable when it could have been easily prevented by checking what was going on the old server before you took it offline.

I am merely asking to have my backups from  [REDACTED] restored to my account.   Is this possible or do I have to make some other plans?  I am also sending the Consumer Advocacy blog “The Consumerist” (consumerist.com) a copy of this e-mail.   While the migration diligence seems to be in error you can still correct this problem and an unhappy customer by performing adequate customer service.   One of your features of An Hosting that is touted on your site is ” Backup Storage -Nothing is more shocking and heartbreaking than losing ones data and hard work. We back up our servers nightly to ensure you always have ANHosting to depend on!”  I am solely asking for my data to be restored as close to 4PM 1/16/09 as possible and my faith that I can “always have ANHosting to depend on!”

I sent this e-mail out to the American general manager of the company, the consumerist, the European Executives, and support.   I received an e-mail from the general manager and he got a technician working on the issue right away.   The issue was resolved in a couple hours.   They pulled my data off the old server and synced it to the new one.   There was still some minor issues that I had to correct - wordpress needed to be re-upgraded, but all my SQL databases were up to date.   They also kept me informed during the whole migration.

I really wish I could have had that level of care taken of me on Sunday, or at least a time frame when the data could have been restored.    When they try to equate a blog with a normal static website, it just shows ignorance on their part.   It does show the problem I have with doing regular back-ups - which is in the architecture stages right now.    The only thing I ask of my hosting provider is to live up to the promises they have given me.   I don’t open tickets - really I’ve talked to them only about 3 times in the last year.   The first being a simple problem I had while waiting for my account to activate, the second inquiring about the share SSL certs, and the third this issue.    I’m glad even though I “yelled” across the Internet more then I should have, that they came through and everything is now working.


Web Application Developers Can Learn A Bit From Wordpress
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Just the other day I wrote about cloud computing versus SaS terminology.   A web application isn’t necessarily a cloud computing or SaS platform.   It can be one or the other, it can be both, it can be neither.   Now that, that is out of the way let’s move onto the meat.

I think that all web application developers would do well to look at Wordpress and the product they offer as key points for their own designs.   Obviously I use Wordpress as a blog, I also use it as a CMS, a middleware application system, a database, a word processor and other uses.   Wordpress is extensible far beyond the original blog software it was designed to be.

The reason that Wordpress is so transformative is the ability to use a fairly easy (well not for me but I suck at PHP and programming in general) API that the users can use to extend and transform the core product.  This is done through the use of plugins.   In theory the expandablity of Wordpress would allow it to transform into any functional web application you can imagine.   I’m not saying this should be done however.   Wordpress plugins a lot of times just add band-aids to a product to extend it further then the core company can imagine or support.

Think of your ticket support system.  Most of these are moving to a web based interface.  Easy to manage, no software to install on users computers, easily updated since you only have to update the core server - it’s a no brainer to move everything you can over to a web based centrally managed focus for a company.

Why can’t you extend it though?

Most of the web application companies MAY ALLOW YOU to go as far as put your company logo in the interface.  Allowing you to brand a product to some extent is not the same as extending the product.  I don’t want color changes.  I don’t want a simple image swap.  I want feature sets being implemented without waiting 18 months to have it done.  If you have a robust CRM application, in this modern time wouldn’t you want a spot to add a LinkedIn Profile section?  This would be as easy as allowing customers custom fields that they can rename on the back-end.   What about adding an image?  This would be a bit more difficult then a simple custom field, but still possible doable.  How about however a full blow plugin that looks up the LinkedIn contact info.

This is all hypothetical, but let’s say this is how the plugin would work in generic CRM system.

1.  User logged into the CRM would associate their own - or a corporation profile with Linkedin

2.  User plugins in new contacts e-mail address

3. User is prompted with “Would You Like to Request Connection on Linkedin?”

4.  If users states yes the plugin would go into a state of “Waiting for Remote User to Confirm”

5.  At this point the user could add in all the information they normally would in the CRM database

6.  Later the user would receive an confirmation (or decline) of linking up in LinkedIn

7. If the receive a confirmation they could then pull in the information to the CRM application.

8.  Then the CRM application would have connections and how they relate to each other in their database, home pages, Resumes, etc. - all from a couple clicks.

That is a scenario that would appeal to sales personnel.   Let’s look at something more urbane, a library look up system. A library lookup system is something very simple  and single tasked.  It works well and returns (normally) the following information:

  • Title
  • Author
  • Subject
  • Location
  • If it’s in or checked out
  • Sometimes a Summary
  • Sometimes an Image

Now let’s look at methods we can use to extend this functionality.  The first thing I would make sure is there a public internet accessible site where either the general public, or the Library chooses just card members can access.  Library users are normally people that live in the same town and there are a good number of them that know each others.  What does that buy you?  Word of mouth.  What about a a secondary revenue stream outside of donations or overdue fines?  How can you leverage more people to show up at your fund raising drives?  I’m assuming these are question that library officials ask themselves.   How can we turn that simple search to find a book into something more?

Let’s give the users an option to use the search page as a social platform.  I would give the a users a choice of using the old style simple search functions, but also give them a chance to leverage the public you are serving to work with you instead of you working for them.

Let’s go over an imaginary social library platform.

1.  User opens up a search window into the library database and enters a query.

2. User gets back the title, author, and subject - then a link that states more information (this is where a plugin would take over)

3.  On the plugin page users could get back an image of they are searching.  They also see where it is located, if it’s in or not, and more.   What about a sidebar that allows them to purchase the book/movie/CD at Amazon?  Reviews from other library patrons?  A list of who checked out which book (make this opt-in only on a per title usage - don’t compromise a users privacy).  A listing of library events where the author is signing books, giving a reading, or there is a book discussion covering these topics?

You just made something that is infinitely more “sticky” and let’s the users interact with your site on a much larger scale then previously.  They are no longer browsing alone, but in a group, with people they know from town.

All of this is possible with a platform that allows plugins.  I’m not asking for web application developers to support any plugins directly.  If a plugin breaks or crashes the core site (shame on the user that puts an untested plugin in a production environment) - the web application developer should tell the user they will not support the product with any plugins running at all.   It doesn’t mean the framework, APIs, and access shouldn’t be there.

I’m pleading with web application developers that allow the users to have self hosted servers to please build this extensiability into their products.   I can hack around another platform and get these functions, but sometimes we just want to buy a program from a vendor with support.   Currently your making us choose between function or support.   It should not be that way.  Opening up can only gain customer loyalty in the long run.


Moved to a New Commenting Platform
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.

So a couple weeks ago I moved all of my blogs over to the Disqus commenting platform.  So far so good.  The best thing is that I now have an offsite backups for all of my comments.   I had held off using any commenting platforms until they could sync back to the local wordpress database.

I backup all of my blog posts in e-mail and google documents, but there hasn’t been a good offsite backup system for comments until now.   If I loose my blog or migrate to another platform Disqus (supposedly) will be able to sync the contacts back correctly.

Check them out, and leave a comment to test it.

Originally Published at Journey To Get Paid in this article.


The Crossposting God Series Part 8 - Using A Lifestream to Keep Track of Your Crossposts
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

In part 8 I was going to write about crossposting to blogger, but that’s been delayed for the time being.  I’ll get back to that subject as soon as I get a chance.   Let’s move onto monitoring your crossposting.

Some people may have noticed that on my lifestream there seem to be duplicate posts.   This is because I’ve been working on adding all the RSS feeds from all the services in one trackable lifestream.   The benefits are that you can see and track how long information takes to get from one site to the next.   This also allows you to see where your crossposting is failing.   For example I’m noticing that my posts going to pownce are not getting through so when I get a chance I’ll look into what is actually causing that.

Lifestreaming all of our sites into one endpoint site that you can control and maintain allows all the little maintance to happy at a single glance.   We all know that crossposting is usually best effort delivery.  Not everything shows up in all the sites, but that happens because your not actively maintaining those sites and sometimes things just go wrong.

By having a single stream of all of your sites you are not bogged looking at RSS items for every site all together.  If I put all my feed items in google reader then it would take me an hour each day to get through all of them.  Having a quick glance allows the information to be singled out in a daily quick view.

Currently I’m using the wordpress lifestream plugin to handle my lifestream page.  It gives me the benefit of having a daily summary post generated automatically.  This allows me to have a permanent archive of all of my daily archives that I can go back search and vault away in my own life vaulting fashion.

Life is good.  Maintaining and monitoring in a single glance - that’s great.

Previous Entries in The Crossposting God Series:

The Crossposting God Series Part 1 - The Introduction

The Crossposting God Series Part 2 - Vox

The Crossposting God Series Part 3 - Live Journal and Derivative Sites

The Crossposting God Series Part 4 - Entry, Distribution, and End Points

The Crossposting God Series Part 5 - Myspace

The Crossposting God Series Part 6 - RSS Feeds to Crosspost

The Crossposting God Series Part 7 - Where Can You Post By E-Mail?


So I’m a Webmaster for My First Non-Profit
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

So I’ve taken over the position of webmaster for the VCMA (Vermilion Community Music Association).  This is going to start a new series as I’m going to use them as guinea pig’s for what I’ve felt non-profits need to do to survive and thrive in the web 2.0 world.   They are not a big organization, and I’m sure I received this position for my background and not my witty personality.

I’ve been working on the site for a couple of weeks and here is what I’ve found so far.   They had a private member’s section on the old site to share files and personal data.  This section was password protected, but the username field was just a front, as long as you nkew the password anything you put in the username field was accepted.  Since I’m a security engineer, this just wasn’t going to work for me.  I’ve ranted before the illusion of security and how illusionary security wasn’t worthwhile at all anyways.  The other problem was that their member page “password protected” section was just a javascript that rewrote the “HTTP GET” to a file named a combination of the requested page plus the password.   So if the page was index.tml and the password was “password” the ending HTTP in the “HTTP GET” command would be indexpassword.html.   Since it was still a plain text file without any encryption on it, in theory it could still be spidered and stored by google, thereby completely undermining any security it was giving them.

I’m working on a better and more secure solution while maintaining the balance of ease of use.   I don’t want to burden them too much on the security side.  I’m sure some of the older members would blink at me with a blank stare if I handed them secureID tokens to access their newsletters.

Picture from here

The next thing I discovered is that code each web page by hand, ugh.  There was no way I was going to maintain each HTML manually and hope for any semblance of style and continuity between pages (an issue they had in the past).   They had been using FrontPage and offered to buy me a copy.  First no, no and no - currently I’m using Linux on my main computer (Ok I dual boot into XP and between WoW and Netflix streaming I don’t get into Ubuntu as much as I should), so Frontpage was out.  They were insistent at first that this is how it was done, I however readjusted things.  I moved them to Wordpress which I’m not using as a blog but rather as a CMS (Content Management System).

Picture from here

I manually migrated the data from the old HTML files, I spent hours converting the front page data to be “clean” data that i can migrate and copy paste anywhere.   I was a dumbass though, I should have just copy and pasted the text into notepad or a generic text editor, then I wouldn’t have had all the background crap.  This is my nore to myself to now be stupid next time.  I added images and a javascript navigation menu, but essentially the page was just a cleaned up (easy to maintain now) version of what they already had.

Now the next step is to migrate them to Google Apps for their member related information……

Somehow I always end up volunteering for Vermilion non-profits, now if only I could get one of them to pay me……


Twitter Updates for 2008-07-15
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

  • I Upgraded to Wordpress 2.6: ….. Read MoreNo tags for this post.
    Related posts No related posts. http://tinyurl.com/58qcvw #
  • Watched Charlie Bartlett Last Night / Depp Conspiracy: ….. Read MoreNo tags for this post.
    Related pos.. http://tinyurl.com/5aae56 #
  • The end is near - private joke #
  • @groovymarlin and @branchero actually I think it was a pre-alpha build of the web #

The Crossposting God Series Part 5 - Myspace
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Picture from here

Myspace.

Myspace.

OK, I’ve repeated it a couple times I think I’m ready to actually talk about it.  Unlike some other services where I explain the community and the functions, I’m going to refrain from doing that for Myspace.  While I do have a myspace account, I won’t say that I truly like Myspace.   I haven’t even bothered to give myself the uber l33t cool profile page.   It’s a thing, not a good thing, not really a cool thing, just a thing.

So if I’m so “meh” towards Myspace why do I post there?  Because unfortunately some of my friends haven’t seen the light and still utilize the server.   I keep in touch with old gaming friends there especially, so I feel I want to broadcast my information there as much as I do anywhere else.   I’ll tell you what though, it isn’t easy.   Myspace may proclaim new found openness, yet getting information into Myspace without using their tools is a pain in the butt.

There are three things you can do remotely to update Myspace and keep your friends up to date on you.

  • RSS Widget
  • Status Updates
  • Blog Posts

RSS Widgets:

For any site that allows you to place a widget into your profile, and does not allow you any remote options to any other functions, RSS widgets allow you to bypass the whole “you can’t put our data in our service unless you use our tools” wall.   While Myspace is getting better, it still wants you to play with it’s tools.

If you do a search for RSS widget “Service Name” in Google you shuold be able to pick and choose the one that is right for you.   By editing your Myspace profile and putting your embed code into your profile, you should be able to display the news feed you want right there on your profile page.

While this is all fine and dandy it doesn’t really cover what a crossposting god wants to accomplish, so let’s move onto some of the other options.

Status Updates:

Your status updates, the “I’m in my room crying cause Kurt Cobain is still dead” status updates that you use on Myspace if your an aging emo kid, these can be done remotely.   By utilizing service such as Ping.fm and Hellotxt you can update this via instant messenger or my choice, my Twitter account, without ever logging in.

You can do this by creating an account on Hellotxt or Ping.fm and they will give you an email address in which you can notify them of your current status.   We’ve discussed on ways to utilize e-mail notifications for use with other services, now you know the gateway to updating your Myspace status message.

Blog Posts:

Blog posts are the final achievement of the crossposting god when it comes to Myspace, unfortunately I only have a solution for Wordpress users.  There is a plugin called MySpace Crossposter that will send your post over to your Myspace blog when it receives a publish event notification.  To get some of the information in configuring this plugin (it’s one of the most pain in the butt) you will have to open up your wp-config.php file to get the accurate information.

The options to program this plugin are as follows:

Database Settings:

These options will be automatically configured in future versions of the plugin. Most of the data is available in your wp-config.php file if you need to reference it.

  • DATABASE HOSTNAME: URL of your database host. NOTE: there is no “http://” before this server name
  • DATABASE NAME: Name of your WordPress database
  • “POST” TABLE NAME: Only change if your wp_posts table has a different name… Most users need not change this variable.
  • “META” TABLE NAME: Only change if your wp_postmeta table has a different name… Most users need not change this variable.
  • DB USERNAME: Username for the database
  • DB PASSWORD:Password for the database

Blog Information:

These options will be automatically configured in future versions of the plugin.

  • BLOG URL:URL for your blog, complete with http://
  • BLOG NAME: Name of your blog, as you’d like it to appear on your MySpace post.  Please note that it seems to have a problem with non alphanumeric characters, using them can cause some strange results.  I had to configure it to be “Creevas World” instead of “Creeva’s World 2.0″, your mileage may vary.

Myspace Login Credentials:

Without these, you won’t be able to crosspost.

  • MYSPACE USERNAME:Your MySpace username - usually your email address.
  • MYSPACE PASSWORD:Your MySpace password.

Post style:

Choose “notification” or “full story”.

  • POST STYLE: n = Notification Style *recommended* (will drive traffic to your external blog) w = Whole Blog Entry (formatting may be lost in translation)

Because of longer posts like this one won’t show up in the myspace blog I just have it setup to post a notification of a new blog post, this also allows me to see how often I get hits from my Myspace blog (not often I’ve either unloved or uninteresting).

If you have further questions on making this all work together, please drop a comment below.  The next chapter in the crossposting god series is going to be on RSS feeds and making them work for you in broadcasting your information across the blogosphere in a controlled manner.

Picture from here

Previous Entries in The Crossposting God Series:

The Crossposting God Series Part 1 - The Introduction

The Crossposting God Series Part 2 - Vox

The Crossposting God Series Part 3 - Live Journal and Derivative Sites

The Crossposting God Series Part 4 - Entry, Distribution, and End Points

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The Crossposting God Series Part 3 - Live Journal and Derivative Sites
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Live journal is another online blog that focuses on community.   While it is not as active and communal as Vox, it is infinitely more focused on true interaction between users compared to Myspace, Facebook, or any other of the more traditional collect as many friends as you can pokemon style social network.   I can say that in rankings of comments and feedback I get back from readers that my live journal is only to third to my vox and my main blog in terms of interaction.  Live journal has been so successful that there are derivative sites that use the live journal engine, the steps listed below should allow you (with some tweaking) to post to any of those sites as well.

I really wish I could say that I had options for you to crosspost to live journal from Vox or Blogger, but currently unless you have a paid account you won’t be able to use the post by e-mail method I mentioned in the Vox article.  If you do however wish to use a method and have a paid live journal subscription the steps are similar to the steps in the vox article.

Since my main blog is wordpress I of course us a plugin to facilitate the crossposting - LiveJournal Crossposter to be exact.   When wordpress 2.5 was released there was some issues with this plugin, but it’s since been updated and corrected.   To configure this plugin you do the following steps.

1. Download and install the plugin

2. Activate the plugin in your wordpress installation on your plugin tab

3. Go to your settings tab and click on the live journal option

4.  Fill in the following options:

  • LiveJournal-compliant host:  (If you are using a LiveJournal-compliant site other than LiveJournal (like DeadJournal), enter the domain name here. LiveJournal users can use the default value)
  • LJ Username
  • LJ Password
  • Community: (If you wish your posts to be copied to a community, enter the community name here. Leaving this space blank will copy the posts to the specified user’s journal instead)

That gives you the most basic configuration of this plugin, however unlike many other wordpress plugins that would end there, livejournal crossposter gives you a myriad of more options.  Here are a few more things you can tweak:

  • Crosspost header/footer location - choices at the top or bottom of the post
  • Set blog name for crosspost header/footer - you can use your own blog’s title or a customer title
  • Custom crosspost header/footer - gives you the option for custom coding in the header or footer
  • Privacy level for all posts to LiveJournal - choices are public, private, or friends
  • Should comments be allowed on LiveJournal? - You can force commentors to come back to your blog to comment or allow them to comment directly in live journal (I just let them go directly onto live journal’s site)
  • Tag entries on LiveJournal? - Choices are -Tag LiveJournal entries with WordPress categories only, Tag LiveJournal entries with WordPress categories and tag, Tag LiveJournal entries with WordPress tags only, and Do not tag LiveJournal entries.
  • How should LJXP handle More tags? Choices are - Link back to WordPress, Use an lj-cut, and Copy the entire entry to LiveJournal.
  • Select Categories to Crosspost - You have the option to choose which categories of posts you wish to send over to live journal.  This allows you to target which posts and topics you wish to share, a big boon for some online publishers who are capable of writing on topic.

I think livejournal crosspost should be a benchmark plugin for all other crossposting plugins to come.   You can crosspost to live journal from other services, such as Utterz or Ping.fm - and I’ll be covering the Live Journal crossposting functions from those sites when I get to those articles.

The next article in the series will cover the difference between crossposting endpoints and crossposting distribution points.

Previous Entries in The Crossposting God Series:

The Crossposting God Series Part 1 - The Introduction

The Crossposting God Series Part 2 - Vox

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The Crossposting God Series Part 2 - Vox
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

Vox is a blog community that really focuses on the community aspect.   When Xie first started blogging on vox I kind of poo pooed it.   However I didn’t find some people that I knew from SWG that posted there, ever since I can tell you it is definetly a close knit community.   Since I’m a crossposter I’m kind of on the outside, but I reply to comments and Oh My Yod! is a blog I visit every other day.

Vox is one of the easier services to crosspost to since it allows post by e-mail.  To enable posting by e-mail go through the follow steps:

1. Go to your account settings

2. Go to mobile settings - here you can get your moblog address (which you can post to from any e-mail address) and the settings you wish to apply to it.

3. Setup your account that you are crossposting from (which can be any service that sends out emails)

There are two services I can recommend that you can use to post to Vox with (or bridge across with more on that around part 18), these are Blogger or a custom wordpress installation.

For Blogger:

1.  Go into your blog’s settings

2.  Go to your emai tab

3.  Paste your Vox moblog email address

4.  Now any post that goes to your Blogger account (I’ll talk about crossposting to blogger in a later thread)

For Wordpress

1. Download a plugin that allows for publishing via e-mai ( I use DJ EmailPublish)

2. Go to your settings page and configure the plugin pasting in the Vox moblog address

3. Save and apply settings

4. Now any post that goes up on your wordpress account crossposts over to your vox account.

In part 3 I will be covering crossposting to live journal, so I hope to see you then.

Previous Entries in The Crossposting God Series:

The Crossposting God Series Part 1 - The Introduction

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Feedwordpress Duplication Issues
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

I notice that I get a fair amount of hits on my site listings about Feedwordpress’s duplication bug.   I can say that while I liked it’s function in theory that I never managed to get it to truly stop making duplications in my database.  If you use wordpress I can’t recommend that you use feedwordpress.  The author seems unresponsive and truly doesn’t care.   That’s fine we didn’t pay him and I don’t expect more.

For those that play the OMG why is this post in my database 300 times game, you know my pain.   The only thing I can say is it would be great if someone made a plugin with the same functionality as feedwordpress, until then I deal with my workarounds.


Choosing a Domain Name Can Be Heart Wretching.
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

This is originally from Journey To Get Paid.

la_16_bg_052806.jpg

So you have your own blog but it’s something such as creeva.blogspot.com or creeva.wordpress.com, Both of these are acceptable, but if you read my previous about brand management you’ll know that building your audience to your personal brand can help get you a larger following.

Do I need a domain name?

In all honesty I can’t fully answer that question for you. What I can do is give you some pointers on how to choose a domain that can be personal or directed towards your target audience. There are a few questions you should ask yourself before you register any domain name:

  • What are you trying to do with your site? Is it a personal site? Is it a tech site? Is it a business site? Now none of these really have any bearing on if you’ll ever make money - or at least that is out side of the scope of this article.
  • While some people are just trying to drive massive traffic to their site, what do you want to do? There are loads of spam blogs out there that just show ads and may get thousands of hits a day. I think this people have ethically sold out, but I’m not here to judge you so pay me no attention. You could register a name based of typos and drive traffic that way or come up with something unique that helps you stand out from the crowd. The more unique the site is the more cliquish and faithful your users may become, but this is at a sacrifice of larger traffic goals. This is one of the things you need to consider if your going to be driving traffic to your site. The name is part of the brand and can make or break some sites.
  • Is it worth the cost to you? There are many benefits to owning a domain name. Essentially at under ten dollars a year it really is a cheap investment, you can host your website, have personalized e-mail, and build upon your brand name in ways that aren’t really possible with blogger or wordpress hosting your site without owning your own domain to redirect them to these sites. Over time I’ll be writing more articles on what you can do with your own domain name and choosing the correct hosting service

How do you choose a name that’s right for you?

The questions here are similar to those from above so I won’t rehash them. My suggestions is make it memorable so no omgihavefreestuff.com. Choose something that something something about you or at least your site. Your brand is something you’ll build. Do not choose anything too long, this makes it harder for people to remember your address and it will effect traffic from return users. The shorter the better.

I personally know the agony of choosing a domain name for a project. A couple weeks ago for a project I was working on with some others I spent a good 10 hours running domain names by other people. We had a few that could work and others they thought were great for personal blogs, in the end it’s still an ongoing discussion - and we’re looking how we are going to proceed with that project. Not all of my domains that I have purchased have taken this long. I settled in on journeytogetpaid.com in a matter of minutes and had it all set up with the blog running within an hour of conception. Your strategy and length of time it takes to decide on a domain name is only limited by your creativity and your ideas.

Who do I buy from and how much do I pay?

Like everything else this is a personal choice, but let’s look through what I look for. First and foremost I check out price. I would not pay more then $9.99 for a domain name in this day and age and most people look at that as too high of a price. With coupons and cheap registrars there is no reason you need to pay $9.99 a year. The prices I usually go for is between $6.99 and $7.99.

Normally I register all of my domains in one spot and this is with goDaddy.com and they’ve served me well. Some people have issues with goDaddy.com, namely there are stories of yanking a users registration at a drop of a hat if there is a complaint (spammers be warned your domain will be yanked for e-mail spamming from what I’ver heard). Because of this I decided to track down another registrar that is not goDaddy but also is offering domains for $6.95 (not a bad deal, huh). The second company is Blackbeltdomains.com. This should give you two choices to choose from at around the same price range. The latest goDaddy coupon code I’ve used “OYH3″ - this will get you $6.95 .com domains.

Hopefully I have given you something to think about now go ahead and grab yourself a domain.

UPDATE: Wanted to let everyone know I received an e-mail from the original “owner” of the “OYH3″ code.  To support this user and get his other coupon’s go to his page that contains all of his godaddy coupons.


GoDaddy.com Hosting & Servers


Posted By Creeva Murkado to
Journey To Get Paid at 2/07/2008 09:19:00 AM

[Error: Irreparable invalid markup ('<img [...] %photo">') in entry. Owner must fix manually. Raw contents below.]

<p style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 3px;"><strong>Originally published at <a href="http://creeva.com/2008/02/07/choosing-a-domain-name-can-be-heart-wretching/">Creeva's World 2.0</a>. You can comment here or <a href="http://creeva.com/2008/02/07/choosing-a-domain-name-can-be-heart-wretching/#comments">there</a>.</strong></p><p>This is originally from <a href="http://journeytogetpaid.com/2008/02/07/choosing-a-domain-name-can-be-heart-wretching/">Journey To Get Paid</a>.</p> <p><a title="la_16_bg_052806.jpg" href="http://journeytogetpaid.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/la_16_bg_052806.jpg"></a></p> <p style="text-align: center"><a title="la_16_bg_052806.jpg" href="http://journeytogetpaid.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/la_16_bg_052806.jpg"><img src= "http://journeytogetpaid.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/la_16_bg_052806.jpg" alt= "la_16_bg_052806.jpg" width= "339" height= "252" title="la_16_bg_052806 %photo" /></a></p> <p>So you have your own blog but it&#8217;s something such as <a href="http://creeva.blogspot.com">creeva.blogspot.com</a> or <a href="http://creeva.wordpress.com">creeva.wordpress.com</a>, Both of these are acceptable, but if you read my previous about brand management you&#8217;ll know that building your audience to your personal brand can help get you a larger following.</p> <p><em><strong>Do I need a domain name?</strong></em></p> <p>In all honesty I can&#8217;t fully answer that question for you. What I can do is give you some pointers on how to choose a domain that can be personal or directed towards your target audience. There are a few questions you should ask yourself before you register any domain name:</p> <ul> <li> What are you trying to do with your site? Is it a personal site? Is it a tech site? Is it a business site? Now none of these really have any bearing on if you&#8217;ll ever make money - or at least that is out side of the scope of this article.</li> <li>While some people are just trying to drive massive traffic to their site, what do you want to do? There are loads of spam blogs out there that just show ads and may get thousands of hits a day. I think this people have ethically sold out, but I&#8217;m not here to judge you so pay me no attention. You could register a name based of typos and drive traffic that way or come up with something unique that helps you stand out from the crowd. The more unique the site is the more cliquish and faithful your users may become, but this is at a sacrifice of larger traffic goals. This is one of the things you need to consider if your going to be driving traffic to your site. The name is part of the brand and can make or break some sites.</li> <li>Is it worth the cost to you? There are many benefits to owning a domain name. Essentially at under ten dollars a year it really is a cheap investment, you can host your website, have personalized <a href="http://creeva.com/tag/e-mail/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with e-mail">e-mail</a>, and build upon your brand name in ways that aren&#8217;t really possible with blogger or wordpress hosting your site without owning your own domain to redirect them to these sites. Over time I&#8217;ll be writing more articles on what you can do with your own domain name and choosing the correct hosting service</li> </ul> <p><em><strong>How do you choose a name that&#8217;s right for you?</strong></em></p> <p>The questions here are similar to those from above so I won&#8217;t rehash them. My suggestions is make it memorable so no omgihavefreestuff.com. Choose something that something something about you or at least your site. Your brand is something you&#8217;ll build. Do not choose anything too long, this makes it harder for people to remember your address and it will effect traffic from return users. The shorter the better.</p> <p>I personally know the agony of choosing a domain name for a project. A couple weeks ago for a project I was working on with some others I spent a good 10 hours running domain names by other people. We had a few that could work and others they thought were great for personal blogs, in the end it&#8217;s still an ongoing discussion - and we&#8217;re looking how we are going to proceed with that project. Not all of my domains that I have purchased have taken this long. I settled in on <a href="http://journeytogetpaid.com">journeytogetpaid.com</a> in a matter of minutes and had it all set up with the blog running within an hour of conception. Your strategy and length of time it takes to decide on a domain name is only limited by your creativity and your ideas.</p> <p><em><strong>Who do I buy from and how much do I pay? </strong></em></p> <p>Like everything else this is a personal choice, but let&#8217;s look through what I look for. First and foremost I check out price. I would not pay more then $9.99 for a domain name in this day and age and most people look at that as too high of a price. With coupons and cheap registrars there is no reason you need to pay $9.99 a year. The prices I usually go for is between $6.99 and $7.99.</p> <p>Normally I register all of my domains in one spot and this is with <a href="http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-2848884-10378406">goDaddy.com</a> and they&#8217;ve served me well. Some people have issues with goDaddy.com, namely there are stories of yanking a users registration at a drop of a hat if there is a complaint (spammers be warned your domain will be yanked for <a href="http://creeva.com/tag/e-mail/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with e-mail">e-mail</a> spamming from what I&#8217;ver heard). Because of this I decided to track down another registrar that is not goDaddy but also is offering domains for $6.95 (not a bad deal, huh). The second company is <a href="http://www.shareasale.com/r.cfm?B=42546&amp;U=254561&amp;M=8666">Blackbeltdomains.com</a>. This should give you two choices to choose from at around the same price range. The latest goDaddy coupon code I&#8217;ve used &#8220;OYH3&#8243; - this will get you $6.95 .com domains.</p> <p>Hopefully I have given you something to think about now go ahead and grab yourself a domain.</p> <p>UPDATE: Wanted to let everyone know I received an <a href="http://creeva.com/tag/e-mail/" class="st_tag internal_tag" rel="tag nofollow" title="Posts tagged with e-mail">e-mail</a> from the <a href="http://inoveryourhead.net/">original &#8220;owner&#8221;</a> of the &#8220;OYH3&#8243; code.  To support this user and get his other coupon&#8217;s go to his page that <a href="http://inoveryourhead.net/godaddy-codes-how-to-save-more/">contains all of his godaddy coupons</a>.<br /> <a href="http://www.shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=43698&amp;u=254561&amp;m=8666&amp;urllink=&amp;afftrack=" target="_blank"><img src= "http://www.shareasale.com/image/ban_399_domain_email.gif" border= "0" alt= "" width= "368" height= "67" title="ban_399_domain_email %photo" /></a><br /> <a href="http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-2848884-10386906" target="_top"><br /> <img src= "http://www.lduhtrp.net/image-2848884-10386906" border= "0" alt= "GoDaddy.com Hosting &amp; Servers" width= "368" height= "60" title=" %photo" /></a></p> <p style="text-align: center"><a title="la_16_bg_052806.jpg" href="http://journeytogetpaid.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/la_16_bg_052806.jpg"> </a></p> <p><a title="la_16_bg_052806.jpg" href="http://journeytogetpaid.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/la_16_bg_052806.jpg">&#8211;<br /> Posted By Creeva Murkado to </a><a href="http://journeytogetpaid.blogspot.com/2008/02/choosing-domain-name-can-be-heart.html">Journey To Get Paid</a> at 2/07/2008 09:19:00 AM</p> <p class="addtoany_share_save"> <a name="a2a_dd" onmouseover="a2a_show_dropdown(this)" onmouseout="a2a_onMouseOut_delay()" href="http://www.addtoany.com/bookmark?sitename=Creeva%27s%20World%202.0&amp;siteurl=http%3A%2F%2Fcreeva.com%2F&amp;linkname=Choosing%20a%20Domain%20Name%20Can%20Be%20Heart%20Wretching.&amp;linkurl=http%3A%2F%2Fcreeva.com%2F2008%2F02%2F07%2Fchoosing-a-domain-name-can-be-heart-wretching%2F"><img src= "http://creeva.com/wp-content/plugins/add-to-any/share_save_120_16.gif" width= "120" height= "16" border= "0" alt= "Share/Save/Bookmark title="share_save_120_16 %photo" /></a> <script type="text/javascript">a2a_linkname="Choosing a Domain Name Can Be Heart Wretching.";a2a_linkurl="http://creeva.com/2008/02/07/choosing-a-domain-name-can-be-heart-wretching/";</script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.addtoany.com/menu/page.js"></script> </p><div style="text-align: center;margin: 0px;"><div style=\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"padding:5px;\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"><script type="text/javascript"><!-- google_ad_client = "pub-2850455207197635"; google_alternate_color = "FFFFFF"; google_ad_width = 468; google_ad_height = 60; google_ad_format = "468x60_as"; google_ad_type = "text_image"; google_ad_channel =""; google_color_border = ""; google_color_link = ""; google_color_bg = ""; google_color_text = ""; google_color_url = ""; google_ui_features = "rc:0"; //--></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"> </script></div></div> <h4>Related posts</h4> <ul class="st-related-posts"> <li><a href="http://creeva.com/2008/01/01/creevas-shared-items-in-google-reader/" title="Creeva&#8217;s Shared items in Google Reader (January 1, 2008)">Creeva&#8217;s Shared items in Google Reader</a> (4)</li> <li><a href="http://creeva.com/2008/01/11/life-caching-is-better-then-life-streams/" title="Life Caching is better then Life Streams (January 11, 2008)">Life Caching is better then Life Streams</a> (4)</li> <li><a href="http://creeva.com/2008/04/24/internet-deadmans-switch-part-1/" title="Internet Deadman&#8217;s Switch Part 1 (April 24, 2008)">Internet Deadman&#8217;s Switch Part 1</a> (2)</li> <li><a href="http://creeva.com/2008/04/10/does-data-portability-hurt-you-in-google/" title="Does Data Portability Hurt You in Google? (April 10, 2008)">Does Data Portability Hurt You in Google?</a> (0)</li> <li><a href="http://creeva.com/2008/01/03/creevas-shared-items-in-google-reader-3/" title="Creeva&#8217;s Shared Items in Google Reader (January 3, 2008)">Creeva&#8217;s Shared Items in Google Reader</a> (0)</li> </ul>

How the new Creeva.com works - Part 1 The Visual Look and Layout
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

wt477740e2da703-thumb_medium2-full

Ok so I’m finally happy enough with the migration that I moved all the DNS settings over to my new web host and turned the old creeva.com back to creeva.blogspot.com.   As they say, breaking up is hard to do.   Hard for me since I had some functionality in the old blog that I was missing (until earlier today) in the new blog.

First of all, obviously I have moved to a sparser design.   I like zen-like simplicity.   No distractions and the meat in front of you on the plate.  Part of this reason is that moving from the blogger platform to the wordpress platform I couldn’tuse the same themes and I was being lazy when it came to the idea of converting the theme.   After being distraught and having issues over this fact I then decided I would make a new layout.  After coming to this conclusion I became happier and more excited about the new layout.   There are some more things to do but that will come with time.

The basic design things you will see is less widgets on the front page (and no advertising currently) I moved some of the functionality off to sub pages (something blogger didn’t support).

My subpages are across the top they are:

Random Quotes    -  These are things I’ve collected over time (this page may not make the grade long term)

About Me   -  A Random Self Observation
Security - Some of the Security I’ve enjoyed that I wrote myself

Music - Not finished - but is going to old information about the bands I play in

Photos - My photo album (sourced at flickr)

Videos - Videos I’ve made or uploaded - or just videos I like

Contact Me - My contact information

Links - Links to friends/

It’s late and I’ll get to writing up part 2 of how the new creeva.com works tomorrow.  The next part of this mini-series is which wordpress plug-ins I am using.


Annoying - Wordpress didn’t migrate all of my blogger posts
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

I found that out when I linked to the Symantec Endpoint Protection article in my last post. That isn’t going ot stop my launch or cut over - but it means this weekend I’ll be tearing over information between the old blog and the new to see what didn’t make it over. More work for me…..fun fun……….

Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr - Wordpress


Another night has gone by
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

I’m that much closer to launching my site out in the wild and turning off the blogger site from www.creeva.com to the new blog. The blogger site and me have had a long strange journey. I cracked my first css in it’s embrace. Going to wordpress I’m going to have a new mess of complaints and pleasures.

What a long strange journey this will be.


Partial Migration
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

For those anxious to see the new look (which by the way will be changing more tonight - you can scoot over to creeva.com - www.creeva.com still points to the blogger site - use no www in your attempts to go to the new site.  Once again this will be changed in the near future - I have some more things I need to do tonight - so you may catch the site up or down.

I can say though that this is a long strange journey of having to rework everything.

Friday night I’ll be posting about all the changes and features this site has gotten - I also think I have some things to make it a tad more sparkly then it is right now.


Twitter doesn’t like me
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

I had to change my password since it seems earlier my rss2twitter feed went into overload - I have since moved to a wordpress plugin that should be a bit nicer (guess I won’t know until I’m done testing.

BTW Twitter didn’t yell at me I just felt bad


Ok last test for awhile
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

I’ve managed to get the following cross posting done from wordpress:

Myspace

Blogger

Vox

Live Journal

So lastly we’re testing out MSN Spaces - then my crossposting tests should be done for a bit


Migrating from Blogger to Wordpress
[info]creeva

Originally published at Creeva's World 2.0. You can comment here or there.

In the next week or so I’ll be moving from blogger to wordpress. One of the key differences that is nailing me right now is tags versus categories. So for the migration I’m eliminating some of my tags on my blogger site so it’s less work to import them into a style I like with the wordpress themes.

During the import they show up as categories - which for some weird reason of my own bothers me - so the tags that existed before will show up again as tags after the migration.

As for the current site -

RSS feed will be redirected so RSS users will lose nothing in the migration (cross fingers)

The DNS is being updated so people manually going to the site won’t have any issues.

The current blog on blogger will revert to creeva.blogspot.com which it was originally so the site is not being deleted - but this will screw up most of my google search results. This is a price I should pay now instead of after another year of links being aggregated to this blog.

I’m hoping to implement some new features - one would be to pull in RSS links of what I do manually instead of the messy web wandering dumps I do now. So when I digg a story it will hit the blog as a post instead of being saved up throughout the day. The people that read the site via RSS already get these notifications. I’m just going to have the website flow the same way that the RSS feed does currently.

The one thing I’ve struggled with the most if the theme. It seems some of the features I have on blogger I lose - since there is no easy way to do categories on the top bar that I have found. I may implement them in the future when I figure out wordpress’s method of doing it. Until then however I’m going to take this chance to have a new theme and see how that works out for me.

Wish me luck - I’ll post more on this if I run into any issues other then themes as they come up.