Posted on January 13, 2009 by Steve Magruder in WebCommons Announcements
I just changed the WordPress setting that required registration here before commenting on a blog post or page. However, entry of your name and e-mail address is required, and the first post by an individual will always be moderated.
I made this change because most blogs don’t seem to require registration before commenting, and spam blocking mechanisms in WordPress are pretty strong. I also think this should actually encourage comments more, or so I hope. It’s a convenience thing.
Now, please understand, I didn’t make this change to encourage anonymity, as I think everyone should stand behind their words. So, any attempts to “play anonymous” by obfuscating or frequently changing one’s identity will be screened out.
At any rate, I do hope that regular commenters (once I have them) will choose to register. It does make frequent commenting easier, and it allows the commenter to build a kind of identity that readers can tie from comment to comment.
On edit: I have shut off comments for this post, as I am under the impression that people are commenting for self-promotion purposes and not contributing much value. Just being honest!
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Posted on January 13, 2009 by Steve Magruder in WebCommons Announcements, WordPress Development
You may have noticed that this blog/site has been undergoing some structural changes, and you would be correct.
What’s going on is fairly straightforward — I am simply moving most of my content from my old WebCommons site as well as my resume into this WordPress-based blog, and scrapping the rest. I am doing this for three reasons:
- I wanted to streamline my updating of the content, and have it all be in essentially one place. Now, considerably less programming or otherwise awkward intervention will be involved in adding/updating most content from now going forward. The only exception will be when I want to add specially programmed content.
- I wanted to learn more about how WordPress can be used as a content management system, including how plugins can be configured or altered, or templates created, to deliver special content features. WordPress is increasingly looking like a very important platform for website development, and obvious for a web programmer like myself, I need to know it from top to bottom.
- I wanted a demonstration project I can show potential clients what can be done with their (sometimes very static) existing websites and how much more powerful their sites can become, while not requiring as much attention from hired web programmers (and the expenses associated with that). Imagine your company website that its owner or administrator (normally a non-programmer) can make most of the content updates to!
Of course, I’m not quite finished, so don’t judge, yet.
But if you’re interested, you get to watch three separate sites merge into one, and I will post about what I’m actually doing.
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