Tuesday, October 13, 2015

THE Best Places to Start a Blog 2015


THE Best Places to Start a Blog 2015


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Typepad


Browse at Typepad.com

Founded October 2003:


Founder: Say Media


Total users: ?


Pros: Ease of use


Cons: Less costumization


Costs: Free


My verdict: Just love the news? If so, know that ABC, BBC, CBS, MSNBC and more use Typepad to maintain blogs.


Weebly platform



Weebly


Browse at Weebly.com



Founded: 2006


Founder: David Rusenko


Total users: hosts 15 million websites


Pros: Drag and drop feature so easy a monkey could use it.


Cons: Less control for the user


Costs: ?


My verdict: I’ve heard a lot of positive reviews here. For a company owner who needs a website but despises tech, it’s Weebly or Squarespace, and both are sound choices.


Drupal


Browse at Drupal.org


Recommended for: Blogging, Content Management, Web Applications


Founded: January 2001


Founder: Dries Buytaert


Total users: 1 million users and 30K developers


Pros: 22,900 free add-ons, free and premium themes via the Drupal Theme Garden


Cons: Quite involved, not ideal for beginners


Costs: ?


My verdict: Fun for developers and bloggers with a real interest in building code.


Squidoo


Browse at Squidoo.com



Founded: 2005


Founder: Seth Godin


Total users: 1.5 million


Pros: Lenses and points systems to level up are only part of the fun.


Cons: Like Hubpages, you might not feel an ownership of your work.


Costs: Free


My verdict: A classy place to meet others before you get more serious about blogging.


✩ ♨ New Releases ♨ ✩


Postach.io


Browse at Postach.io


Recommended for: On-the-go bloggers, note-taking


Founded: 2013


Founder: Evernote


Total users: 20,000


Pros: Supports popular comment plugin Disqus, lighter feel, easy to use.


Cons: Less costumization


Costs: Free


My verdict: Too soon to form a verdict here!


Facebook Notes


Browse at Facebook.com/notes






Recommended for: Social media integrated blogging


Founded: 2013


Founder: Facebook Developers


Total users: Well, 1.1 billion already on Facebook…


Pros: Simple to share images, links and quotes – useful if you’ve got a large, Facebook-centric audience already.


Cons: Limited design and that blue Facebook-y feel we all should just escape every now and then.


Costs: Free


My verdict: Not much different from a Facebook page – I predict this to be a feature Facebook tries, directs advertisers to, then slowly wanders away from.


Svbtle


Browse at Svbtle.com






Founded: 2013


Founder: Dustin Curtis


Total users: ?


Pros: New, different; aren’t we all?


Cons: Must apply for a membership and no commenting feature as of yet.


Costs: Free


My verdict: They are a “network of great people who want to make it easier for people to share and discover new ideas”. Excited to see where Svbtle goes in the next few months.


sett-logo


Sett


Browse at Sett.com


Founded: Early 2013


Founder: Tynan (a blogger) and Todd Iceton


Total users: 1,000 – 10,000


Pros: Generally bent on community, top navigation bar like Blogger, has a word-matching system that matches similar posts and will recommend users to your posts the moment they sign-up, private discussions, one click subscription system


Cons: Premium service that allows for more image hosting (does this mean normal users are limited?)


Costs: Free with premium service offered


My verdict: I’ve always believed it’s the readers who really grow a blog, not so much the blogger him/herself. 80/20. So I’m excited here. Will they win the battle for 3rd place? Either way, the web is always better with more variety, more options, more places to blog.


ghost-logo


Ghost


Browse at Ghost.org

Founded: Early 2013


Founder: Ghost Foundation


Total users: 10,000 – 50,000


Pros: Open-source so once you download it you own it, organized at run by volunteers and non-profits


Cons: Any service that charges based on the amount of views you get is a villain in my book or could become one. Don’t limit us, thanks.


Costs: Free with premium service offered


My verdict: Got to respect their lofty ideas. But, I suspect they are trying to KO WordPress and possibly backed by BlueHost based on their web design, so I oppose :)


posthaven-logo

Posthaven


Browse as Posthaven.com

Founded: Early 2013


Founder: Ghost Foundation


Total users: 10,000 – 50,000


Pros: Post by email. Oh and “they’ll never get acquired, never shut down” as long as you pay them.


Cons: “Simple, easy blogs for $5 a month, forever.”


Costs: 5 bucks


My verdict: They’re a group of engineers who want to build blogs for us. Love this idea and wish them the best. But as a company you just can’t get ahead in an open environment like blogging by trying to control things, at least not upfront. Their technology might be great and “durable” but most of us will never know, because their marketing is a zero and their homepage design is really weak.


Posterous


Browse at Posterous.com


Unfortunately this site has been deprecated, or slowly removed with no further updates.


✩ ♨ Almost Extinct ♨ ✩


Blog.com


Browse at Blog.com


Recommended for: Blogging

Founded: 2004


Founders: ?


Total users: 2 million


Pros: Free themes, multi-author blogging, social media widgets, video


Cons: Less customization


Premium features: Your own domain name, advertising network


Costs: ?


My verdict: You’d hope a domain name as strong as blog.com would produce a winner…


Zoomshare


Browse at ZoomShare.com

Founded: ?


Founder: ?


Total users: < 50K


Pros: Still has a community


Cons: Shifting 100% of users to paid version


Costs: “As of May 22, 2013 our free website service has been discontinued. If you would like to convert to the paid service click here and upgrade for the low cost of $6.95 a month.”


My verdict: Not enough information to form a verdict.


Xanga


Browse at Xanga.com

Founded: ?


Founder: ?


Total users: < 50K


Pros: Resembles WordPress


Cons: Unclear timeframe of new software releases


Costs: ?


My verdict: Not enough information to form a verdict.


The End

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