Quest for The One Blog, Part 7

834 words.

I stopped writing about my Quest for The One Blog for a very good reason: I gave up on it. What I want to do is essentially impossible unless I develop the blogging platform from scratch myself (or fork one of the open source projects). It’s within my skillset to do that, but I just don’t have the time or motivation or funds for it. (But hey, if anyone is interested in Kickstarting it, let me know!)

So I suppose I need to figure out how to shoehorn my blogging goals into what’s available on the mainstream blogging platforms.

I wanted to change web hosts. I still do. I’m thinking about trying out Bluehost. They offer a plan that works for me. I’ve seen people recommend it, I’ve seen people leaving it. In the absence of any other data, I figure one web host is just as good as another: Meaning there’s roughly a 50/50 chance it will be good or bad. All you can do is try them and hope to get lucky.

I considered managed hosting. But that’s just not going to happen unless I can count on making money from blogging, and that’s definitely not going to happen. I’ve never once received an email from anyone trying to buy space on my blog. (Then again, I don’t actually read the email associated with my blog very often.) So I’ll continue with one of those $5/month Linux shared hosting plans.

I said I don’t like WordPress, but it’s the clear winner in terms of audience reach. Heavy sigh. It’s the VHS winning out over Beta, all because of superior marketing, all over again. Super heavy sigh.

As much as I hate the WordPress backend from a software developer perspective, from a user perspective, “it just works.” And as Aywren recently noted, and others, there is a huge WordPress ecosystem that comes built-in to even self-hosted WordPress installations.

But here’s the thing: There’s a lot of cruft that accumulates in a WordPress blog. After 5 years now (6 years? I don’t remember), my media library is an absolute nightmare. God help me if I ever want to find or retrieve anything from there. It’s like a Windows installation after a few years-everything’s slow and bloated and festering with entropy.

So I definitely do not want to simply move my existing blog to a new host as-is. I want to hit a “reset” button and start rebuilding a clean, new database.

Which means I have an opportunity to “re-brand” here. If/when I move to a new host, I will probably rename the site to something a little more personalized. Something that says, “a person lives here,” as opposed to Endgame Viable, which just says, “this is a publication.”

I’ve always been flustered and flummoxed that “my site” and “my identify” are two different things. My Twitter handle is @endgameviable, which is the name of the site, not my name. It bugs me a great deal. That’s something I want to correct going forward. So it’s almost certain I will rename that handle someday.

Back to the blog, the question for me is, how do I merge everything all together into one site in a way that it doesn’t self-destruct? I want to maintain at least a real name developer identity, a writing identity, and a musician identity. Brands, as it were, that can be marketed to the appropriate marketplace. (I view the gaming identity as a kind of subset of the developer and writing identities, not really a “brand” in itself. Hence the reason I don’t really have a “personal brand” for Endgame Viable.)

The only thing I can think of to do is to create a new “umbrella” site that has a fairly generic and unspecific name, but is clearly a personal identity. Then create a few sub-blogs underneath the umbrella entity.

That way if you come to the main site, the umbrella site as it were, you would get a feed of all my blog posts about every conceivable subject. You would know it’s “me” because the umbrella site will have a name that strongly associates it with “me.” But there would still be these satellite blogs with more specific topics.

I’m not entirely sure how to implement that in WordPress. It sounds like something that would be perfect for a multiblog, but I don’t think it is. The experiments I’ve done with WordPress multiblogs have allowed the creation of two or more parallel blogs, but not any kind of hierarchical structure. I want to create something like a parent blog, with three or more child blogs.

I think it might be time to install WordPress on my Ubuntu server and start playing with it. Heavy sigh.

Then there’s the rather intimidating prospect of thinking of a new blog name, one that will be unique across all social media, catchy, and a personal identity. Huge heavy sigh.

This post is part of The Quest for The One Blog. Next up: Part 8.

Related

This page is a static archival copy of what was originally a WordPress post. It was converted from HTML to Markdown format before being built by Hugo. There may be formatting problems that I haven't addressed yet. There may be problems with missing or mangled images that I haven't fixed yet. There may have been comments on the original post, which I have archived, but I haven't quite worked out how to show them on the new site.

Archived Comments

Naithin 2019-08-27T23:35:23Z

WP RSS Aggregator would do what you want on the umbrella site, but not within the confines of the free version unfortunately. So you’d have to assess whether the licensing cost (there are annual and one-off / lifetime versions) is worth it to you or not. At the very least you’d only need the one license.

The main premium addon you would need, I think, is: https://www.wprssaggregator.com/extension/feed-to-post/

Which is $269 lifetime or $79 annually, neither exactly cheap but if you saw this as your new longterm setup the lifetime option probably makes sense.

I haven’t tried this particular addon – no need for it – but I did end up grabbing the RSS categorisation addon and I’ve loved that. (Sounds like you wouldn’t need this on top though, since the feed to post can import categories for the post itself no problem).

Aywren Sojourner 2019-08-28T18:05:41Z

I’m a little sorry to see this as the outcome of your search. I didn’t fully understand everything you were doing in your posts, but I was quite interested in seeing if you did find something that served as a WordPress alternative.

I don’t have anything against WordPress, obviously, but it was just pure curiosity to see what else was out there. Thanks for your time, work and documentation on it. I learned about a bunch of blogging platforms I didn’t know existed!

UltrViolet 2019-08-28T21:59:42Z I haven’t quite given up on leaving WordPress but the odds are stacked pretty high against it right now. :)

Sorry, new comments are disabled on older posts. This helps reduce spam. Active commenting almost always occurs within a day or two of new posts.