3 posts tagged “wordpress”
July 24, 2008 — 09:30 AM PDT — by —
Seeing
as how Web services today are becoming more and more multi-faceted and
multi-functional, particularly in the social networking and social
media space, it really is open to debate what is and what is not part
of a specific segment of the market. Where blogging starts and where
networking ends, for instance, is a gray area that has grown ever
larger with time. Mobile utilities in particular have evolved to
contain powerful assets that accomplish several tasks at once.
Good ol’ run-of-the-mill blogging: TypePad and WordPress
If we burrow down to the core of the blogging world, there are several platforms which sport robust frameworks, and many of them are free to use. WordPress, TypePad, Blogger, Live Spaces, are just a few that sport mass userships and audiences. But only two currently reside as native, officially-released applications within the iPhone/iPod touch paradigm. They are, as we noted recently, TypePad and Wordpress.
WordPress arrived with its own utility after TypePad had introduced itself to users. Both have received good reviews so far. And why not, really. Both aptly manage the basic tasks of posting and editing blogs, and each enables the user to upload photos from a library or take new images via the iPhone’s onboard camera.
I have already offered my own impressions about both applications, and happen to favor TypePad’s application a bit more than the WordPress release because TypePad provides support for English and French, but both essentially get the same job done similarly well. Neither path will lead you astray. Quite honestly, as I said before, one’s choice of application will naturally fall to whichever platform one prefers as it appears on the desktop, and whether one has invested much time in either setting.
Micro-blogging
There
are even more choices in the microblogging realm, and if photos are
one’s main source of intrigue, the list is even more voluminous. So
let’s dig in. To start, there are the Twitter-specific applications: Twitterific, available for free and ad-supported [iTunes
]; or as a paid-for premium version [iTunes
]; Twittelator
[iTunes
]; and Twinkle
[iTunes
].

My experiences, coupled with feedback from others tells me Twitterific is the most pleasant, as it has the benefit of housing a browser within.
If you’re one to click on URLs posted by friends, this is definitely a convenient feature. And in my trials, it has proven quite reliable. It is most useful due to the fact that it makes any transfer out of Twitterific and into Safari Mobile unnecessary. Once you’ve taken a look at whatever webpage you were directed to, you can close the browser and immediately carry on with reading incoming feeds. No need to repetitively enter and exit applications.
Twinkle is aesthetically pleasing, no doubt, and it adds a location dimension to facilitate conversation among users within a given area. But the application has been known to crash regularly. According to Tapulous, Inc, the creator of Twinkle, an update should arrive this Friday, July 25, to fix bugs and “other minor problems.”
Miscellaneous and (even more) multi-functional
Here’s where it all comes down to personal tastes and desires. Some applications will connect you to numerous services for easy, synchronized posting. Others will help you satisfy only your tendencies as a photo blogger. Some will help you connect with friends, micro-blog a bit, and even post duplicate hellos and how-are-yous to Twitter. That’s because… well… it all comes back to Twitter, doesn’t it? Without further adieu, here are some items for your consideration listed in no particularly prearranged order.
LifeCast
[iTunes
]:
Manage your day’s events in organized fashion. Want to keep what you do
for work and for play exclusive? No problem. LifeCast is about keeping
things tidy. Also, non-English speakers will enjoy its slightly
multi-lingual reach. French, German, Italian, and Spanish are all
supported. Also, if you’d like to post text to Blogger, you may. The same goes for Tumblr (photos, too). Geo-tagging comes with.

Bluepulse
[iTunes
]: We gave this a brief review
some days ago. And while it wasn’t my personal cup of tea, it’s
something that others have shown an affinity for. If you’d like
something Twitter-esque (with a Twitter connection, to boot), albeit in
a way that allows you to message multiple people of your choosing —
rather than, say, everyone on your friends and followers list(s) — this
one’s a treat. The layout may take some getting used to, though. It
appears designed to make existing Bluepulse users comfortable when
making “the switch.”

ShoZu
[iTunes
]:
If this one were to be described in a single word (not yet recognized
by the grammar police), it would no doubt be “awesomeness.” You need
only look at the list of supported sites and services to get a grasp on
what this ShoZu
is all about. It is the Swiss Army knife of online social interaction
(so far as photo uploads and status updates and things are concerned,
anyway).

Pownce
[iTunes
]: Despite what the heads at Pownce
say, this one’s original intent was most definitely to give Twitter a
little slap-slap. Which seemed like it might’ve been possible, until it
didn’t. For what it’s worth, it’s still a nifty service. If you want it
on your iPhone, the download is available.

Kyte
[iTunes
]: Mobile photo blogging is super cool, for sure. But mobile slideshow blogging is exponentially more kick-ass. Kyte makes that happen. For this one you might need to take a few minutes to craft something nice, but it’s worth it.

Clowdy Photo Blogger
[iTunes
]:
The name says it all. It also lets you see photos taken “nearby” to
where you stand. A number of downloads currently available in the App
Store do this as well, but Clowdy works the photo realm exclusively.
It’s free, and it’s all of 0.1MB large.

Graffitio
[iTunes
]:
This operates with the same location-based concept as Clowdy, but it’s
text-based. The best way to explain it is to offer an example. Say
you’re at a restaurant. You can check Graffitio to see if a
Facebook-like “wall” has been created for the place. If so, you can
post a public message to it. If a wall doesn’t exist, create one. If
enough people participate in the experiment and visit various locations
regularly, it starts to become a rather interesting series of
whiteboards.

Speaking of Facebook, the Web’s largest social network (arguably) has its own application [iTunes], as many have already learned, and in some respects, it’s about blogging, too. If you’re one to routinely update your status, and your friends do too, what’s to say you all aren’t blogging? And with the recent update to the application, introduced late last week, you can post to your own wall as well as those of friends. Upload photos seamlessly too.

WordPress app hits the iPhone fashionably late
Just a week and a half ago WordPress for the iPhone was announced with a pretty killer screencast detailing what you could do with it. Tuesday morning it finally showed up on the app store, and I've had ample time to play with it. The good news is that it's very enjoyable to use and quite capable for creating posts on the go. The bad news? You've got to have an iPhone or iPod Touch to take advantage of it.
The key benefit to using this app is writing and publishing quick posts on the go. What I found after using it, though, is that it offers up far more to the discerning user who wants to use it as a very powerful publishing tool. You can upload photos either from your existing library or snap a quick shot with your phone's camera. I can see this leading to many food-related photo blogs. Also nice is that whatever you write can be saved on your phone, so you can work on dozens of posts at once and only publish when you want. There's also a great preview function that will show you what your post will look like without kicking you off to Safari.
I successfully connected two Wordpress.com hosted blogs to the app in just a minute or two, although I ran into problems connecting my personal hosted blog that uses the software install from WordPress.org. It's worth noting you'll need version 2.5.1 or higher to hook it up to a hosted blog, although updating to the recently released 2.6 is definitely worth it for all those extra publishing goodies.
Unfortunately there are some serious shortcomings to the iPhone that bring the app down a notch. If you're used to adding links to your posts there's not a lot you can do without copy and paste. HTML code is fully supported, so as long as you're good with your href tagging (which is brutal on the iPhone's built-in keyboard) you'll be able to add links from memory just fine.
Another quibble of mine is that drafts created on your computer won't show up in your post queue on the iPhone app, meaning you won't be able to start a post on your computer and finish it on the road. Ideally, future revisions will include better shortcuts for adding links and some support for fetching drafts from the cloud.
Hardcore users with a lot of readers will also be pining for some sort of comment management feature in future revisions. As it stands, you'll have to log in to your WordPress dashboard from Safari and administrate them from there, which isn't terrible, but it would be far more enjoyable to write and manage in one place.
All in all, it's off to a great start, and compared to competitor TypePad, which had its app available at the launch of the app store, WordPress is just as full featured and opens up mobile blogging to the millions of WordPress.com and WordPress.org users.
I've embedded screenshots and the screencast below.
Sarah Perez / ReadWriteWeb:
Amit Agarwal / Digital Inspiration:iPhone for WordPress Application Now Live on iPhone App Store
