Any tips for hosting a blog? i recently read this speech by deng about the pen being a major tool for exercising leadership and i want to start writing my thoughts to practice and get better.

I’m kind of interested in WriteFreely at the moment, if I wanted to start something up. Seems like a good tool to write stuff and make it easily accessible on the Fediverse.

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4 points

great suggestion i’ll look into it, seems perfect for my sbc server

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2 points

I’ve used it for a long time, great tool! The wordsmith instance iirc.

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2 points

Interesting project. I would have suggested that @bennieandthez@lemmygrad.ml join your mastodon instance since you get 2000 characters per “toot” (weird choice of word tbh), which is not bad at all for shorter writings and you can arrange them into a thread.

The problem with having a blog or any platform is getting people to read you, social media is a powerful tool to get eyes on your content.

Substack is also becoming very popular, I think because you manage your blog space however you like.

And on ProleWiki we’re looking at opening a sort of blog space too for our editors to replace the legacy essays page (which is just a page with a table in it). But you’ll need an editor account and we have no release date at all, we’re still playing around with the idea.

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6 points
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7 points

yea this is what i was thinking, still a bit scary to have a port open to the public internet lol. need to research more.

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3 points

If you can rent a cheap VPS. I host a blog myself, if you have more questions about the hosting process, you can DM me.

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2 points

My advice is to choose whether you want to focus on writing or on learning how to set up the infrastructure for the website. If it is the former then go for something like writefreely or proprietary platforms like medium, substack, github pages etc.

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3 points

I’d personally avoid Medium as they’re quite unfriendly from a privacy perspective, though front-ends such as Scribe exist. Something deployable like Hugo would be the best variant imo, or making it by hand if you’re into that.

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2 points

You could also rent a VPS and make a Wireguard tunnel between your homeserver and the VPS, thus not exposing your home network.

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1 point
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7 points
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Easy+free option might be making a static site on github. Basically you write your posts in some easy to write format like markdown and then run a command to generate the HTML from it, then commit the whole thing to a git repository. Look up “static site generator” for various tools to help you do that. The site’ll be hosted on your-username.github.io. Unlimited flexibility as you can tweak the styles and how the generation happens as you want and there’s virtually no limits as long as you’re just posting text and the occasional image. A lot of programmer blogs I’ve seen are run this way but ofc can write about whatever you want on there :)

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7 points

Making a website is cool, but don’t forget about the most important thing: content! You can start writing now, and save your work in Word/Writer/Notepad/whatever until you’ve found or built a place online to publish it.

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2 points

My only experience is having a Tumblr, which is in many ways better than the usual big name social medias, but in many ways is just as poisonous in a very subtle and pernicious way.

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