Topic: How do you present articles? (Read 903 times)
Bill Gates is my home boy
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« on: Oct 10, 2006, 12:36:05 AM »
I've got a section of one of my sites that has some articles.
After it being up for a few months and watching my log/traffic, I took a more critical look at the page.
Despite the articles all being written by me and probably because there are only a few of them, the page looks like one of the spammy MFA sites.
I've played with moving things around, but since it is such a small sub-section of a bigger site, I can't figure out how to fix/design it while keeping some continuity with the rest of the site.
I would love some suggestions as my logs indicate that section of the site gets visitors, but few stay.
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Jedai Sword Master
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It's time to use PHP5!
« Reply #1 on: Oct 10, 2006, 09:01:50 AM »
Most of the MFA site are designed very simple (less graphics, desgin). Since your design is very basic the page is getting an image of an MFA site. I think one thing you can do is to add a comment section, some digg, delicio buttons or a voting system.
Bill Gates is my home boy
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« Reply #4 on: Oct 10, 2006, 04:07:28 PM »
I am working on a seperate, but related blog. I'm still setting it up. It will be on it's own domain. I had planned to keep the original articles in place. Now I'm wondering if I should move them?
I am working on a seperate, but related blog. I'm still setting it up. It will be on it's own domain. I had planned to keep the original articles in place. Now I'm wondering if I should move them?
I have a similar problem, I wrote some articles (including some PHP code) and need to include them in my blog site but highlighting php code is not so fine with wordpress. Will say I need to show them at my homepage
Bill Gates is my home boy
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« Reply #6 on: Oct 10, 2006, 05:23:39 PM »
I don't know if it would do what you need, but I'm using Serendipity. It's open source, has a very active forum (didn't find any unanswered posts), and there is constantly new templates and plug-ins being added.
Part of why I chose it is how fast it loads.
With the built in templates and easy installation, you could literally have a blog up and running in under 10 minutes.
I guess I'll need to rethink having the articles on the directory.
Bill Gates is my home boy
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« Reply #8 on: Oct 11, 2006, 12:28:38 AM »
Yes, it is. I've only begun playing with it, but it seems like it is more flexible than WP - at least what some of the more active programmer types are saying. It seems so folks are also using it as a CMS and running traditional looking sites with it.
Most blogs seem to load so slowly on my dial-up connection and the ones that use this software loaded more like a regular HTML page.
When people develop templates, they are tested for standards compliance. They even ask that any plug-ins or templates be written to their standards with inline comments and tabbing.
So far I've been very impressed with both the software and the community.