February 4, 2012

Blogging on Empty Creates a Newsletter

Blogging on Empty is pleased to announce it’s very own Part-Time Bloggers Blog Tips Newsletter. For those of you reading this blog regularly you probably don’t have a lot of time to a) remember which blogs help you blog better, and b) visit those blogs and read all the valuable information on them.

That’s why we at Blogging on Empty want to provide you with an even easier way to get our free tips by offering this great newsletter free of charge. We pride ourselves on a no spam policy and just want to bring you great tips to help you improve your blogging.

So if you feel like getting free blog tips, then signup, it’s easy. In the upper right hand corner, below our showing off our readership, you’ll see a signup form that all you have to do is put in your name and email, accept the confirmation email (that way we limit spammers) and start enjoying the FREE newsletter.

Setup a Site with Many Bloggers

If any of you have ever wanted to create a site with multiple users each having their own blogs, and love the way WordPress manages their blogging platform, well now you’re in luck!

Found via problogger.net Darren tipped me off (as he usually does) to WordPress’ announcement of WordPress MU 1.0. The MU stands for multi-user allows you to “manage and host” thousands of blogs instead of one.

WordPress says the install is a little more difficult and for those who know servers a little better, but I’m sure, as with all the WordPress products, WordPress MU will be just as easy in no time to come.
How many sites will have multiple blogs by the end of this week, I can think of a few that I would imagine will add them soon enough.

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Embed a Video in Australia

Google Video announced today that “Google Video Australia” is available and ready to go down under.

You Aussies can now search the most popular videos in Australia and embed them in your sites. For those of you stumped on what to write about for some of the newest bloggers, you can easily add content and media, which is big this day and age if it moves, into your site.
And If you keep it fresh that means more people will wonder back your way to see what’s new!

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It’s a Blogger Birthday

Evan Williams, current CEO of Odeo, Inc. in San Francisco, reflects on when he launched blogger (before Google Gobbled it up) over at Pyra.

Believe it or not, even though you’ve probably just started blogging, and probably been using some free service such as blogger, Blogger is 7 years old. My guess is there are some 6 yera olds out there that have a few Blogger blogs.

Check out more about Evan Williams and Blogger over at his post Blogger is 7


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Best Blogging Tool Ever – Flock You

I can’t believe I blogged any other way.

I currently use wordpress on all my blogs, all 11 of them. But this blogging tool will work on all major blog software out there, read below to see which ones.
The Old Way:

To post I used go to the particular Blog’s WordPress Dashboard, click on write, and go about my business. If I post about a news story or some other great tidbit I found on a website I have to open it (usually in a separate tab) and click back and forth, copying and pasting things I can’t memorize how to spell and generally spending a lot of time keeping my readers updated on the most current related information.

Uploading images, formating text, copying web addresses. Time Time Time. I would waste a lot of time doing a lot of things that I knew had to be possible some other way.

I was then pointed to the greatest Browser a Blogger could ever use.

The New Way:

Now I blog from my browser. As I surf the Internet and see articles I think you, my readers may like, I right click to “blog this,” Type or quote a little bit from my new “stuck” window, hit publish, choose which of my eleven blogs and categories I want to publish to, add some tags and presto, I just published some fresh new content for my blog.

It’s that easy. Flock is amazing. It’s a browser based off of Mozilla but with all the add-ins you could possibly want to be a great and efficient blogger. It literally has everything. I’ll outline some of the best here that deal with efficient blogging but there are a lot more you can use.

Built in Feed Reader

Flock has a built in feedreader. That’s right, no need to login to an account, check your feeds, go to your wordpress, blogger, or typepad dashboard and blog about what you read. Just organize your feeds into folders, it’ll tell you whats new, then right click “blog this.”

To add feeds just click on the RSS icon or link on any blog or news source and it’ll bring up that sources feed. Another great thing is that any site with a valid feed shows up with an RSS icon in the address bar that you can also click and add to your feeds.

Don’t worry if you have a bloglines or other feedreader account you can import back and forth your feeds so you can have the feeds on the go as well.

Web Snippets – Better than Google Notebook

Google Notebook is an interesting addition to your web browser but isn’t all that integrated. It’s still cumbersome to navigate through your stuff and hard to add to blog posts where most people would need it.

With Flock’s Web Snippets all you need to do is drag and drop or right click and add and your in business. The web snippets are saved in a nice expandable/collapsible toolbar at the bottom of your screen. You can then drag and drop the pictures you save, the text, or video feeds into any web application or “blog this” post.

It’s that easy.

Blog This – Finally Efficiency

You can finally have truly efficient blogging. Flock’s “Blog This” function allows you to blog about anything you’re reading or looking at. That’s right you can even do pictures. You can shape and resize pictures (I resized the picture above right in the “blog this” window.)

You can highlight text or pictures, right click to blog this, and your text along with a titled link to what you’re viewing is right there in the window for you and ready to go.
The “blog this” window is sticky, meaning it’s anchored to the screen and you can scroll, highlight, navigate whatever you want to the main browser window and it’s tabs. You can copy paste, drag drop, whatever you want.

You don’t have to log in anymore, all you have to do is setup each of your blogs with their passwords and Flock does the rest. It’ll find your blog, it’s settings, and it’s categories. You truly never have to log in again if you don’t want to. Just click publish!

One other cool thing about the “blog this” feature is that it allows you to tag your posts with technorati tags. No plugins, no coding, just add your tags in their tag box and they show up at the bottom of the post. Tags are quickly becoming vital to a bloggers toolbox and this is a no-brainer way of tagging your posts.

Don’t worry about blogging software support, flock currently works with all the major blog softwares out there like Blogger, Typepad, WordPress, Moveable Type, Live Journal, MetaWeblog API, and Atom API based blogs.
Lack of Toolbar – No Problem

I can’t find a Google or MSN toolbar download support for it but that’s no problem. The built in search box lets you customize what base search engine to use and also lets you add other engines to the pop down search as you type option.

I would imagine you’ll see a toolbar soon as flock seems to be catching on. The one thing I miss is to check Google pagerank of the pages I visit but I’m sure I’ll get over it.
Finally

Flock has tons of other great photo features, favorites sharing, extensions, plugins whatever you want to call them, and it’s open source. Meaning the general public makes it better through extensions and updates. It’s also got a nice support forum and more that you’ll have to try out.
Flock is great and you have to give it a try for blogging and browsing. Just try it out and see what it can do for you. I know there are blogging tool additions for Firefox from groups like Performancing and other add ins that make IE and FF like Flock, but Flock has it all.

By the way this was blogged using Flock!

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Blogging Platforms

What Blogging Platform should you choose? It’s all a matter of preference. I would stick with a free one, and one that lets you write from anywhere, on any computer. Aside from that, really, it’s all up to you. Some you’ll need a server to host the software on (WordPress, etc) which could end up costing you money, and some will offer hosting service for free with the blogging software (blogger, etc).

Blogging On Empty has put together a list of some of the more popular platforms below. This list is by no means exhaustive and will be updated as much as possible. The links are to the particular website of that software and aren’t affiliate links so the list is in no ranking order. Check out their sites for more information on what services are offered and to get a demonstration of the blogging software in action.

WordPress
Typepad
Blogger
Movable Type
Expression Engine
Live Journal
Xanga
iblog
MySpace
Again these are just some of the blogging platforms that are available to you right now. There are new ones being developed all the time. All of the ones listed here allow you to host your blog on their site with some limitations on them. BOE will discuss these limitations in a future article but suggest taking a look for yourself to see what these softwares can do for you.