On self-hosting WordPress blogs

A long overdue post on the way I go about blogging. It would be too grandiose to call it a strategy, but actually that’s a reasonable way of describing what I’ve been trying to work out in my mind.

The first thing (as ever with blogging) is context and identity. This “problem” has led me to create different blogs for different purposes. This in itself has caused me problems of identity and of course the targeting of posts to different audiences. [At least in my mind, if not in practice.] This led to a proliferation of blogs on different platforms and a sparsity of posts on nearly all of them :-(. This had to stop!

Some of these issues were also resolved to a large extent by using Google+ and Circles. However the one insurmountable issue appeared to be the spamming of Circles with Public posts – I have come to the realisation that I can’t solve that one without going down the separate identities again, and I’ve come to the conclusion I just can’t do that. I want simplicity, not complexity – so “spamming” it would appear is unavoidable! Actually, it’s not so much spamming as a challenge to me to get people learning a different way of looking at posts :-).

If you think of it, using Google+ is akin to reading a newspaper and absolutely no one reads a whole newspaper from cover to cover … do they? So, I’ll just be sending an explanatory message to my Google+ Circles requesting tolerance and suggesting they just ignore anything that has the word Public after my name :-).

The second issue is where to blog – what platform to use and how to integrate them with social media. For a long time I’ve used Blogger as well as WordPress. That had to stop. The latter is so much a better platform than the former, even if Blogger did integrate so much better with the other Google services. However, WordPress gets better all the time, and in its hosted form the flexibility it offers, and the integration you get by using the Jetpack plugin, creates a platform that is a joy to use. So I decided that my Private (mainly family) blog(s) would remain on Blogger, and so gain from the close integration with Google+, but that my two remaining Public-facing blogs would move to a hosted WordPress platform.

Here I must put in a plug for 5quidhost who (as well as being a UK-based hosting company, which I appreciate and would wish to support in any case) are also incredibly good in their email support and account administration and whose response time for readers in the UK is very good. They have an easily understandable approach to hosting which allows a try-before-you-buy free hosting account before you decide on the scale of hosting you want.

I also would highly recommend DomainMonster for domain registration. Again their dashboard is the easiest to understand of any hosting organisation I’ve seen or used. I moved a number of domains to them from another domain registry a couple of years ago and this went remarkably smoothly. They’ve got a very satisfied customer too!

So, I now have two Public-facing blogs – this one, and one – “Moments like these …” to focus on my photography hobby. They both integrate seamlessly with my social media accounts and I believe now that I’ll be able to keep both reasonably active.

Issues? Well … yes! I thought I’d like to share with you what I’ve learnt from my self-hosting experience. I’ve found that it’s absolutely a time-saver to have a development platform with loads of space that I can have a number of blogs hosted on – as I do authoring and design work for others as well. Using this platform led me to realise a number of things which I wanted to share.

Firstly, store your images off your blog – use flickr, Google+ photos, whatever, and link to them in your posts. This reduces the space used by your blog and therefore the cost of the hosting at very little decrease in the speed of loading a page.

Secondly, be absolutely ruthless in your choice of widgets and plugins. Only use ones that do not impact on the speed of loading a page. Then having made your choice, not only de-activate the plugin but delete it as well – the space and speed you gain by doing this for a number of plugins is remarkable.

Thirdly, only use Responsive themes. There are plenty of them available for free at WordPress.org. Doing this will make the rendering of your posts on mobile devices so much better and easier and the effect is remarkable. It’s like looking at different blogs, every time you look at a post on a different device. Choose the theme that makes your post look best on those multiple platforms.

Fourthly, don’t be scared at the thought of “messing” with your theme. There’s a huge community of wordpress bloggers who will help you create and edit your first child-theme and after that you’ll fly! In fact there’s even a widget or two to help you do the job.

And that’s about it. I hope to have the opportunity to plug (sic) the plugins I’ve found most useful – it may be of use to someone – in a later post. That’s for another day.

How do you solve the problem called “This video is currently unavailable”

Perhaps the one thing that annoys me more about technology than any other thing is when something that should obviously just work – just like that … doesn’t!!!

A case in point is the Google Capture app on iOS. Of course there should be no problem with it working with Google+, or that it should integrate seamlessly with YouTube … think again! Time and time again you get the message “This video is currently unavailable” when you click on the Play button in your Google+ post – unless you’re looking at it on a Desktop, using most probably Chrome. That makes sense doesn’t it? NOT!

So many of my valuable “little grey cells” have been destroyed trying to find out just what’s going wrong; trying to find a workaround to something that there shouldn’t need to be a workaround for. Quelle domage. This stuff’s supposed to be easy, isn’t it?

Finally, I have a workaround. It’s not ideal, but it works. It’s not logical, but it works. It allows me to continue to use technology I like, but which is letting me down. Let me share my solution with you.

1. You start by taking the video clip with Capture, do what edits you want to in the app and then Upload to YouTube. Do not Share at this time. I know you want to, but don’t.

2. Check using the YouTube app that that the video has been Uploaded successfully, return to the Capture app and then Share to Google+. Yes, I said this wasn’t logical, you want to know why you don’t just share from the YouTube app, don’t you? Well you don’t, because you stand a good chance of getting a Red screen thumbnail on your Google+ post, it might be a smiley (sort of) face, or it might be a clock – but the thing is … you don’t want it!

3. So you’re back in the Capture app. Click on Share, choose Google+ and with a fair wind and a slice of luck (and presuming you haven’t jumped the gun and tried to share too quickly, see 2 above) you’ll be able to get a share away and write a post to accompany the video on Google+.

See I told you it wasn’t logical. Come on Google, solve this idiotic problem.