Saturday, July 25, 2015

Wix

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Wix is a cloub-based web development platform whose brand name stresses originality, simplicity and above all, free. For this reason the platform is popular among musicians, photographers, entrepreneurs and other small business owners who want a quick-fix website on a very low budget. The catch with Wix is the premium features, which of course cost money, which you’ll almost definitely need as you expand your website. The main difference here between a Wix and a WordPress is with Wix you enter for free and pay more as you go, and with WordPress you enter for a cost (domain name and hosting) and afterwards all resources are free.
Ø  Stats:
Ø  Recommended for: Quick fix small-business budget websites
Ø  Released: 2006
Ø  Founder: Avishai Abrahami
Ø  Total users: 57 million
Ø  Pros: Drag and drop website builder which uses HTML5, little to no coding knowledge necessary, free to get a basic website online, text editor and free fonts, free templates, mobile friendly, login through Facebook or Google + accounts, and more.
Ø  Cons: Charges for many features one would expect to be free. Difficult to transfer away from.
Ø  Costs: Premium version of the software and additions, domain names, hosting capability. Unclear exactly how much you might spend but it has been reported to often cost several hundred dollars per year.

Ø  My verdict: Obviously a very successful company with a wide marketing budget and clean look. But I’d never recommend Wix. There is just no situation I can bring to mind in which I would recommend Wix because of their pricing structure and decreasing market share among respected online brands.

SquareSpace

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All over television with beautiful and encouraging ads, SquareSpace offers a nice solution for the business owner in need of a web presence. Get online quickly with a free trial, setup a cool design and start attracting clients – that’s the motto. If a more complex blogging platform were snowboarding, SquareSpace would be skiing, in the pie wedge stance 
Stats:
§  Recommended for: Individual and business blogs and websites
§  Founded: January 2004
§  Founder: Anthony Casalena
§  Total users: ?
§  Pros: Elegant designs setup with a couple of clicks.
§  Cons: Less customization – you’ll pay for things that may come free at a place like WordPress
§  Costs: 14-day free trial with plans from $8 and up afterwards

§  My verdict: Less hands-on than WordPress but arguably better advertising and accessibility – Squarespace gets your business site up quickly. A good quick solution.

Tumblr

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Introduction to Tumblr:

At a time when WordPress and Blogger were neck-and-neck for new users, Tumblr showed up as the 3rd guy to the party. They received lots of sign-ups from users wanting a totally refreshing take on blogging, and have grown ever since. Tumblr was recently bought by Yahoo, who has interesting plans for the whole blog advertising thing.
Stats:
§  Founded: February 2007
§  Founder: David Karp
§  Total users: 152 million
§  Pros: Ease of use and ability to share your friends’ work through re-blogging.
§  Cons: Less customization, just a shade less professional and not ideal for conducting business.
§  Costs: Free, pay Tumblr to get your own domain name without the “.tumblr” addition

§  My verdict: Great for photography and other forms of art. Super-simplistic designs and a whimsical vibe make Tubmlr a great choice for any new blogger.

WordPress.com

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WordPress.com is a free blog-hosting site with roughly half the features of .org. The general idea here is less maintenance for you, but less control of the blog. Get a .wordpress domain name like “dearblogger.wordpress.com” or pay to use your own domain name. Need a niche? WordPress.com sees 100,000 posts published each day so you’ll surely find like-minded thinkers. Not a full company website but a loyal companion for one. Write posts, try a free theme, set up social media buttons and learn blogging at WordPress.com.
Stats:
§  Recommended for: Mass community blogging
§  Released: November 21, 2005
§  Founder: Matt Mullenweg of Automattic
§  Total users: 56 million blogs
§  Pros: Ease to use with little you can mess up.
§  Cons: Less customization and a bit fussy with adding certain features.
§  Costs: Free, you can pay WordPress.com to get a domain name without the “.wordpress” addition.

§  My verdict: A lovely intro to blogging that about 1 year in takes us all to a crossroads: stay put, or transfer to WordPress.org.

Blogger.com

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Blogging. 










The thing your friend does that you could do better. The hobby of the century. Your key to boss-less freedom and your cat’s one shot at fame. So do your homework with this list and start a blog the whole world, and your mom, will love.

Ø  Recommended for: Blogging
Ø  Founded: August 2013, 1999
Ø  Notable events: Bought by Google in February, 2003
Ø  Founder: Evan Williams of Pyra Labs
Ø  Total users:
Ø  Pros: Publish anywhere, huge community, images, video, edit HTML/CSS, template designer, track traffic stats in Blogger, Adsense at no charge
Ø  Cons: While Blogger is where many writers (including Dear Blogger) started publishing, it’s designs appear a bit childish today. Google owns your blog – they axed Reader – so acknowledge a bit less control upfront.
Ø  Costs: Pay $10/year for a domain name without the “.blogspot” extension – otherwise totally free.
Ø  Future predictions: May merge with Google+.

Ø  My verdict: Everything blogging should be and more – Blogger was the sandbox for names now headlining in tech. The only real negative comes from outgrowing Blogger, at which point many (like myself) transfer to WordPress. Less popular today – even Google’s PR Mogul Matt Cutts runs a WordPress site.