March 12, 2008
Getting there one piece at a time
Posted by John (Admin) under Site | Tags: plugins, research blog, Site |We’re getting there!
A couple days ago my boss commented that he’s getting a much different vibe out of me working on this project than he got when I was largely concerned with a pilot program involving tablet PCs running Vista; I retorted that there’s a big difference when all you have to do is follow the directions and stuff works (as opposed to following the directions and stuff doesn’t work anyway…).
The main focus of starting this project is to establish 1) some research bloggers and 2) a “mother blog” focused on undergraduate research at William and Mary that would aggregate posts from our research bloggers and have a public tagging capability so interested readers could help categorize postings. We’re using feedwordpress for aggregation via RSS (the author of which kindly and thoroughly explained to me aspects of its operation); TagThis fits the bill perfectly for audience tagging, and even supports tag-use thresholds and other functions more robust than I’d imagined when I thought about what we’d need to accomplish that.
I got Defensio installed to control comment spam (though I can’t say how well it works yet–so far we’re under the spam radar, though I’m sure that will change any time). The developer was quick to address a dashboard bug that arose since I’ve disabled the Plugins management tab in the dashboard in favor of using Plugin Commander.
I don’t want to sound too fanboyish, but it’s as if WPMU is the Big Rock Candy Mountain of CMS/Blogging systems: whenever I want something, I just reach out and it’s there–and it works! And if it doesn’t, there’s an interested, active base of users and authors who are willing to help. From an admin point of view, there’s not much more gratifying than that.
March 17th, 2008 at 6:55 pm
Two new blogs already! We’re not quite at the University of Mary Washington let, but we’re on our way.
March 18th, 2008 at 8:12 am
**smile** Very nifty! I hope–and I guess it’s the vision and goal, too–that it snowballs into an active hub & resource from these humble beginnings.
March 26th, 2008 at 5:06 am
Jim Groom has a relevant post on software to eliminate comment spam. Also, he’s back at Mary Washington after a short (3 week) tour at the University of Richmond.
http://www.bloglines.com/myblogs
March 26th, 2008 at 5:08 am
Oops. Posted the wrong URL for Jim’s blog.
http://bavatuesdays.com/
March 26th, 2008 at 4:27 pm
Thanks for the tag. I think feedWordPress is the way to go in terms of aggregation. And one of the things I have been playing with is a self-service RSS feed drop.
For example, say you have a number of blogs on your WPMu install, which you will, some of which deal with one particular focus as opposed to another. You can run an aggregated blog with FeedWordPress that is actually taking all of its post from an OPML feed created by the BDP RSS aggregation plugin. You can get the aggregated feed for the appropriately numbered output by doing http://wmblogs.org/bdprssfeed=1 (with the domain being that of the aggreagtor blog).
Why do this? Well, because Andre Malan’s sidebar widget for BDP RSS allows registered WPMu users (and even anyone depending on how you set it up) to drop just about any feed into a text field on the sidebar, and it will automatically be run through FeedWordPress, and into the aggregation blog.
Here is an example: http://swan.wpmued.org
It is a quick, self-service solution that might just work if you want to use aggregation on a number of scales, i.e. school-wide, discipline specific, course specific, or for particualr groups.
March 26th, 2008 at 4:43 pm
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