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When I want to put a website or blog together quickly, I use WordPress. This blogging tool content management system has been around for years, and it is wildly popular. You log into a dashboard from your favorite web browser, add content, change the look and feel of the site with themes and plugins, and then publish your changes. There's no need, as in iWeb, to make changes locally and then wait for your modifications to be uploaded to a server. It's a great way to learn how WordPress works, all your content can be migrated to another WordPress host at a later date if necessary, and the fairly new step-by-step tutorials are an incredible way to learn all about this powerful content management system.
If you decide to head out on your own, most major web hosting providers have one-click installers for WordPress. In other words, you sign up for a hosting plan, then say that you want WordPress installed. A few minutes later, you get an email from your WordPress site saying that you need to log in and create an administrative account. Do that, and you're on your way to blogging superstardom. WordPress is remarkably powerful, and a vast developer community is constantly creating new plugins to add functionality to the tool and designing new themes to make pages that are unique and beautiful.
If you can't find a theme to your liking, there's always Artisteer , an app that you can use to easily create your own custom theme. There are several plugins now available for WordPress that integrate with shopping cart services like FoxyCart. Finally, WordPress is an excellent way to get familiar with most content management systems. For anyone who has aspirations to become a professional blogger, starting with WordPress can get you familiar with the tools and workflow that you'll need to move on up the ladder.
Want a very easy to use and free way to host a website? Tumblr 's a good start. You can sign up for free in minutes and be posting immediately after that. As you can see from the Tumblr dashboard screenshot above, once you've logged into your account you have a choice of what you can post. Each one of these buttons leads to a data entry page that you can use to post a specific type of content. Tumblr's bookmarklet and email posting tools are pretty snazzy, and they make it easy to clip and share popular links or videos.
You can call in posts from your cellphone, if you like blogging in audio format. I personally don't like the vibe or feel of Tumblr, which is why I use the next tool for some personal posting. The only thing you need to start a Posterous blog is an email account.
Because you can actually do a lot of your posting by just sending emails to a special Posterous address. You can also use the web-based editor with Safari, Firefox, Chrome, or any other modern web browser to update your information. Posterous is completely free, and there's also a free iPhone app for posting on the run.
Another option is to switch to an alternative desktop site editor, and set it up to publish your site at another web host. If you liked iWeb, the closest alternatives are Sandvox and RapidWeaver.
Both have their pros and cons, and both are available for free trial download. Try them both before you make a decision. Moving from iWeb to a new design tool means more than just learning new ways to create and customize websites.
Some handy iWeb features you may have relied on—specifically site-wide password protection, blog and photo comments, blog searching, and the humble hit-counter—required MobileMe hosting to work. Fortunately, most of these features can be reproduced, even improved on, with similar features and services from your new design tool and host. Jimdo offers password protection with its free plan, and Weebly requires a paid account to password-protect your site.
Weebly and Jimdo offer similar commenting on their pages. None of the other design tools offers quite the same built-in same feature, though each can use third-party HTML widgets that do the job.
Each can also use Google Analytics for much more detailed visitor tracking. Secure your site: Jimdo can password-protect your pages with a few clicks. How you do that will depend on your new design tool. If the media files are still in their respective iLife libraries, using a tool with iLife integration will let you access them quickly, much as you did in iWeb.
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