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Writer's Portfolio Web Site -- WordPress, Drupal or Something Else?
rweisman | Feb 22 2008
I want to put up a Web site that offers a portfolio of my writing samples, along with a blog, and probably other professional stuff that escapes me at the moment. What do people recommend for setting up a site like this? Would you use a CMS? If so, which one? If anyone can offer any examples of good writing portfolio Web sites, please let me know. Thanks! Robyn |
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I'd at least try Wordpress first
I’m not a major CMS expert, but I’d say that unless you’re looking to have a major role for community authoring, Drupal or its main multi-user competitors would be overkill. For those environments, it’s great. Obviously, 43f runs it, as does DIY Planner and KnoxViews (two other places in my regular reading).
But for a relatively small number of authors, and limited need for comments, i.e., if you want to just publish, I don’t know how much easier you can get than WordPress. Your blog postings are obviously its core competency, but you can set up separate categorized pages for your “writing samples”. You can get some really clean minimalist themes for it that may fit the bill for a site where you want people to focus on your writing rather than the sidebars. If you’re a CSS weenie, you can get a good starter template from the plaintxt.org folks that you can customize to your heart’s content.
Examples:
Thank you!
Hi mwr,
That’s awesome. Thank you for your help!
I guess one more question: Is A2 a good Web hosting site? Of course, 43folders.com uses it, and I like fantastico. Just was wondering your thoughts on that as well.
Robyn
A2 works fine for me: Same
A2 works fine for me:
Same overall cost ($8/month after a 20% off coupon) as my previous host
Many more useful features — I get secure shell, IMAP SSL, and SMTP+TLS; I can put my own subversion repository up in my home directory; and they already had LaTeX installed on the web server
Much better performance — never had to submit a ticket for “everything that uses SQL is ridiculously slow, and everyone who goes to my site is complaining”
Much better tech support — what little dealings I’ve had with them has been perfect, and I don’t think they’d say “your site isn’t slow here, have all of you tried clearing your browser cache?”
No idea about Fantastico, since I tend to just install whatever I need from scratch.