Posterous launches killer new iPhone App, adds Themes and CSS/HTML Customization

Posterous iPhone App

Back in July I got word from the guys over at Posterous that they were hard at work on an iPhone app that would make posting video from your iPhone 3G S wonderfully simple. They did not disappoint. PicPosterous is by far the best media app I’ve used to publish photos and videos from my iPhone.

Your iPhone instant camera
Live-post anytime, anywhere
Make photo albums as you go
Auto-resized into an easy-to-browse gallery
Full-length video capture
Supports iPhone 3G S video, playable on web and iPhone
No signup/setup required
Start posting right away
Autopost everywhere
Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, YouTube and more
I can assure you that this has singlehandedly sealed the deal on Posterous being the best mobile publishing site out there. Hands down. If you have an iPhone, there is no reason at all that you shouldn’t have a Posterous site and this app. You can download it here.

Posterous Themes

After much anticipation Posterous has finally added the ability to add themes to your Posterous site. Initially there are four new themes to choose from but I’m sure there will be more to follow. What’s even more exciting than the four new theme options is that they have also opened up the the HTML/CSS code to allow you to create your own Posterous theme from scratch. This will no doubt create an instant demand for quality custom Posterous themes for people to beef up their sites. This also allows people, for the first time to actually brand their Posterous site with their own company brand. This should be huge in the growth of Posterous.

Posterous and Qik Video on the iPhone 3G S

posters_and_qikYesterday I wrote about YouTube’s current dominance as the iPhone video hosting place of choice simply because you can upload videos straight from your phone and not be hindered by the relatively small file size restrictions on email attachments. I also mentioned that Vimeo publicly admitted to not having the resources to develop an iPhone app. I think this is a mistake that Vimeo will ultimately correct or regret, I’m not sure which.

YouTube’s dominant position may not last for long if a couple of other companies have their say. Qik and Posterous are both working on iPhone apps that will allow you to upload much longer video straight from your iPhone.

What will the two apps be offering? We heard back from both of them today. Someone inside Qik and from Sachin, one of the founders of Posterous and here are their responses.

Qik: “There is no limit to the total number of videos you can upload to Qik.com. There is a limit of 2 hours to the length of the video that you can upload.”

Posterous: “We are working on a photo uploading app now, and we’ll add video to it after we release the initial version. This should allow full res, long uploads to posterous.”

All I can say is, wow! The thought of streaming up to two hours of live video on the iPhone is a pretty exciting concept. Qik is already available on jailbroken iPhones but they do have an app in beta so let’s hope that Apple gives it the thumbs up for the App Store.

As exciting as two hours of streaming video is I’m almost more excited about the Posterous app. The Posterous app promises not only to allow you “long uploads” but Posterous will also post/publish your videos everywhere for you. This will allow you to take video on your iPhone, upload it to Posterous and have it posted to your blog, Twitter feed, Facebook account, Vimeo account AND YouTube. Posterous and iPhone have the potential to unleash live video greatness upon the web.

Hopefully we’ll here more soon about one of these apps being released into the App Store.

Posterous: Full-time Lifestream, Part-Time Blog

posterous-logoAs I’ve said before, if I had my way, WordPress and Posterous would marry each other and have beautiful blogging babies. Though, as much as I’d like to see that happen, it seems clear that Posterous seems quite happy to keep its independence and be the hot, young upstart, so I’m also not holding my breath on any acquisitions or mergers any time soon.

I’ve been using Posterous exclusively for the past week or so and I can definitively say that there is no better mobile publishing platform out there. Simplicity and ease of use is the key to Posterous’ success. They took what used to be a convoluted, messy task and turned it into something so simple it’s beautiful. It’s hard for me to imagine not using Posterous on an almost daily basis now. The simple fact is, why not? It’s too easy not to use.

Posterous not only takes whatever media you send it (photos, audio recording, videos, documents) pretty much anything you can think of, and packages it nicely into a a gallery, video or audio player. It will also automatically post to whatever sites you’ve set up, from Facebook to Twitter to Flickr, Picasa of Vimeo, your content will find it’s place to the right spot.

Make no mistake, Posterous is still a work in progress. What it makes up for in mobile publishing it lacks in web publishing, but web publishing is not the “hair-on-fire” problem that Posterous set out to address so it’s not all that surprising that they’re still behind in that category.

I can’t say enough about Sachin Agarwal and Garry Tan, the co-founders of Posterous. It’s obvious that both of them are very passionate about what they’ve created and are determined to see it succeed. Garry and Sachin are still very hands on and extremely helpful when it comes to developing your site on Posterous. Often an email to support@posterous.com will be followed up by one of them directly.

Posterous will always be my mobile publishing platform. In fact I registered jamespoling.mobi and have it aliased to my Posterous (a free tool that Posterous provides its users).

Posterous allows you to have up to three sites associated with one account. Right now, my biggest gripe with the actual functionality of Posterous is that you cannot control on a granular level where each of those sites posts to. Right now your “post to everywhere” options are based on accounts, not on sites within those accounts. The good news is I’ve been assured by Garry that is definitely on their feature list and something they are working hard on.

My other beefs with Posterous are, as previously mentioned, a very weak web publishing experience, and the inability to customize your css or skin/theme your site. I’m sure all of these things are on Posterous’ radar. They’ve been adding features at a blistering pace and recently added the ability to import your current blog into Posterous. That is a clear shot across the bow of every other blogging platform out there that Posterous isn’t going to be content to be “just” a mobile publishing platform.

For now I’ve developed a compromise of sorts. Publishing on Posterous full-time right now isn’t an option for me. There are just too many key features/customizations not currently available.

In lieu of having Posterous publish straight into my blog, which can create content issues since the content that ends up on your site looks nothing like the clean, gallery or player that you’re used to on Posterous, I’m using a Posterous widget embedded into my sidebar which will show my latest content.

Speaking of which, that’s one other custom feature that Posterous is missing. Strong, embeddable widgets. Posterous relies on a third party company to provide it’s widgets and unless you’re willing to dole out a few bucks a month be prepared to have ads and a credit button attached to your widget. I’m not sure if this is a business decision but it seems obtuse to most other ideals that Posterous puts forward. I hope they resolve this issue soon.

If you’ve been waiting for a dead simple and convenient way to start publishing on the go, there’s no reason for you to be waiting anymore. You don’t even have to go to the Posterous to sign up. Just send an email to post@posterous.com and they’ll lead you through the rest.

I’d like to get Posterous and WordPress drunk and convince them to make sweet love

If you could take Posterous’ ability to easily publish any type of media via email and marry it with WordPress’ proven track record with CMS/blogging you would have one seriously beautiful website.

If you added Posterous’ functionality to the your WordPress blog you would literally never need to post anywhere else ever again.

Yes, I know that Posterous can currently publish to your blog, but much of the full content forces you to link back to Posterous and rightly so, but that’s not the point I’m making.

If WordPress could build on Posterous’ amazing ability to publish media on the fly and if Posterous could build on WordPress’ amazing open source community and themes they would make one seriously sexy publishing platform.

What do you say guys? Anyone want to come over and have drinks at my place?

Posted via web from James Poling

WordPress 2.8 “Baker” Released Tonight

logoWordPress continues it’s tradition of rolling out upgrades at a breakneck pace. WordPress 2.8 dubbed “Baker” in honor of Jazz trumpeter and vocalist Chet Baker, was released tonight with over 180 new features, changes, upgrades, and improvements.

WordPress claims that, “First and foremost, 2.8 is way faster to use,” so far I haven’t noticed that much of a difference in the speed, but I will say that their work on the plugins interface is much welcomed and long overdue.

There aren’t a lot of new bells and whistles in this release, that was what 2.7 was for. 2.8 is just cleaning up that release and make it run much faster and more efficiently.

This release (at least not at the time of this post) did not trigger an update this theme in the dashboard, you actually have to go download it and do it the old fashioned way for now.

You can also watch the video overview of 2.8 after the jump.

[Read more...]

The Inglorious Rise and Fall of Movable Type: Now making products for WordPress

wordpress_knockout_movabletypeBack in the day, when blogging was still pretty much in its infancy, Six Apart launched a (relatively) easy to install and customize standalone blogging platform called Movable Type.

Movable Type was developed by Mena and Ben Trott and, back in 2002, it was about as good as you could get to having your own CMS platform publishing your website. It didn’t take long for Movable Type to corner the market with independent/tech savvy bloggers and site owners.

As Movable Type grew in popularity and, sort of by default, became the preeminent blogging platform at the time, it was pretty well known it was by no means perfect. The core of the engine itself was written in Perl, which is a high level program language and not all that efficient (Perl requires CGI scripting to function). To publish a new blog post, or even to edit an existing post, Movable Type, as absurd as it sounds, had to rebuild every single post on your site. Not only was it an extremely time consuming process, which for obvious reasons only got worse as your site grew, it was an incredibly inefficient use of resources. Still, it had a strong community of citizen journalists committed to using it and everyone just assumed that at some point these issues would be resolved. Well, for the most part…they weren’t.

As Six Apart watched their blogging platform explode in popularity they quickly found themselves in the position of having to make a decision on the future of the company. What no one could have predicted at the time was that this decision would ultimately lead to the demise of Movable Type.

What was the decision? Six Apart decided to circle their wagons, keep their source closed and create an extremely convoluted and hard to understand pricing structure that would charge all users. Needless to say this backfired. Suddenly the community that had supported Movable Type and, understandably, considered themselves partially responsible for its success, felt extremely betrayed. And Six Apart, who had been the darlings of the dance suddenly found themselves reeling from all the negative feedback springing up.

This posting on Slashdot from 2004 turned out to not only be concise, but also prophetic.

“An immensely popular weblog publishing tool, Movable Type, has announced a new pricing model based on “support level, number of authors permitted, and the number of weblogs permitted per license”. MT3D (Developer Edition) for non-commercial users has drifted away from its full-featured, free predecessor and managed to upset many blog authors whose entry summaries can be seen via the trackback feature originating from the initial MT3D announcement. Is this a case of bait-n-switch, or simply a company trying to capitalize on its dominant market share? WordPress (GPL), which is an equally powerful CMS, seems like a perfect candidate for those who are considering a switch to a non-crippled, free alternative.”

And therein lies the rub. Just as Six Apart was clamping down on their code and trying desperately to monetize their product, WordPress was just appearing on the blogging scene. What was so special about WordPress? It was completely Open Source and it was completely free. Six Apart eventually backed down on their pricing structure and continued to offer a free version of Movable Type (that came along with a number of caveats). It was too late though, the damage had already been done.

At the very moment Six Apart was busy alienating its users, WordPress was busy welcoming them into the fold. At that time WordPress was mere blip on the CMS/blog publishing platform radar but that would begin to change rapidly. By maintaining its Open Source stance and inviting people to not only help develop the product but to create plugins and themes to help customize their sites, WordPress eventually put Movable Type on its back.

Remember when I said Movable Type was “relatively” easy to install and customize? Well that was pretty subjective. You needed to be pretty tech savvy to install Movable Type on your own and even then it could take an hour or two to setup, if there were no mistakes. In fact, a major part of their revenue platform was offering to charge you $199.95 just to install Movable Type. Imagine how frustrated you would have to be trying to install a blogging platform to be willing to pay $200 bucks just to get it installed. Part of the genius of WordPress was their Famous 5-Minute Install. That was the hook, and it worked. Compared to Movable Type WordPress was a hundred times more user friendly to the common user.

In the summer of 2007 Six Apart announced  the “Movable Type Open Source Project, a move that will see the release of an open source version of Movable Type in Q3 of this year”.  By then it was way too late.  WordPress had already handily surpassed Movable Type as the blogging/CMS platform of choice and had an extremly large and vibrant community continuing to grow and improve it.

From the outside, it seems that much of Six Apart’s so called success with their Movable Type platform has been with posturing and corporate deals with business people, who were either ill-informed or weren’t tech savvy enough to know any better, as opposed to any kind of innovation.  It’s like the parable of the tortoise and the hare only much geekier.

All of this leads us to Six Apart’s announcement (read: concession) today at WordCamp Mid-Atlantic. Anil Dash, Six Apart’s longtime evangelist, made the announcement that Six Apart has launched a a plugin that provides WordPress users with access to a suite of Six Apart’s add-on features for blogs.

To put this in perspective, this would be sort of like the Yankees announcing that they were renting out their farm system and practice facilities to the Boston Red Sox.

TechCrunch points out that just last year the two companies were going at each other quite publicly and now Six Apart is developing products for WordPress users.

Dash says that this move represents “baby steps” in Six Apart’s tentative first efforts to provide a suite of features and functionality to WordPress users. This a big deal, considering the long standing rivalry between the two blogging platforms. Last year, the two companies had a heated duel via company blog posts, Twitter and in TechCrunch comments.

My initial reaction is that it’s probably too little too late.  Much of what Six Apart is offering overlaps what WordPress already provides which seems counterintuitive.  And, possibly more to the point, I believe there are probably still quite a few old school bloggers that remember how they were treated by Six Apart (Movable Type) when they were on top and aren’t exactly knocking each other down to start using their product again, even if it is as a WordPress tool.

Editor’s note: After much thought I have edited the title and image associated with this post to replace “Six Apart” with “Movable Type”.

Disqus adds ability to sign in with your Twitter ID

disqus-logoI’ve switched the blog comments back to Disqus. They’re track record of innovation cannot be ignored and they are definitely worth a shot if you’re looking to build a solid online community.

In an a post I wrote called How to: Build a Vibrant Community of Blog Commenters one of the points I made was “keeping it simple”. In other words, made it as simple as possible for your commenters to post, don’t make them jump through hoops just to leave some feedback on your site.

Disqus definitely meets this criteria by allowing your users to login three different ways to leave a comment on your site. I’m very impressed with the amount of growth I’ve seen in this commenting system and I will definitely be sticking with them for quite a while.

New Projects

Spring has sprung, summer is almost here, life at BAM is returning to a normal hum and I’m pretty excited about a couple of new projects on the horizon. Both are with my good friend and comrade, Jake Clark.

The first project to launch will probably WPDesignPro.com. I’m very excited about this one. In the year’s I’ve spent developing websites and blogs I’ve learned that one of the most difficult aspects about staking your claim on the internet is your design. Your design is your first impression to your client/readers and for most people, a clean, professional design is the hardest part of achieving their goal.

There are a few premium WordPress Theme shops out there but, for me at least, they’ve all sort of missed the mark. Maybe not by much and it may be just a feeling or a minor piece of the puzzle, but for me, it’s the small things that round out a great site.

Between Jake and myself we have over 16 years of website development between us and most all of that is working with CMS platforms to create dynamic, easy to use sites for people looking to build a solid, professional presence on the internet.

If you’re looking to put that final piece of polish on your WordPress powered site, check out WPDesignPro for some exciting developments.

Play Ball

New Yankee StadiumAs you may or may not know, for the past couple of years I’ve working for Major League Baseball, specifically, MLBAM as a marketing producer. The position affords me many opportunities to work on a wide variety of projects and which keep me both busy and engaged.

That goes doubly so from about the end of February through Opening Day. Breaking out, dusting off and cranking up the machinations of Major League Baseball is a huge undertaking for all involved. That being said, I’m pretty much completely AWOL from my own site and virtually anything unrelated to baseball for these two months.

Hopefully, as things start to ease back to the normal hum of the season, I’ll be able to stop neglecting my personal site and get back to writing and tweeting and all that fun stuff.

One thing I’m particularly proud of that I’ve worked on over the past couple of months is creating and developing twitter.com/mlbtv, chronicling the unbelievable launch of our new 2009 MLB.tv Premium Player. If you’re a baseball fan, you’ll definitely want to check it out.

March Madness

Aside from the obvious inference of college basketball, March Madness takes on a completely different meaning for me. Let’s just say that while March may be the time when college basketball is going mad gearing down. Baseball is going mad gearing up. Hopefully I’ll be back to posting more regularly in a few weeks. Until then the annoying automatic weekly Twitter updates should keep you somewhat abreast of what’s going on in my world.

How to: Build a Vibrant Community of Blog Commenters

tin_can_stringIn all the time I’ve been blogging, one truth has remained constant. The hardest part of building your site, and your community, is building up an active community of commenters. I’ve had sites that pulled in millions of visitors a month and it was like pulling teeth to keep the comments flowing.

Another truth is, in nearly all the blogs I’ve ever ran, at one point or another, I’ve had friends or acquaintances that read my blogs fairly regularly. I often found myself in the position of seeing these people days or even weeks after I’ve written a particular post and having them say to me, “oh, I read that post you wrote about FILL IN THE BLANK and INSERT COMMENT HERE.”

It can be frustrating. Everyone has opinions. Everyone who reads your site has an opinion on what you write. The problem is getting them to voice their opinion in a comment rather than waiting to see you in person. The truth is, when it comes to your comment community, friends probably aren’t the best source to rely on, for a few reasons.

[Read more...]

Is Twitter Killing my Blog Feed?

Back in October I asked if Twitter was stealing my Zen. The point was, did microblogging actually take you out of the moment you are in to give you time to post it to Twitter or FriendFeed or wherever you microblog. I think there is a definite balancing act that you have to make to keep that from happening, but I think once you get the hang of it, and figure out what level of involvement is right for you, it’s almost the opposite.  It, in a way, heightens your experience by allowing you to document it and ultimately share it.

social_networksChris Garrett had a great post up last month asking a slightly different question.  Basically, Chris wants to know if Twitter is stealing readers from blog feeds.

There is much to be said for the blog, or email newsletters. Not least is depth and detail that is not possible in 140 characters. But that in itself could be seen as a disadvantage as reading more than a few sentences feels like “effort”. Writing a few hundred words even more so. 140 characters means “just the facts”.

Blogs will more and more have to provide value greater than mere links, quips and trivialities. The chit-chat conversation has moved, and your content and community will need to evolve. Discussions on blogs will need to take more thought and provide more value.

It’s almost like in the blink of an eye, blogs have outed newspapers as aging behemoths that can’t keep up with real time, instantaneous updates and then, in an even shorter amount of time, microblogs have come along and outed blogs as long-winded dinosaurs.

I don’t think Twitter will kill the blog.  I think it will do what nearly everything else has done since the rise of the blogs.  I think it will help to shape them.  I think it will help to make them better and more informative.

Blogging is still very much in its infancy.  Even as I posted earlier about the evolution and ultimate demise of the blogroll, this isn’t much different.  Sure, there are people who are “well established” in the blogging theater and already boast an impressive reader list, there are many still to come.

Learning to pick and choose what social networks you want to use and focus your time and energy on is the first step in learning to craft your brand (you) and divide it up into the necessary components to keep each of those streams informative and interesting to your readers.  Learning how to fuel each of those components to enhance the other is the key.

Farewell Blogroll, We Hardly Knew Ye

blogrollWhen I started blogging back in 2002 blogroll’s weren’t that big of a thing.  In fact, hardly anyone had even heard of one at that point.

Initially, the ideal of the blogroll was a good one.  It was intrinsic to the social aspect of blogging.  It was a way to pay homage, make connections or just share some kick ass blogs that you liked reading and wanted to share with your readers.

Blogrolls were your own way of advertising your little community of blogs.  It was your special endorsement, letting everyone that visited your site know that these other blogs have your stamp of approval.  It was a unique idea at the time that I could discover one blog that I liked and immediately be introduced to a number of other like-minded blogs that I might like as well.

It didn’t take long for blogrolls to get out of control with people adding 50, 60, 70 or more blogs to their blogroll.  At some point that many links just becomes useless.  But, for the most part, blogrolls were still around.  They were still a good way to get a little juice from the bigger, more established bloggers.  And of course, everyone linked to the big blogs already because they wanted some of that juice in return.

Then one day, people started to notice, hey, the big boys are trimming their blogrolls.  And guess who landed on the cutting room floor?  Yep, all the small blogs that all played their part in juicing those big boys as they were climbing the ladder.

Even as little as a year and a half ago, while I was running Metadish, a blogroll was still pretty normal practice.  Smaller perhaps, more focused and possibly even geotargeted on some level, but they were still being used.

After selling the Metadish Network and taking a haitus from blogging for a while I launched jpoling.com (which soon became jamespoling.com) back in October.  I did what any new blog owner would do. I immediately began looking around for like minded bloggers and sites to connect with.  It didn’t take long to notice that while it’s still important to make connections, blogrolls were not the way to do it anymore.  Virtually none of the sites I visited and liked, big or small, sported a blogroll.

[Read more...]

Google Friend Connect

You may notice to the right that I’ve added Google Friend Connect to my blog.  I’ve put it on the top of the sidebar for now to give it some publicity for the two people that read this site so hopefully someone will sign up.  I may be moving it around in the sidebar to see where it’s most effective but hopefully as this blog grows, these will be valuable tools for helping to build the community.  You can join the site as a friend and you can also leave a comment or post a YouTube video.  Hooray!

Insomniac Roundup

  • YouTube announced they are starting to sell ads on their search result pages.  That’s a tough sell.  I know after a search for chimpanzee on a segway I’d be hard pressed to decide whether or not to buy the Segway or the chimp.  Monetizing YouTube is going to be tough, YouTubers are wont to be entertained, not marketed to.
  • What happens when one half of one percent of New York babies are born at home with midwives instead of in hospitals?  Why a fancy article in the New York Times of course.  How relevant!  ”Mommy, why does my blow up pool smell like afterbirth?”
  • 10 Mistakes That Could be Killing Your Blog – #1. Passing off Top Ten Lists as Content.  What’s worse than infrequent posting and people writing about infrequent posting?  People writing about the people writing about infrequent posting.  But now I’m now I’m writing about a person who is writing about a person who is writing about…oh fuck it.
  • Help Obama choose what qualities to look for in our Nation’s first CTO.