trash
28
IngrownMink4
link
fedilink
51Y

I know this is an unpopular opinion, but I prefer Plume.

@mossy
creator
link
fedilink
2
edit-2
4M

deleted by creator

IngrownMink4
link
fedilink
4
edit-2
1Y

These are my reasons:

  • Write.as is written in Go, while Plume is written in Rust and WASM. It may seem irrelevant, but Go has worse performance than Rust (among other things, because of the use of the garbage collector in Go).
  • All Plume functions are free of charge. In the case of Write.as, the basic functions are free, but if you want to customize it to your liking, you have to pay $6 per month, which is not much, but it is something to consider.
  • Write.as has a hermetic development in my opinion, even if it is open source. Plume is open source, hosted on Gitea (a good thing for those who hate Microsoft and GitHub), and they have a room on Matrix/Element.io to talk to the developers directly.
  • Plume has been translated into more languages than Write.as
@mossy
creator
link
fedilink
3
edit-2
4M

deleted by creator

@mario1312
link
fedilink
1
edit-2
7M

deleted by creator

IngrownMink4
link
fedilink
21Y

Glad to hear that! Good luck with the blog :)

musicmatze
link
fedilink
41Y

I have a writefreely instance for myself and like it. I would like a static site generator much more, because I can edit and view my blog offline, but I like that writefreely uses Activitypub and I wanted to have that explicitly, so here we are.

It does it’s job though and is usable for me. I normally prepare articles in a markdown Editor offline and just copy them into the web editor.

@abbenm
link
fedilink
41Y

but I like that writefreely uses Activitypub and I wanted to have that explicitly,

Plume uses activitypub right?

IngrownMink4
link
fedilink
31Y

Yep.

@X51
link
fedilink
11Y

I tried to find an instance of WriteFreely that I could join. I had no luck in my efforts. I’m test driving Plume now. It seems pretty basic, so I may discontinue using it.

@poVoq
link
fedilink
8
edit-2
4M

deleted by creator

Halce
link
fedilink
31Y

Plume is still active, just slowed down on the release circles.

@sibachian
link
fedilink
51Y

afaik the plume team recommends using writefreely since their development is somewhat stagnant. at least thats what i read and started using writefreely (which i don’t quite like because you need to pay to participate in the fediverse on write.as).

Halce
link
fedilink
21Y

The main branch actually compiles and is active. All it means is that you’re not going to see branched-off releases with neatly written up changelogs very often.

IngrownMink4
link
fedilink
61Y

Actually, Plume is working in a new release (v0.70).

@ttmrichter
link
fedilink
91Y

There are those who think not having comments is a selling point. ;)

@X51
link
fedilink
21Y

It is. Without user interaction, it’s very difficult to get readers to come back and read subsequent articles.

@ttmrichter
link
fedilink
11Y

I’m not sure I follow.

People can subscribe to my WriteFreely articles on Mastodon and can comment to their heart’s content. And since I too subscribe to them, I can see the comments. I just don’t see the need to host them myself on my blog.

@X51
link
fedilink
11Y

I meant to say that allowing comments is a selling point or promotional aspect because it keeps users engaged and give them a reason to come back. They have a reason to revisit the blog, see new posts, and comment on old posts. Having run a message board for over 20 years, I’ve observed that when people visit without posting something back, the quicker traffic dries up to almost nothing.

@ttmrichter
link
fedilink
11Y

With WriteFreely (and presumably Plume) people can follow via ActivityPub and comment on platforms like Mastodon, Lemmy, and other such locations. On top of that Mastodon, for example, can be used to spread the link bringing new eyes to the blog, as well as permitting comments to be spread around even outside the usual circles of the blog’s readers.

I really don’t see what hosting comments directly brings to the table.

@poVoq
link
fedilink
1
edit-2
4M

deleted by creator

@ttmrichter
link
fedilink
21Y

I’m not sure how RSS helps in publishing a blog?

@poVoq
link
fedilink
4
edit-2
4M

deleted by creator

@ttmrichter
link
fedilink
11Y

You can federate just fine. I’ve followed and boosted WriteFreely articles on Mastodon.

@poVoq
link
fedilink
2
edit-2
4M

deleted by creator

musicmatze
link
fedilink
11Y

(Just to mention it:) writefreely only publishes articles via Activitypub but does not have a way to view replies on an article (yet?).

Halce
link
fedilink
11Y

Yes, exactly. Personally, I think Plume does it the right way here.

@morrowind
link
fedilink
11Y

Could they not simply disable them?

@ttmrichter
link
fedilink
31Y

Why disable when you can use something that doesn’t have them in the first place? It would be like buying a car that periodically sends electric shocks to the hands on the steering wheel, but which you can disable. Why would I buy the car in the first place when I can get one that doesn’t periodically send shocks to my hands ever.

@DPUGT
link
fedilink
01Y

Because that’s the one where they don’t include the steering wheel at all. Or the engine block. The shocks and the other parts are inextricably linked.

Fediverse
!fediverse
Create a post

A community dedicated to fediverse news and discussion.

Fediverse is a portmanteau of “federation” and “universe”. It is a common, informal name for a federation of social network servers whose main purpose is microblogging, the sharing of short, public messages.

Getting started on Fediverse;

For devs;

  • 1 user online
  • 109 users / day
  • 189 users / week
  • 249 users / month
  • 605 users / 6 months
  • 4.97K subscribers
  • 631 Posts
  • 3.99K Comments
  • Modlog