Every so often (well, at least once a week....), I read about different blogging tools and think "I would like to try that out...". Then, I remember this picture, and think "My WordPress setup is just fine, I don't need to look at other blogging tools" (he says as he types this post in Drummer to publish with Old School). But...I had some time this weekend (Memorial Day holiday), so I spent some time looking at two tools related to Drummer.#
The first tool was drummerCMS (a shell for the Old School blogging tool to connect with Drummer). Some time ago, I saw that Scott Hansen wrote a post about running drummerCMS locally, and that it could generate a set of files from the OPML blog file. I set it up per his post a few weeks ago, but had a problem, and set it aside. This weekend, I reached out to Scott Hansen, and he said that his original post had an error in the build URL, and he had updated the post. I tried it again, and it did create a set of files, but not the finished product I was hoping for (a set of HTML files that I could upload to a hosting site). I did a little looking through Old School, and saw that the tool is tied into uploading to Amazon S3, and although parameters related to that could be changed, the tool seemed to do the final render as part of the S3 upload. Sigh...setting it aside again... #
The second tool was written by Antranig Vartanian, and was using an XSLT style sheet to style an OPML file from Drummer as a blog. I took a slightly out-of-date copy of my blog.opml from Drummer, copied it to a folder on my web hosting service, copied the XSLT style sheet, added a link to the style sheet within the OPML file, and was able to create this rendering of my Drummer posts. Fun!#
I guess a batting average of 1 out of 2 is not too bad...must...stop...fiddling....#
Every so often (well, at least once a week....), I read about different blogging tools and think "I would like to try that out...". Then, I remember this picture, and think "My WordPress setup is just fine, I don't need to look at other blogging tools" (he says as he types this post in Drummer to publish with Old School). But...I had some time this weekend (Memorial Day holiday), so I spent some time looking at two tools related to Drummer.#
The first tool was drummerCMS (a shell for the Old School blogging tool to connect with Drummer). Some time ago, I saw that Scott Hansen wrote a post about running drummerCMS locally, and that it could generate a set of files from the OPML blog file. I set it up per his post a few weeks ago, but had a problem, and set it aside. This weekend, I reached out to Scott Hansen, and he said that his original post had an error in the build URL, and he had updated the post. I tried it again, and it did create a set of files, but not the finished product I was hoping for (a set of HTML files that I could upload to a hosting site). I did a little looking through Old School, and saw that the tool is tied into uploading to Amazon S3, and although parameters related to that could be changed, the tool seemed to do the final render as part of the S3 upload. Sigh...setting it aside again... #
The second tool was written by Antranig Vartanian, and was using an XSLT style sheet to style an OPML file from Drummer as a blog. I took a slightly out-of-date copy of my blog.opml from Drummer, copied it to a folder on my web hosting service, copied the XSLT style sheet, added a link to the style sheet within the OPML file, and was able to create this rendering of my Drummer posts. Fun!#
I guess a batting average of 1 out of 2 is not too bad...must...stop...fiddling....#