Title photo
Ode is simple! (Simple means that you know how it works.)

Hello, and welcome to news.ode-is-simple.com.

This is a weblog dedicated to Ode (ode-is-simple.com) and other topics relevant to the project.

If you're looking for general info about Ode you may want to start at the project homepage at ode.simple.com/home

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Posts

Wed, 05 Jan 2011

A quick and dirty guide to setting up the disqus commenting service to work with Ode.

This will be short and to the point. This is in response to a user request. Given that a native commenting addin is not yet available, I do want to make sure that there is some sort of commenting solution for the time being.

Note: This is based on a very early pre-release of the disqus addin for Ode.

Download the disqus addin

Introduction

Disqus is a popular 3rd party commenting system with a lot of bells and whistles. To learn more, you'll want to visit their site. In fact you must visit the site and set up an account.

Disqus has a lot of features including (among others):

  • Notifications,
  • Media embedding,
  • Integration with Facebook, Twitter, and other social sites

One of the big advantages of using Disqus is that it allows you to require that users authenticate to comment, without requiring that you manage authentications, or ask users to set up an account on your site.

Visitors can authenticate through Disqus using: a Disqus account, Twitter, Yahoo, and OpenId.

(There's also an option to allow visitors to post as guests using only a name and an email address.)

Should you use Disqus for comments?

At the moment a 3rd party commenting service is your only option with Ode. So if you want to enable comments right now, it's either Disqus or something else like it. What if the native comment solution were available and it did everything you need, should you use Disqus then?

I'd say it depends on how you think of comments.

If you consider comments an integral part of your site then you might prefer to have native comments saved locally along with the rest of your site content.

On the other hand, if you consider comments a nice extra, but not necessarily part of the content of your site, then a hosted service might be better for you.

Read the rest of this post

Thu, 23 Dec 2010

How-to: SimpleViewer Photo Galleries and Ode

Most of this is either fairly self-explanatory or covered by the documentation at simpleviewer.net. There really is nothing specific to Ode about using SimpleViewer. (That's the point after all :) Still if you're looking for a detailed step-by-step walk through along with a couple of suggestions, you might want to read this through.

Regardless, give SimpleViewer a try. I think you'll like it.

You might prefer to read this relatively long post using the text_page theme.

I've decided to tackle photo galleries for this first how-to for several reasons:

  1. Photos are important and speak directly to the idea of 'the personal web' I like to think about. Integrating photos with a weblog is a unique and compelling way to share experiences. Photos on their own are a little abstract and captions don't help enough. Tags, though informative are about as pleasant to read as an entry in a library catalog (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_catalog). A weblog post gives context to the photos while the photos enliven the text. It's a perfect marriage. I'd love to see more Ode sites featuring lots and lots of photos.

  2. It's pretty straight-forward and the results are really nice. Though people post lots of photos to social media sites, this is an area where I believe weblogs have the advantage.

  3. There's a particular solution I really like and want to talk about.

Let's get started.

Read the rest of this post

Introducing Ode how-tos

The goal of these how-tos is two fold:

  1. To serve as a very practical resource to help you accomplish the sorts of things you might want to do with your Ode site, integrating a photo gallery for example.

  2. To serve as a reminder of advantages of the Open Web. The fact that these solutions work for Ode with no direct coordination or collaboration (as they work with many other platforms) is a testament to the true value of Open. It is because of open that I can claim quite sincerely that a humble little application like Ode is in a lot of ways on par with Facebook and other platforms which enjoy hundreds of millions of dollars worth of investment and legions of full and part-time developers.

Hopefully there will be a bunch.

Want to write a howto yourself? I'd encourage you to do it. If you'd like my input, feel free to email me directly (or you can discuss it on the forum.