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Why I Chose Posterous: a Quick Review

I finally decided to start a blog last week and needed to select blogging software.  My first reaction was to use the software I helped develop at New Media Campaigns .  Ultimately, I decided it would be more valuable to experience other software instead.

With that goal in mind, I looked for software that took a new approach to blogging.  As it turns out, the search wasn't long and the results were clear:

Posterous is the most innovative blogging platform available today.
So what is posterous?

Posterous lets you post things online fast using email. You email us at post@posterous.com and we reply instantly with your new posterous blog.

If you can use email, you can have your own website to share thoughts and media with friends, family and the world.

Posterous has designed a blogging platform where the entire focus is on email. Your email client is the admin interface.  For those of us that have an email client open all day, posterous seamlessly inserts blogging into the day's natural workflow. At any point, I can jump over to my drafts folder to start or continue a post.

Other Cool Features:
Attachments
When you attach files to an email post, posterous acts intelligently.  Photos are resized and become slideshows, videos are flash encoded (!) and embedded, mp3s are added to a flash player and links are parsed.  (i.e. youtube links are replaced with an embedded player)

Autoposting Elsewhere
For those that claim that posterous is just a feature, (and I might agree) it's possible to configure posterous to automatically update your blog, twitter account or flickr account.

This feature makes posterous perfect for me.  Ultimately I'll need to add more to jsuth.com requiring a more sophisticated platform.  Once I make this transition, I will continue to use the straight-from-email posting functionality.

Where posterous Fails:
Theming and Custom Design
Forcing every account to look and behave the same way is extremely limiting.  A serious website simply cannot be run without more functionality. I would suggest the developers look at the theming implementation Shopify uses.  They have done the perfect job of providing a range of tools for users of all levels of sophistication.

Basic, Non-Temporal Pages
Since posterous has focused so directly on the email problem, all other features were seemingly ignored. Adding static pages (or links) to your site is only possible in the "About Me" sidebar.  

This requires that a posterous account is used exclusively as a mini-blog, positioning it somewhere between twitter and a full website.  If this is how things stay, I have a hard time believing users will find the time to manage their posterous account as well as their other online identities.

Exporting Data
My primary concern with using posterous as a stopgap for jsuth.com is the lack up an export method should I decide that I want to take this data elsewhere.

Feed Abstraction
I am a big fan of feedburner .  Currently there is no way to use it with posterous.

Conclusion
Posterous is a good stopgap for jsuth.com.  It was extremely easy to set up, allowing me to start my blog right away.  Using email as an blog interface makes perfect sense and I will enjoy using it even if I migrate to a different platform.

Comments (9)

Sep 14, 2008
Garry Tan said...
Thanks for the awesome post!

We actually do use liquid (shopify's non-eval-ing template language) on the backend -- awesome stuff -- and we're working with theme designers right now to build some great built in themes and enable full css.

Exporting? We are all about making things work well for our users, so while it's not in the plans at the moment, I'm sure you could email me directly and we could work something out.

Feedburner? Definitely on the list of things to support.

Thanks again for choosing posterous, and trust me, we'll be getting better yet!
-Garry

Sep 14, 2008
Akshay Dodeja said...
Great post and I share the same sentiments. I love Posterous.
Feb 18, 2009
David Huey said...
i hate the fact that you have to be a posterous member to comment
it's the only downside I see
Feb 18, 2009
Garry Tan said...
David -- you can turn that off in the site settings so that anyone can comment. We automatically use spam-killing akismet too.

We're also about to launch fb connect, so facebook users can also easily leave comments too. That's launching tonight.

Feb 18, 2009
David Huey said...
thats really cool!
Thanks Garry
I've loved the site - but have been so frustrated by that for the past week -
Now I'm a HUGE fan!
Jun 22, 2009
Andy Triggs said...
I'd definitely be interested in FeedBurner support too. In fact, if I'm going to continue using the service I think it will have to appear pretty soon!
Jul 07, 2009
Jordan Willms said...
Still hoping for that Feedburner support ;)
Jul 08, 2009
Ari Dorfman said...
Great post, glad I made the choice to use Posterous. Your post helped me decide. Can't wait to get it set up more and learn more about it functions.
Jul 19, 2009
Feedburner support would be great!

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