I sympathize with the use of a flat-file system for posting articles.  Hey, no 
XSS defects, no query support, no problems with bugs in an intermediary 
publishing system that corrupts the blog archives, no time spent figuring out 
how to prevent spam comments, etc.

I started with a blog engine when I started blogging in 2002, but I stick with 
ones that publish flat files on a server space of mine that I can preserve and 
keep on-line even if the engine becomes obsolete and I have to do something 
else.  

I may have to change engines again since it takes too much to be my own IT and 
administrator for the one I am still migrating to since Blogger stopped 
supporting static FTP posting to an user's own domain.

Have you considered DISQUS, since it will work on your pages but it is an 
external service?  I've never quite got the habit, but it might suit you.  Or 
agree on a de.licio.us tag that applies to your blog, so folks could comment 
there and find them.  (Have you got a twitter ID too?  I don't recall if I've 
seen you that way.)

 - Dennis



-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Meeks [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, May 10, 2012 05:16
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Fwd: Performance!

[ ... ]

        Uninteresting as it is - I've been blogging since 1999 and happen to do
it in emacs, in a plain text format; and I host it as flat files: that's
a habit I have no interest in breaking for some hideous, newfangled
databased backed, hosted service etc. :-) But I like feedback, and
update entries with it as/when people send it in, my blog page footer
reads:

        "I encourage linking back (of course) to help people decide for
         themselves, in context, in the battle for ideas, and I love
         fixes / improvements / corrections by private mail."

        Back in the day, people used to discuss and cross link their blogs, and
use E-mail - perhaps I'm stuck in that past. As I say, I hear a lot of
"FUD allegations" coming from various people - yet seldom any sort of
reasoned or detailed rebuttal. I would expect such a thing to happen in
a blog entry elsewhere that I can link to in an interesting, civil
discussion, as we go deeper on any given topic over time.

[ ... ]

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