Hey Charles,
That was a great explanation - thanks for doing that! I'm just not making
the connection to backing things up - isn't it all important? If I'm backing
up my site, don't I want to back it all up?
-Verdi
On 11/16/06, Charles Iliya Krempeaux [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hey Harold,
I've done the Blogger - WordPress migration a couple of times, with mixed
results. Apparently, recent versions of WordPress (2.0 and above) provide
better methods for migrating from Blogger. I've yet to make the decision to
do so with somethingthathappened.com yet, though...
Harold
On
Automatic backups? Now *that* I've never been able to manage...
Harold
http://videoharold.com
Wish there was more
open source-minded
On 11/15/06, Charles Iliya Krempeaux [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello Harold,
scp and sftp would be better (for backup purposes) than wget or
curl, since
Hello Erik,
Is there any way to get the database to dump the data to disk.
Is the is, you could SCP or SFTP that over.
See ya
On 11/15/06, Eric Skiff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
unfortunately, SFTP backup of stuff at blogger (if you have access to
it)
wouldn't back up the info in the
Hello,
You know, another way of backing up the system in a good way would be if
you used some Semantic HTML in your Blogger template. (I believe that it
would be actually pretty simple to do if you put them into your template.
So you template would automagically do this for you.)
So... for
I don't know anything about Semantic HTML, nor the Semantic Web (which
I'm assuming is related; please correct me if I'm wrong), but this
*sounds* like a really good thing. Still, do you mind explaining it a
bit more, or pointing in the direction of more info.? Perhaps doing
so will generate
Hey Harold,
You are correct that (technically) Semantic HTML is part of the semantic
web. (However... just to avoid confusion I should say... when many many
people talk about the Semantic Web, they are talking about RDF. I am NOT
talking about RDF. I'm talking about a part of the semantic web