Blog v Website

I think the social media vs blog vs website is a false trichotomy (is there such a word?)

It all depends on who your 'audience' is, and the communications method.

A web page is for you to maintain and administer, and is much the best thing for 'vanity publishing' - which is far from pejorative: there's a bunch of useful information out there, some published by those of this parish, eg Vyv Cox (and to a much lesser extent I succumb also). You maintain it as and when you have something to say, and when you have a good internet connection. There's (almost - I could use raw ftp) no way I'd attempt to maintain a site via an Iridium link from mid-ocean. You need WiFi from a land-line or a reasonable mobile broadband connection. There's no expectation of a predictable schedule: updates are made irregularly.

Facebook is designed for ephemera such as sharing cute cat videos. More seriously you don't get to control the amount of material you have to download before you start to upload, so you absolutely have to have a very good connection - on an iridium modem just forget it: - 2 x the age of the universe just to log in (it's only 2.4 kilo-baud at best!) Another probably fatal problem is that there is no search facility which makes it unusable as an archive. Therefore it's just for family and friends who you already know are interested. You can't subsequently say to someone "if you want more info read our Facebook pages on Kiribati". It also steals your copyright to photographs, but that may not matter to you.

A blog is a write-only method. You've no idea if it's read at all so it can feel like it's pointless: it's certainly without immediate feedback and so can become a chore. A great advantage is that you can upload a new diary entry or blog by simply sending a text only email, even if only a few dozen characters. This can be done from a low-end non-smart phone or via an iridium link. You have absolutely zero excess bandwidth requirement and are 100% in control, so I wouldn't contemplate any other method from mid ocean or other remote place. I have found that blogs seem to work best for an older audience who log on specifically to read the blog - ie for those not permanently 'on-line'. But that itself imposes a sort of moral responsibility to update it with a regular cadence. Another downside is that it's often not editable or at least difficult to edit once posted.

Of all these - we've between us done all three - the blog remains the one which continually surprises me: sometimes a year or three later I discover that the most unexpected people follow it: old colleagues I've not seen for a decade, or son's girl-friend's granny etc. So despite it seeming to be 'write only' I suspect that it has the most reads over time. Who hosts it is probably not so important, but for what it's worth I use mailasail which seems well used, see http:\\blog.mailasail.com
 
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I think the social media vs blog vs website is a false trichotomy (is there such a word?)

It all depends on who your 'audience' is, and the communications method...
A very good summary.
A blog is a write-only method...
Although my sailing blog was an ordinary 'write-only' blog I also had a couple of pages, on the subject of Greek and Turkish phone SIMs, which I kept updated and linked to from other sites or posts. So they had the characteristics of a website. If I'd have put the information in a blog post it would have got buried. If you think you might want to do the same then use a platform that supports non-blog pages (I used Wordpress).

My Turkish phones page got more hits than the rest of the blog combined!
 
Keeping a good blog up is hard work but if you enjoy doing it which I do then it keeps the mind active and gives you something to do in winter months.
If you use wordpress then you can get stats at any time on how many people are reading your blog. I get an average of about 600 views a day so I actually feel privileged that people are taking an interest.
It does form a diary of what we have been doing and allows me to write which I enjoy.
If you are just writing for friends and family then I would suggest blogger as it is free and the learning curve for wordpress can be steep. Wordpress is far more flexible and you can do far more than other programs.
What writing a blog as also done is allow us to meet new people via the blog and try and help new liveaboards with any help we can give.
There are so many helpful people on this forum who helped us with our questions when we set off it is nice to be able to give something back.
Any help we can give just message us on here or through our site below.
 
There are two different types of Wordpress blog. You can host your own site using Wordpress software, or you can let Wordpress host your site on wordpress.com. If you use wordpress.com the learning curve is certainly not steep - you just choose a theme and off you go. I don't know blogger/blogspot but I doubt if it's very different. (And it's not owned by Google.)

http://en.forums.wordpress.com/topic/please-read-me-first-before-posting?replies=1
 
I'm another user of wordpress, hosted on my own domain. It can be both a blog and a web page and is not hard to learn. It (Wordpress that is) has been around a fair while now and so unlikely to disappear or become unsupported.
It is a great way to enable family and friends to know what you are up to, if you keep it updated that is. Often the hardest part I find is getting fast and reliable wifi for free. Well the cost of a beer or two or a coffee or a meal at a place that offers free wifi.
 
Whether you use WordPress or Blogger (I use the latter, I find WordPress clunky but that's just me), write the blog primarily for yourself
 
I looked at wordpress to start with, but couldn't get 'into it' and I was never going to learn HTML so we bought a package (X5 evolution), about £50 from memory. Facebook page is also a good option and there are quite a few using this space too. There are a lot of great examples out on all the different media platforms, do whatever works for you.
 
Having blog site is great though it is better to have social media too. I write whatever experience I have through blog but I let my friend knows it when they see share that through social media.
 
Blogger is pretty flexible these days.... I have several pages on mine, so it can appear much like a website rather than a blog.... its also very easy to use.

For me, one advantage of both Blogger and Sailblogs, is the easy set up of posting via email... which makes blog entries while on long offshore passages possible.... which is an attractive feature for me.

Wordpress is great, and very powerful, but takes a bit more time and attention than Blogger, which can look great and be ready to go, in just a few minutes.

Mine also autposts entries onto Facebook, so good for nudging friends and family that there is new content...

I've been doing mine for just approaching 10 years now, and approaching my 1,000th entry.
 
My rationale with http://www.syfuga.co.uk was the same as OP: to keep friends and family in touch. In practice, family couldn't really be bothered, and it has been the occasional cruiser that has come up saying it had been useful to them.

As far as I am concerned, I use it to look back where we were when, the cost of marinas, and such trivia. I used raw html using techniques I learnt from a book c. 2000, and it has been relatively hard work to keep it together over the years. Now the java buttons seem to have been superceded, and I am not sure how to resolve that. Since returning to the UK, the zing has gone out of it.
 
I/we used sailblogs, chosen at random by me initially as usable by a computer know-nothing, but as others have said, it turned out that it was quite easy to email text to it via sat phone. I set it to automatically link to facebook as well.
I ended up hating the whole blog thing really. I initially set one up as my own personal diary/log, but then it seemed silly to have another one for the boat/my partner so we shared it. Disaster. I'd spend musing time planning my next erudite, witty, insightful literary effort only to find my partner had got there first and blogged about the best bits in his style- .....fight. So we decided to take it in turns but then if one of us missed the 'blog every three days for the relatives peace of mind' deadline-........fight. Then there was the time when trying to blog nearly killed us. Literally. We had an old second hand sat phone that had a very temperamental link to the computer, I had to find a position to sit holding the #%^>ing thing that both found some signal and where I could wedge myself and not move or jog it- despite rolling in the big Pacific swells.I hardly dared to breathe yet alone turn my head. So, me braced in the corner of the cockpit facing aft, him down below staring and swearing at computer screen- 3/4 of an hour goes by and a beeping sound eventually pierces through the cries of 'get on with it! Sit still! I am- you try keeping still in this! **** blog anyway! Etc etc' simultaneously he switches his gaze from the computer screen to the AIS /plotter screen a few inches away to see a flashing red collision danger triangle as I stand up and face forward to find the bow of a supertanker seemingly a few yards away........
Well we missed each other by the skin of our teeth, the AIS track showed that neither of us had deviated from our course in the slightest, so neither of us had been looking out.
Of course, I was the one officially on watch at that moment, so it was my fault.
I hate blogging.
Ps I also dislike trying to post at length coherently and grammatically using this silt silly iPhone with its stupid predicted predictive text and Fitch titchy screen
 
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>You can host your own site using Wordpress software

The two problems with Wordpress is they have some dreadful background colours it should be white. Also the code is about 40 times longer than the HTML that is needed so it slows the site down. If you want to see the source code right click on the page and click 'view source'. I'm about to sort out the mess of a dreadful Wordpress site for a friend by using HTML.
 
Nice wordpress site just added to this thread (post #149). Adapts the layout to this 7" tablet. Black on white background, too. But appearance is down to personal taste.

But a non-techie probably wouldn't know it's wordpress. If you see one you like email the author and ask what they use.
 
One thing that worked for us was using the blog posts as the basis of printing a couple of copies in a large format hardback book, we only did two copies,, one for ech of our daughters who were 9 and 10 when we did an Atlantic circuit.
We used the best of our photos and many of the blog entries and it is a really great repository of memories in a way that a website on it's own would not be.
I spent a few £££ on getting them printed, but the gilrs who are now 171/2 obviously value them and will have one each when they want them.

I saw them being shown to a new group of the girls friends last weekend who loved looking at the photo's of Molly and Kate when they were 9 (and the dolphin photo's went down quite well too).
 
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