The Core

Why We Are Here => Hardware & Technology => Topic started by: Brad on February 27, 2024, 11:01:09 PM

Title: Flatfile CMS - Blog Script Spotted
Post by: Brad on February 27, 2024, 11:01:09 PM
Bludit  -  https://www.bludit.com 

Create your own Website or Blog in seconds.  Simple, Fast, Secure, Flat-File CMS


It looks pretty complete.
Title: Re: Flatfile CMS - Blog Script Spotted
Post by: rcjordan on February 28, 2024, 01:50:31 AM
How does it integrate reader comments?
Title: Re: Flatfile CMS - Blog Script Spotted
Post by: ergophobe on February 28, 2024, 05:50:11 AM
>> comments

https://forum.bludit.org/viewtopic.php?t=1882

I was sure it was going to be Disqus
Title: Re: Flatfile CMS - Blog Script Spotted
Post by: Brad on February 28, 2024, 09:04:30 AM
>comments

It's amazing to me how many newer blogging platforms just omit native comments.  I realize comments are not easy to implement due to relentless spam, but IMHO a proper blog needs to have native comments which the owner can turn on and off, moderate and also have protections against evil spammers.
Title: Re: Flatfile CMS - Blog Script Spotted
Post by: rcjordan on February 28, 2024, 08:34:44 PM
>I was sure it was going to be Disqus

Ditto.

>native

What Brad said + a configurable 'auto-close comments' (close in X hours or days) would reduce moderating quite a bit while letting your current users comment while the post is hot.
Title: Re: Flatfile CMS - Blog Script Spotted
Post by: ergophobe on February 28, 2024, 08:49:01 PM
>> proper blog needs to have native comments

That is the most complicated part of a blog system to implement and also the one that is least compatible with a flat-file system.

The only high-volume flat-file system I know of is WMW, but I don't think anyone would design something like that today. And WMW had a lot of limitations due to the decision to implement it as flat-file.

And frankly, I'm less and less sold on the value of comments for blogs. For some topics it's great. But for many topics, it's not just spam, it's also trolls and such. I think the blogosphere was most healthy when a post would elicit a response post and that would get linked back on the original blog as a pingback... unfortunately those nine days of glory before people figured out pingback spam were short lived.