Blogging

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Blogs@psu is a project which aims provide a blogging platform to all Penn State students, faculty, staff. The blogs@psu is currently powered by SixApart's Movable Type software. This product was chosen due to its rich feature set and its ability to publish static files into user's personal web space. All students, faculty, and staff have had web space available. Blogs@psu aims to provide an straightforward means of utilizing this space. Rather than having to possess moderate knowledge of HTML, FTP, and CSS to publish content onto the web, users of blogs@psu can create content for their personal web space with a simple wysiwyg web-based editor and publish with a click. Blogs@psu also contains a web-based file upload tool and asset manager for multimedia files or other attachments.

Deploying the blog platform on top of PSU personal webspace creates a more scalable solution since every request does not require a dynamically generated page. This solution also allows the blogs@psu to leverage the existing file system tools (quota, access control management) and usage policies.

Blogs@psu is also a platform for podcasting. Any blog feed that contains links to audio or video files attached automatically becomes a podcast feed.

The Penn State e-portfolio website now highlights blogs@psu as a portfolio tool.

Contents

Getting Started with blogs@psu

Examples of websites built with blogs@psu

Examples of courseware built with blogs@psu

Milestones

The Future of blogs@psu

Blogging and Protected Space

With the launch of protected personal web space, we must modify the blog software to give users the option to publish into their protected space. This alone is not difficult and we have had the option working in our staging environment for some time. However problems arise from the fact that even though the published content is protected, Movable Type does not understand what content is meant to be public and what content is meant to be protected. So, even if you publish content into your protected web space, that content could still be found on various dynamically generated pages such as blog searching, both by the public and on the Movable Type dashboard. We are not interested in hacking the core of the Movable Type to provide this functionality, as maintaining a fork of the code would prove to be too onerous. We are currently looking at developing a protected blogging plugin to provide this functionality. We had previously thought about moving to system of individual Movable Type instances, but have abandoned that option due to difficulty in maintaining a custom system.


Aggregation of Content

We are at the early stages of thinking about this. Some sort of tool to aggregate content and offer different views in to the content. Perhaps the idea of social rating systems ties into this. Users would have to take some sort of manual action to add their blog feed to this aggregation service. Content could be filtered in various ways, controlled by the user. Examples: "recent videos from IST", "Most popular recent content dealing with Agriculture", "Blog posts about PHIL 083, Section 2"

All aggregation could be done with tags. A tag search of the whole system could reveal all posts tagged with PHIL083, or "PSU-ITS". You could view this on blogs.psu.edu or subscribe a tag feed with a newsreader. An instructor could ask all of her students to tag relevant posts with some sort of unique tag, then just subscribe to that tag feed.

Current Issues with Movable Type

Brainstorming Ideas

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