Playing with Blogsy App for Blogging on My iPad

Blogging App for iPadYesterday, I read a few reviews and visited the website for a new blogging app for the iPad. It’s called Blogsy and, until now, I’ve been rather unimpressed with those apps claiming to be blogging apps for the iPad/iPhone platform. (This one is ONLY for the iPad, btw.)

All that changed when I put out my $3 last night on iTunes and downloaded this pretty little thing and started using it today. I’m writing this blog on it now and I must say, it’s making the blog process fun. Believe it!

The Good
There’s lots of real estate for composing – even with the keyboard on in landscape mode! The designers have followed the 80/20 rule beautifully by adding nearly everything a typical blogger would need in neat, easy-to-access and visually uncomplicated tool bars on the top and the right side of the screen. It’s pretty. It really is.

It’s also cheap! The developer seems to be responsive to user comments, problems and suggestions and has already submitted a new version to the App Store (currently awaiting the official nod) to address some of those. In the meantime, the price has been lowered until the new version comes out — so now is a great time to buy if you want to try it for yourself.

I’m quite excited to watch as this little app develops and matures — it may easily become one of the most used apps on my iPad.

The Bad
I wish there was a way to add my own photo repository sites to pull the images over and that those icons could join the ones for Flickr, Picasa, YouTube and Google on the right column.

Yes, there’s a Safari-type button there, so I can get there, but there’s no way to favorite or make an icon for the couple sites I use most, so it’s a long and unnecessarily complicated process. I guess I could “go with the flow” and throw up all the images I think I might need onto my seldom-used Flickr account, or start using Picasa, but I’d rather not. Besides, doing that means I can’t do it all from the iPad, and that’s the real goal here.

I’d also like to be able to pull images directly off my iPad to add in. If there’s a way to do that, I’ve not found it.

It would also be nice to work on drafts that are currently in process on my WordPress self-hosted site, or the ability to pull down and edit published posts on the fly. Right now, this will only create new posts and upload them.

I have heard reports of the loss of posts when attempting to upload to a blog — but have not experienced that one myself. I’m writing this blog on Blogsy now! :) I think it would be great to have an automatic backup on the app to prevent data loss — and to prevent that sinking feeling when you just exit an app without hitting a save button and just hope for the best.

The Ugly
There is no ugly to this app. The layout is intuitive and easy to use. Instructions are complete and easy to follow. It’s like a little microcosm of Blogging 101 — with the power to support those of us who have been at it for many years.

Until recently, I didn’t realize how important the icon is to my enjoyment of an app. Sure, it must function well, do the job and not crash — but having a little bit of pretty eye candy makes me happy and this app has that too. (Now, maybe I like it because I still love the classic tools of the writing trade – typewriters, fountain pens… heck, even Quills!) Or maybe my age and sense of nostalgia just gets the better of me from time to time.

If you are a mobile blogger – this may be the next tool in YOUR toolbox.

The Uh-Oh!
***NOTE/UPDATE: Although I still like the little app, it has frustrated my morning. I probably won’t try to blog on it again until the new, more stable version is released — since as I was finishing up the last paragraph, the thing crashed and I lost everything other than the first sentence. :(

I had to recreate it from memory… on my MacBook. And this was a crash unrelated to the “uploading” one I’ve read about. This one was while I was trying to add a link. Go figure.

5/20/2011 – update – I’ve played with the Blogsy app quite a bit now, and must say that I love it. Nearly all of the issues I noted before have been addressed and it has now become a permanent resident on my first page of my iPad. I love how responsive and helpful the developer is in answering questions and addressing concerns (see the comments below for a sample!) Thank you for making Blogsy a keeper!

7 Things About Me (That you WISH you didn’t know)

I’ve been remiss in my blogging duties this month. (That always happens after a grueling round of “every day blogging” in November.) So, it’s probably a good time to be tagged with a blog meme, right? I just got tagged by Kris Rowlands over on Fresh Focus.

Guess that’s ONE way to get my butt more productive, eh, Kris?

So here we go with the dirt on me…

1. I’m a bit of a conspiracy theorist. I can’t help it. It’s in my genes. Today, my eldest son told me that the reason he’s a weirdo is because I made it impossible to avoid, genetically. So be it.

2. If I found out I was dying, the first thing I’d do is go buy a pack of cigarettes and smoke them all. I used to smoke… alot. I started smoking at age 15 (although I tried it several times before then). I continued to smoke until I was in my 30s when I put down my two pack-a-day habit. I never smoked in front of my kids or while I was pregnant and stayed “in the closet” all that time. There isn’t a week that goes by that I don’t miss it. During times of stress, it’s a daily urge.

3. I’ve been married for 18 years — just under half of my life. This marital longevity was made possible through three marriages (and divorces). I’m a serial monogamist, methinks. Horrific isn’t it? I can now say that I’m completely cured of any lingering romantic notions or illnesses. I’ll not walk down any aisles again. (Heck, even long hallways give me the heebie-geebies.)

4. I recently developed vertigo when in a high place, that was something new to go with the terrible motion sickness I get and the fact that I’m a tad claustrophobic. Needless to say, I’m all KINDS of fun on those huge cruise ships. Especially in the tiny cabin rooms on rough seas. :)

5. When I finish raising my youngest (who will be 11 in a few days), I’ll probably throw a backpack and a one-man tent on the back of a motorcycle and head out west to see some of the stuff I’ve not yet seen. I expect to be gone for several months. If I get really brave, I may do it before then and make it a larger bike (with a passenger seat) and a two person tent. Time will tell.

6. I’ve learned to quit jousting windmills and spend my energies in more productive manners, most of the time. I no longer fight city hall just because the fight needs to be fought. I figure I spent most of my teens and twenties and (especially) my thirties doing that. I’ve taken my turn and it’s time for the younger crew to take a shift. I’m not saying I won’t fight… I just don’t go in search of a war anymore. (I do, however, reserve the right to reverse that particular decision at any moment.)

7. Organizing my surroundings, eliminating what’s not essential and reducing my personal use of resources isn’t just a thing I do, it actually gets me all excited. I love it. And tiny houses/living spaces are the coolest. It makes me happy. I know… more weirdness.

Now you know seven oddities about me (trust me, there are many MANY more).

Now, I’ll call out seven people who I suspect of being closet weirdos — or who desperately need to make a fresh blog entry. I just won’t identify which is which!

Don’t hate me, folks… just spreading the meme love (and looking for something juicy to gossip about!)

Jeff Aughey | follow him on twitter

Jodi Diehl | follow her on twitter

Tim Kulig | (Poor guy, hasn’t discovered twitter yet)

Whitney Bishop | follow her on twitter

Anna Baron | follow her on twitter

Rocky Turner | follow her on twitter

Nan (aka RoguePuppet) | follow her on twitter

Success! (NaBlPoMo) Failure! (NaNoWriMo)

Today is the end of November 2008. I have managed (with this post) to log a blog every single day of the month, as I committed with my participation in NaBlPoMo. Even when I was under the weather for several of these 30 days, I managed to blog a little. Yea, me!

But, I didn’t do as well toward my commitment for NaNoWriMo. Despite my several thousand words this month, I didn’t come near the 50,000 I had hoped to log. (Epic Failure!) Alex didn’t get hers logged either — but pressuring her to write was taking all the fun out of it for her, and that seemed counterproductive.

We did both manage to get started on a novel, albeit a less than prolific start. We plan to continue our work on said books… so at least we managed that much.

I may try again next year to participate in the Novel Writing Month. Hopefully I’ll be finished with the current effort by then. We shall see. I don’t know if I’ll do the blogging month commitment next year. I think doing both in the same month isn’t the best choice I ever made.

As far as the rest of this year goes, I’ll probably be blogging alot less during the last month of the year and spend my time trying to close out client accounts and close out my business books for the year.

I missed the Thanksgiving holiday with my family, since I (selfishly) wanted to keep my illness to myself. So I’m really looking forward to spending time with my family though the Christmas season.

For now, as I wind the blogging frenzy down a few notches, I wish you and yours an enjoyable remainder of 2008!

Properly appreciating excellent blog content

Chuck Westbrook (www.ChuckWestbrook.com) had a great idea a few days ago… on how to promote some of the high-quality, but lesser-known blogs on the ‘net. He suggests that groups of bloggers go out and read and comment on some of these “gems in the rough.”

I can’t agree more. When bloggers get feedback, their desire to continue the blog skyrockets!

So slip on over to his October 23rd entry and sign up to do your part — and to help him promote the idea. It will also spread a little link-love his way!

When you are blogging, it’s ALL good! ;)

Is blogging dead?

I blog. I’ve blogged since the turn of the century. (I just love saying that!)

I love saying it, even though it makes me sound like I’m sitting in a bentwood rocker, creaking slowly back and forth, reflecting on my long-ago wonder years.

During the course of the last decade, it occurs to me that, when it comes to blogging, there are four distinct groups of people.

Early adopters:

    Some people understood the blogging concept from the get-go. They just “got” it. These were big-picture “Wow!” folks.

    There are some forward-thinking folks that fall into this category, but even those bright-eyed optimists in the early days of blogging were usually shocked at the outpouring of benefits and followers of this new format for online communications and (a bit later) for relationship-building.

Gee-whiz folks:

    Others, like me, took the plunge because I have a bad case of the “can’t help its.” This format, with the “coolage” factor of technology with an Internet platform from which I can climb on my soapbox proved irresistible. (It was called a “web log” back when I started.)

    I’ll admit that I did my blogging anonymously in the early days, before I was quite comfortable with this “complete transparency” concept.

    The folks in my group may or may not “get” how important blogging is to a small business, but they do it because… like any other opportunity to write… it must be done or because their inner geek cries out for it.

    The opportunity to publish my stuff in a WORLD-WIDE forum was just too alluring to ignore. I started with small, personal vignettes, and moved up to articles on technology, marketing, real estate, politics and personal opinions. Those of us in this group quickly discovered the many layers of benefits. Many of us became blogging evangelists.

The “but” folks:

    Some recognize that they NEED to blog, even if they aren’t exactly sure why. Maybe someone they trust told them they should. Maybe someone harassed them enough to get them started.

    Some members of this group, know they need to blog, they understand the importance, but they never seem to find the time.

    The members of this group usually don’t blog or at least they don’t blog for long. They are the reason that so many new blogs, like new businesses, fail in the first few months.

    There is always something a bit more important to do, or they genuinely doubt the long-term advantages. These are the same folks that have business leads sitting on their desk that are days, or weeks, old. They really intend to get to them, but they never quite manage to do so in a timely fashion. It’s sad.

    Case-study: I was meeting with a client this week. I’ve been preaching “blog” at this guy for over two years now. I even showed him a blogger in his own market a year ago and said, “This is your competition — he’s going to eat you alive because he blogs and you won’t.”

    His response? “I never heard of him.”

    (Note: a few months later, said competing blogger powned most of the best search terms in my client’s market.) The client ignored this and refused to discuss said blogger with me anymore. It became a not-so-silent point of contention.

    Suddenly, this week, he calls all excited.

    After agreeing to do regular blogging for 30 days — JUST this ONE month — he’s seeing a huge boost in his Google results on his key terms. Go figure. (I guess that 30-day challenge — which was my desperate final attempt to move him — was a better idea than I’d hoped!)

    “This blogging thing,” he tells me, “it really works!”

    “Oh?!?!” I reply, “this blogging thing? Really? Who’da thunk it?”

    “No really!!” he insists, all jazzed up and trying to explain that he’s now a convert.

    I roll my eyes silently, despite my quite audible huff, and am thankful that I’m not on webcam for this particular call.

    All I can say is it’s a good thing that he’s a couple states away, or I may have been tempted to hop in my little car, drive to his office and shake him with my bare hands until his teeth rattled.

    (Yes, I know that’s HORRIBLY unprofessional, but I don’t really care — that was my honest impulse.)

    The best I can hope is that he will now blog on a regular basis. He’s already agreed to craft his titles with effective SEO in mind and with more thoughtful consideration on how to grab more attention from his visitors. We had a tutorial on that this week.

    He has also endured “how to categorize” and “how to tag” tutorial sessions, so — who knows?!?! Maybe he finally has hopped the fence to become a believer. I guess stranger things have happened.

The nay-sayers:

    Others don’t understand blogging, don’t trust bloggers and will purposefully never give any credence to blogs and their creators.

    Case in point: My father. Just yesterday he and I had a conversation wherein he said, “I argued with him (a mutual friend) about this blog crap, and he’s like you… he thinks it’s great. I want MY news and information to come from a source that’s been vetted and checked and has at least had an editor look over it. I don’t care what someone without anything more than a computer and a website has to say about something.”

    And my response, as a long-time blogger was rather snippy (it WAS my father, after all), “Yeah, I see how wonderfully well-researched and balanced the national news is these days as a result of following your prescription for perfection.” (This was a continuation of an earlier and ongoing debate about the way the election and every other important news item is being covered — or not covered — by today’s media.) We like this debate (we must) because we have it often.

    He “humphed,” and I “humphed.”

    I reminded him that I’d been a journalist, a newspaper editor, and had been making my living as a writer and researcher for nearly ten years now and that I blogged.

    He summarily excused me from the “bloggers” category he was blasting. (There are some advantages to being an offspring — like being excused from a group of wayward souls by your parentals.)

    I “humphed!” again.

    His views however, are fairly common. Many people assume that online conversations are meaningless. They assume that bloggers don’t take the time to verify their sources. Sometimes that may be true. After all, it’s often true with journalists. (I know — I used to check the sources on some of my reporters’ stories before printing them.)

    Because he thinks blogs are unimportant, it never ceases to amaze him when I pop up in a Google search on the front page. I try to explain how and why, but I might as well be describing the attributes of magic.

    He now uses the “customer reviews” on his favorite websites, but flatly refuses to ever leave any feedback of his own. He won’t do it.

    So I know he understands the value of “collective” experience and collective thought being shared about specific computer products on, say, NewEgg.com (his favorite online vendor). But he feels no responsibility to reciprocate or participate in the building of that knowledge base. (I’m still working on that one with him.)

    To try to explain micro-blogging and twitter to my father makes him ready to fight. So, I give up.

The fact is, my father doesn’t really need blogging (he has me to listen to him on his soapbox) and he doesn’t need twitter (although he’d enjoy it and learn a lot if he’d permit himself to try). Pops doesn’t run a small business and he can just forget about the conversations on the web and the cutting edge thinking and continue digesting the pablum that the national media outlets dispense. (And, I told him as much.)

My clients… and YOU — if you are working on the web… can’t afford to ignore it. Blogs aren’t dead. They are stronger than ever, it’s just not as easy to own (pown) your niche now as it was a few years ago.

And despite what you may have heard, the new microblogs, relationship marketing, and other forms of social media haven’t replaced blogging. They have augmented blogging and have brought a whole new, shorter format to the online, immediate communications realm. Personally, I find it all quite alluring.