My first foray into blogging began with Blogger. This was the free platform I used but soon felt too confined by it (before they added the tagging feature and a host of other goodies they now offer). So I graduated to another free blogging platform, Wordpress. My Wordpress.com blog was short-lived. I was soon venturing into the world of hosting with my own domain, and set up my current blog with Bluehost. I’m considering starting another blog–one that is anonymous and not hosted with Bluehost. So today I happened upon TypePad. I’ve visited many a TypePad blog, but never knew much about the platform. And I certainly didn’t know you had to pay to use their service! Ok, granted the basic level is only $4.95/month. However, I would like to know what they offer that Blogger and Wordpress don’t. A description of the basic level:
Choose your design from dozens of professional templates. TypePad makes it easy to include pictures and links, manage comments, and categorize your posts. Includes 100MB of storage and 2GB of bandwidth per month.
And, at this level you’re only allowed one author! The storage and bandwidth features are pretty good. I don’t know the type of monthly storage and bandwidth Blogger or Wordpress offer (I searched but couldn’t find this info). So maybe this feature is why TypePad charges. *shrug* I don’t know, I guess I’m just used to the many free services I use on the internet. What I do know is TypePad’s been crossed off my list of potential blogging platforms for my future blog…unless they began offering a free service. And, for any TypePad bloggers who read this, if you have also used either Blogger or Wordpress I would very much like to know how TypePad compares to those platforms.








When I started blogging almost three years ago. I used Blogger for one day. I wasn’t impressed and switched to Typepad. I used Typepad for almost nine months and I moved to WordPress. I simply outgrew it I wanted to do a lot more and I found that I could not do it using Typepad.
I like the fact that WordPress is opensource and they have a lot of features the other two, in my opinion, could not give me what WordPress has provided.
Opal Tribble’s last blog post..Smoothies: So Hungry I Could Drink A….