-
Ann Mobile
Why FreThink?
My goal is not to get you to agree with me; my goal is to get you to think for yourself.
Pages
Free Thought
Politics
Science
Society
Technology
Tags
aliens
Atheism
atheists
belief
Ben Stein
brain
children
Christian
community
creationism
death
Education
election
evolution
Expelled
freedom
free thinking
Free Thought
god
gods
huckabee
ID
intellectualism
Intelligent Design
internet
islam
memes
memory
morals
networking
patriot act
Philosophy
police
Politics
president
proof
Religion
Science
security
self-awareness
skepticism
Theism
thinking
United States
website



Comment Platforms – A challenge to compare
As soon as I installed TweetDeck on my Linux partition today and fired it up, I noticed a Twitter reply from December 16th I hadn’t noticed before. So first I’ll apologize to db0 for my inattentiveness and now I’ll get to the substance of his Tweet.
Here is db0’s challenge:
The commenting systems in question are Disqus, Intense Debate and the built-in commenting structure of Word Press/Blogger/What_have_you. I use Disqus on this blog (and on most the blogs I’ve created) and Intense Debate on one other. I don’t rely on WP’s built-in commenting option on any blog except one with wordpress.com.
Ironically, I installed Intense Debate on that one site because I was hoping for a lot of, well, intense debate. I figured Disqus could handle the volume of comments I anticipated on my other blogs, especially this one. I like to think I’m far more controversial over there than I am here. Instead this blog has garnered far more comments than the one with ID installed.
I have StumbleUpon and it’s devotees (addicts?) to thank for that. Most of my traffic here comes from SU. Since neither of tem are tech blogs or gadget blogs, my comments will never make a dent on Digg or Techmeme. StumbleUpon is Digg for blogs that address society or philosophy. StumbleUpon is also similar to crack cocaine. Once you start clicking that damned “Stumble” button…
I appreciate the differences between IntenseDebate (ID) and Disqus, both have their strengths and weaknesses. The dashboard for ID offers more options than Disqus’ interface. But I find I’m not using the extra options much. Disqus’ simpler dashboard allows me to do everything I need it for on a regular basis. Since both allow me to reply by email, I often don’t notice which system I’m using, since to me it’s Google’s Gmail interface. Gmail provides organization by threading the comments better than either ID or Disqus.
They both integrate into the WP backend pretty much the same. I don’t read or write comments via cell phone, so how well they do that, I don’t know. It’s not a factor.
Seeing as how I get far fewer comments than db0 or vjack do, I’m not the most informed person to judge these two services. They both work about the same for me and I prefer both of them to the built-in comments. I also don’t need the advanced features available, so they’re pretty much wasted on me. A lot is wasted on me. And I get wasted a lot. That’s how I maintain balance in my life. Zen, you know.
I haven’t a clue who among other bloggers I know well enough to tag (those I suspect may read this whole post and see themselves mentioned) would be interested in debating this issue. So if you’ve read this far and have an opinion on this topic, join in and consider yourself tagged.