turbin3
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- Oct 9, 2014
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Paralysis
I've heard a lot more about various flat file cms' over the past year, and have been seriously looking at a few. One of my goals is scaling my own content production a bit. I am definitely one who has a constant struggle with paralysis by analysis. Put too many variables in front of me, and it's easy for productivity to suffer. Though, on the flip side, I'm often able to soak in those variables and develop deep insights that most might not have. There's always trade-offs.
If it's any indicator, even a standard WYSIWYG Wordpress editor is sometimes a bit much for me, as I sometimes fall into the trap of worrying about formatting, switching between the visual/code....when I just need to write the damn content and get it out. I have no problem getting into the code, and realize many of these flat file cms' need a lot of coding to get setup. My whole deal is, I want to get into the code, get it done, and get out, so I can focus on content.
Do it For Yourself
Outsourcing is not an option for some of the sites I'm thinking of, as it's content I must create myself, being an SME on certain subjects. Suffice to say, some subjects demand in depth knowledge from the writer, and my focus will be in putting out the highest quality, most technologically correct information on those subjects. I use outsourced content when I need to, for other uses, but not for these.
Point of No Return
So my primary question is, where's the breaking point with a flat file cms? At what points does one become unsustainable to use. Is there a "ceiling" where, above a rough number of pages, things simply become unmanageable? Are there performance issues if you reach or exceed this ceiling? Again, I'm falling a bit into the analysis trap, but I do want to ensure I'm building a solid foundation for some of these sites. It would suck building one for years, only to find that I have to revert back to WP and migrate thousands of pieces of content to keep things running smoothly.
The Goal
In terms of what types of sites I'm talking about, I'm thinking primarily of a few simple, blog-style sites, mostly focused on things I enjoy or have significant knowledge and experience with. A digital memory dump if you will. I would probably create a significant amount of content on them, somewhat as also a personal exercise in helping balance my paralysis with action. Most of those sites would not have any complex functionality.
Will it Scale?
I do have one magazine/news-style site planned, and the current plan likely will be to use WP with Thrive Themes' Performag theme, as the company seems stable, responsive, has good support, and that theme seems fairly streamlined for productivity. For what could become a large, active site with a lot of content (as well as taking on other writers), I'm guessing a flat file cms, such as Ghost with the GhostWall theme will probably be too limiting.
Flat file cms I've looked at: Ghost, Phile. I'm liking Ghost, as it seems to be catching on and developing a decent community around it. Any opinions on Ghost, especially if any of you have experience with sites like anything I've described? Anything I'm overlooking or overthinking?
I've heard a lot more about various flat file cms' over the past year, and have been seriously looking at a few. One of my goals is scaling my own content production a bit. I am definitely one who has a constant struggle with paralysis by analysis. Put too many variables in front of me, and it's easy for productivity to suffer. Though, on the flip side, I'm often able to soak in those variables and develop deep insights that most might not have. There's always trade-offs.
If it's any indicator, even a standard WYSIWYG Wordpress editor is sometimes a bit much for me, as I sometimes fall into the trap of worrying about formatting, switching between the visual/code....when I just need to write the damn content and get it out. I have no problem getting into the code, and realize many of these flat file cms' need a lot of coding to get setup. My whole deal is, I want to get into the code, get it done, and get out, so I can focus on content.
Do it For Yourself
Outsourcing is not an option for some of the sites I'm thinking of, as it's content I must create myself, being an SME on certain subjects. Suffice to say, some subjects demand in depth knowledge from the writer, and my focus will be in putting out the highest quality, most technologically correct information on those subjects. I use outsourced content when I need to, for other uses, but not for these.
Point of No Return
So my primary question is, where's the breaking point with a flat file cms? At what points does one become unsustainable to use. Is there a "ceiling" where, above a rough number of pages, things simply become unmanageable? Are there performance issues if you reach or exceed this ceiling? Again, I'm falling a bit into the analysis trap, but I do want to ensure I'm building a solid foundation for some of these sites. It would suck building one for years, only to find that I have to revert back to WP and migrate thousands of pieces of content to keep things running smoothly.
The Goal
In terms of what types of sites I'm talking about, I'm thinking primarily of a few simple, blog-style sites, mostly focused on things I enjoy or have significant knowledge and experience with. A digital memory dump if you will. I would probably create a significant amount of content on them, somewhat as also a personal exercise in helping balance my paralysis with action. Most of those sites would not have any complex functionality.
Will it Scale?
I do have one magazine/news-style site planned, and the current plan likely will be to use WP with Thrive Themes' Performag theme, as the company seems stable, responsive, has good support, and that theme seems fairly streamlined for productivity. For what could become a large, active site with a lot of content (as well as taking on other writers), I'm guessing a flat file cms, such as Ghost with the GhostWall theme will probably be too limiting.
Flat file cms I've looked at: Ghost, Phile. I'm liking Ghost, as it seems to be catching on and developing a decent community around it. Any opinions on Ghost, especially if any of you have experience with sites like anything I've described? Anything I'm overlooking or overthinking?