I'm somewhat familiar with Wordpress and I've used it a little. There is a huge community with tons of plugins and themes etc. Does the BlogEngine.Net compare favorably? Is there another .NET CMS that you would recommend?
Thanks for your help.
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I'm somewhat familiar with Wordpress and I've used it a little. There is a huge community with tons of plugins and themes etc. Does the BlogEngine.Net compare favorably? Is there another .NET CMS that you would recommend? Thanks for your help.
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Compared to WordPress, BlogEngine.NET is relatively immature and has a much smaller community. That's not to say BlogEngine isn't good on its own merits, but it's definitely more niche where WordPress is mainstream. As far as .NET CMS solutions, and not just blogging platforms, N2 and Graffiti are both very well-regarded and seem to be widely adopted. They are also both geared towards more flexible CMS than simply blogs, although have blog-like functionality baked in. Of course, N2 is open source and Graffiti is a paid product (albeit quite inexpensive), but both do quite well. |
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I have no experience with BlogEngine.Net, but to answer your question about any other alternatives, we're using Sitefinity which is a .Net based CMS, and is highly customizable. In our experience, it has some performance issues for very large sites, but we're still by and large happy with it. |
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I haven't used it personally, but I've heard good things about dasBlog which is an open source .NET blog similar to WordPress. |
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I think it depends on what matters to you. Give BlogEngine.net a try and give Wordpress a try. This isn't our blog it's yours. I usually find using it for about 1-3 weeks messing with features and just what feels right for me works the best. |
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I'm actually interested in this post myself. Thought about blogging but being a .Net Developer i want to stick with something .Net based. |
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I'm not that familiar with Wordpress, but it does strike me that Wordpress is a little bit more than just a blog engine, more of a complete document management solution. So for me personally, I found that "less is more" I quite like the simplicity of BlogEngine. |
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Wordpress is very slick. It's mature, has ton's of templates and plugins and the administrative tool is fantastic. Installation is simple -- even on IIS7/PHP. I am primarily a .Net programmer, though I can work with PHP as well (I just don't care for it.) So, I'd like to say that BlogEngine.Net could "stack up", but I think from an operational perspective, Wordpress is still the leader. |
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I'd like to add to the original question (if that's appropriate) - Google has such love for Wordpress, how does BlogEngine.net compare from that perspective (SEO-wise)? |
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We're using BlogEngine.Net. Yes it is less mature, and sometimes, the community is a bit quiet on the threads. It is well written however and uses ASP.Net webforms. We've integrated it with our Profile membership on our site which works well. However, one thing to note - it was never designed to work on web farms or clouds. There are a few workarounds in the forums to help if you are having problems here.... but it is not ideal. Editors can't have their own blogs either. It has been the most asked feature for quite awhile. Again, a few users have contributed solutions to implement this feature, but it will break your upgrade path. |
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How to import wordpress blogs to blogengine blogs? import functionality in blogengine is not working as it is a click once application. any thoughts? |
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There are also issues integrating Blogengine into a pre-existing CMS and issues with having multiple blogs on the same server. There are definitely hacks that you can implement to do both of these, but we decided it wasn't worth the energy and just used wordpress. |
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I run a single user blog and a .Net developer. After checking out BlogEngine.Net and dasblog tonight I will be moving from WordPress to BlogEngine.Net. (Nothing really bad to say about Wordpress I just want to be running on a .Net platform) |
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blogengine simply the best choice for online activities |
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