The Difference Between a Blog and CMS?
Software that provides a method of managing your website is commonly called a CMS or “Content Management System”. Many blogging software programs are considered a specific type of CMS. They provide the features required to create and maintain a blog, and can make publishing on the internet as simple as writing an article, giving it a title, and organizing it under (one or more) categories. While some CMS programs offer vast and sophisticated features, a basic blogging tool provides an interface where you can work in an easy and, to some degree, intuitive manner while it handles the logistics involved in making your composition presentable and publicly available. In other words, you get to focus on what you want to write, and the blogging tool takes care of the rest of the site management.
WordPress is one such advanced blogging tool and it provides a rich set of features. Through its Administration Panels, you can set options for the behavior and presentation of your weblog. Via these Administration Panels, you can easily compose a blog post, push a button, and be published on the internet, instantly! WordPress goes to great pains to see that your blog posts look good, the text looks beautiful, and the html code it generates conforms to web standards.
If you’re just starting out, read Getting Started with WordPress, which contains information on how to get WordPress set up quickly and effectively, as well as information on performing basic tasks within WordPress, like creating new posts or editing existing ones.
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Great beginner’s review of WordPress. What makes WordPress better than Blogger or other popular blog engines, is that it also works as a CMS – giving you the ability to add/edit pages and not just make blog posts.
Hey thanks for the informative post on CMSes. I've been using Blogger for a bit and after getting into it, you're right – Google just doesn't let you customize the way you need to. Also, the WordPress blog is really easy to use and so I'm going to build my full website with it including the blog stuff. You can just use the Pages as the static pages for your site and the posts for the ongoing community stuff.
Joe