Sunday 22 October 2017

10 Free Blogging Tools One Should Use

There are mass of interesting tools available for the serious and less serious blogger. Here are 10 free tools I use almost daily for my blog.

1. Picasa

 

Picasa, a free download from Google. Picasa lets you store all pictures on your hard drive in a library and perform basic editing like cropping, tone adjustment and watermarking. But I use it the most to compress pictures in size and quality before posting them on my blog so the download speed is reduced.
Picasa also allows you to synchronize all your pictures with your online library.

2. Flickr

 

I store all my picture on Flickr a free online service by Yahoo. They have a small tool which lets you right-click on any picture to add it to an upload batch. Pictures are organised in folders and refered to by an URL. Flickr provides basic online editing with Picnik. You can publish pictures for the whole Flickr community allowing comments, grouping,…

3. Google Analytics

 

There are many free web statistics tools available, but the most well-featured is probably Google Analytics. It provides deep analysis of your blog visitors, top content, referral sites, search keywords, etc.. All data can be displayed in a wide array of graphs and can be exported in a spreadsheet or PDF.

 

4. A menu bar generator


The drop down menu bar you see atop this blog, is made with the CSS Menu Generator by WonderWebWare. Through an interactive freeware, you customize your menu layout, style and its links, after which it generates the HTML/CSS code, which you can cut and paste into your template.
One tip: While the Menu Generator lets you save your menu for later changes, it does not store the styling of your menu, only the structure. I work around it, by saving the HTML in a text file, and when I do updates, I cut and paste the part of the structure only.

 

5. Feedburner


Feedburner is probably the most powerful and commonly used feed tool. It allows you to customize your feed, to keep track of your feed users, provides a wide range of tools allowing users to integrate your feed into their favourite reader, and has a ‘subscribe to this feed by email’ function.

 

6. Backlink searches and page ranking


Going into the “Nerds” category :-)
As for any website, a blog gets a Google pagerank, a point of measure of the “importance” of your blog in the blogosphere and the Internet itself. Google uses pageranking to “prioritize” sites when a user searches for certain keywords. The pageranking algorythm is based, amongst others, on the number of people link to your blog.
I use prchecker to monitor the blog’s pagerank.
To monitor the backlinks, I use mainly three tools:
- Google backlink checker
- Google Blog Search
Some curiosities to measure your “penetration” in the blogosphere:
- Trifecta
- Website Grader

 

7. Manipulating RSS feeds


I wrote before on the use of Yahoo Pipes a tool I use to aggregate, customize and reformat RSS feeds.
On The Road, I use them for the comments feed, and the humanitarian news feed in the right column.
On The Other World News, Newsgator is used to generate a script searching all aidnews feeds and display the latest.
Yahoo Pipes you can see in action on my “meta” blogs: AidBlogs and AidNews… All together, about 100 different blogs and other websites are re-mixed, summarized and re-published for a reader to get an overview “what’s up”.

 

8. Gadgets and widgets


Google offers a wealth of gadgets you can use on your blog. From tickers counting down to a certain date, local weather forecasts, related YouTube videos, Quotes of the Day, jokes to games. I use Google Gadgets for the translation widget in the right column.
Another great resource is WidgetBox, featuring thousands of widgets. They also make it easy to make your own.
Keep in mind though, the more widgets you add to your blog, how slower your page will download. So keep the tips I published in this post in mind.

 

9. Google webmaster tools.


Google Webmaster Tools is an essential for webmasters. Both require you to register (no fees), and facilitate the overview of how crawl robots look at your site, check backlinks and outdated links on your site.

 

10. Buttons, icons and badges


Buttons, icons and badges are a great way to make a link to a service, a page or a function on your blog with a graphical interface. The two tools I use are Brilliant Maker and CoolText. Free and easy to use.

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