Archive for the 'Reviews' Category

19 Pages Review - Mini Site CMS

First of all, this is not a paid review. It’s in preparation for a series of articles, Making Money with Mini Sites, Step by Step, that I’m going to start tomorrow. I will use 19 Pages for this series so I thought I’d review it first so you can see what it can and can’t do.

What it is

19 Pages is a very simple CMS built for fast deployment of mini sites by the guys from 45n5. It’s limited to 20 pages, index plus 19 articles, because that’s how the creators see mini sites, having 20 pages or less.

Here’s the short presentation/tutorial video from 19Pages.

The Good Parts

Simple to install - It doesn’t need a database, because it stores everything in its files. You just unzip the files and upload them to your host, and you’re ready to go. Log in (user: admin, password: admin), change the password (!) and start writing.

Easy to move - its as simple as moving the files from a host to another

Extremely easy to use - you don’t really have that many options to play with. You write the text, add the meta description and keywords and you’re done.

SEO OK for the most part - I would’ve preferred using - instead of _ for url’s but they’re still SE friendly. You probably can modify these in the .htaccess, but I’m not that technical so no idea there. You can add meta description and keywords so that’s covered too. No need to install SEO plugins like you would with WordPress. The only problem in the SEO department is that not all templates are coded well when it comes to the page title. The default version is ok, but the Made Of Cheese template uses the title from the index on all the pages, instead of using the article title. Didn’t check all the templates to see if there are others with this problem. I hope they fix this for the next release.

Until then, click Edit template and then at the top, in the head section, replace the part marked with red

<title><?php echo $sitename;?></title>

with this: $sitetitle;?

The Bad Parts

These are experienced by me with an older version. No idea if they fixed them yet.

  • Deleting the site leaves some sort of traces on the server. I added an index.html and it still kept saying that it couldn’t find the index.php
  • On the domain where I used it I had two directories /blog and /forums. The blog worked fine, but I couldn’t access the forums anymore. It took me to a 404 page of the CMS as far as I can remember.
  • Doesn’t work in folders, only on sub-domains or on the main domain. So test.example.com and example.com work fine, but example.com/test doesn’t work. Shouldn’t be a problem because most people don’t install mini sites in folders. I imagine it doesn’t work there because of the .htaccess file? Not sure.
  • It’s got a limited number of templates to use. They offer custom templates for $49 but that’s too high if you want to have a template fit for a certain niche. If you want a template to use on all your mini sites it might be worth it. If you know how to code I assume you can make one yourself.

Conclusions

All in all, I like it. I like it a lot. It’s supposed to be easy and for mini sites only and it does that well. Extremely easy to use and deploy. I used WordPress for static sites until recently, but I’ll switch to 19Pages for any mini sites I’ll make from now on.

Tomorrow or the day after tomorrow I’ll start the Making Money with Mini Sites, Step by Step series. The first article in the series will be rather long because it will detail every step, so I might not be able to finish it tomorrow.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed.!

Reviews Alexandru 27 Aug 2007 6 Comments

30 Day Challenge, The Good, The Bad And The Spam

In their own words:

In a nutshell… The Thirty Day Challenge is about making your first $10 online. For a full 30 days we are going to be showing you exactly how to start your own Internet business and generate your first income online without spending a dime.

In mine:

The good part: if you’re looking for new gray hat techniques to rank and make some money then their videos do provide good nuggets of information, that I personally didn’t see anywhere else. The market research part especially is pretty good. It will teach you how to research keywords and find a niche for affiliate marketing. If you’re a beginner then these videos will teach you how to do it in an easy way.

The bad part: if you’re not a beginner and you already have some experience with setting up blogs and other similar stuff, it will drive you mad trying to follow all the metaphors and the nonsense that the presenter spits out. It’s really beginner stuff, but the bad part is that you have to follow it because it does have some nuggets of wisdom here and there, that you don’t want to miss. So, yesterday I’ve spent an excruciating period of time watching all the videos released so far and listening to podcasts. The worse part is that I can’t stand the voice together with the way he talks.

The spam part: the whole thing has a nasty “I’m going to sell you an e-book at the end” feel to it. The thing that really put me over the edge was the fact that they claim in the videos that they will be using “white hat” techniques only. Having seen all the videos, that makes me think that either they don’t have a clue or that they’re lying through their noses.

socialogs No mater what their explanations might be, there is no way in hell that submitting one page Tumblr blogs with affiliate links on them to 20+ social media sites can be considered white hat. Screenshot on the right shows you how one of those sites looks after the 30DC Brigade marched through. If you look closely, you’ll probably notice a number of Tumblr blogs submitted.

And those are not all of them. There are probably thousands of these nitwits by now, happily spamming social media sites, getting banned from Digg, Reddit or Netscape and still thinking that they’re making money online using white hat techniques.

And to top it off, the snake oil salesman presenting the videos talks about how he feels good that he helps people find what they want (while linking in his spam blogs to 10 page classic sales letters) and that white hat is the way to go to feel good about yourself and make money in the long run (don’t remember the exact words and you couldn’t pay me to watch those videos again to find out).

Conclusion: watch the videos, don’t believe a word he’s saying about all that stuff being ethical. It’s not. The reason I recommend the videos is because if you want to make money online and be good at SEO, you need to know everything, white and black. And it does show you a nice way to rank fast for uncompetitive keywords. Take the lessons, use different methods.

I’m all for gaming Google, that’s what SEO is all about. I’m just not the kind that would spam sites that other people use, to rank for a keyword that brings 100 visitors per day.

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed.!

Reviews Alexandru 18 Aug 2007 2 Comments

« Previous Page