Creating a Blogroll
When I first started blogging way back in 2007, I maintained a blogroll of all my colleagues and peers’ websites. At the time this was a common practice and a way to support an expanding community. I considered this such an important aspect of the blogging scene at the time, I created a website to aggregate posts from video game blogs, called The Gaming Blog Nexus. It ran for two years and proved quite useful. However, it was tricky to administer and would frequently break as a lot of the back end widgets and plugins were created and maintained by “gifted amateurs”. I eventually shut it down due to the operating costs. When I moved my own website, Contains Moderate Peril, to Squarespace in 2015 I intended to start maintaining a blogroll once again. However, at that time there was no native support for such a thing on the platform. Hence for the last ten years, I have not had a blogroll on my website, which hasn’t sat well with me.
During that time blogging has waxed and waned. It is still a viable and popular form of self expression and community building online but it is no longer as popular or ubiquitous as it was a decade ago. Initially there was a degree of social etiquette regarding adding blogs to your blogroll. Do you add the details of blogs that already have your blog on their blogroll, by default? Do you only add blogs that cover the same content as your own? Or can you have a broad spectrum of blogs on your blogroll? All such considerations seem irrelevant nowadays. I think it is important to promote the writing of fellow members of the blogging community and to send any traffic that we can their way. Which is why I have spent some time recently trying to find a blogroll solution for Contains Moderate Peril. There are quite a few third party solutions that can provide aggregation services. Once configured, some custom code needs to be added to your blog, which provides a widget. It’s relatively simple and seamless.
I am currently using Elfsight, which provides among other widgets and apps, a RSS aggregation service which it then “stylishly” presents. At present I am using the free version which comes with some technical limitations. Blog posts from sites added to my blogroll are presented as tiles with feature some text from the original post, along with the date published and the name of the author. However, because there are differences between blog platforms and the data that is available in each respective RSS feed, some tiles lack images and other use the default icon associated with that blog. My apologies to Shintar and Bhagpuss as Elfsight doesn’t seem to want to work with Google blogger at all. I have added a Blogroll link at the top of page but this undertaking remains at present a work in progress. I broadly like the style of the blogroll but it certainly needs some fine tuning. It may work better as a side column rather than a dedicated page.
At present while I tinker with my blogroll, it would be remiss of me to not mention the one that I think is currently the benchmark for such things. Tipa from Chasing Dings has a stylish and functional blog roll that presents a broad selection of posts. It uses AI to generate a summary of the post and these are often bang on the nose. Each blog also has a custom avatar, again generated by AI, that draws upon each sites branding. If I were to ever create another aggregation website like The Gaming Blog Nexus, I would like it presented in this fashion using the python code that runs Tipa’s daily blogroll. However, such aspirations are not a primary consideration at present. I need to fine tune my own Elfsight blogroll and if it cannot support what I require, I may have to change to another third party provider. I would also prefer not to incur any additional costs unless I have to. In the meantime, feel free to post comments, advice or recommend any third party solutions.