Treasure Tables Now on WordPress!
Mon. September 5, 2005
I spent Labor Day importing Treasure Tables from Blogger to WordPress, which is why things looked funny here for most of the day!
I decided to make the switch because this site, and its readership, are growing (which is great!), and I wanted a more robust platform to work with. The more I posted using Blogger, the more I felt that I was butting up against the limitations of that service — and it’s easier to switch sooner than later!
Thank you for bearing with me while I got things moved over — hopefully you’ll agree that it was worth it! For those who use Blogger and might be thinking about making this switch themselves, I’ll cover my approach here.
1. Research: I looked into WordPress and Movable Type, and weighed their advantages against the pain-in-the-butt factor of making the switch, and I took notes throughout. It’s not a hugely complicated process, but I’m glad I did my homework first.
2. Installation: My webhost, DreamHost (affiliate link), offers a one-click install for WordPress. You make a few choices, clink “Install,” and you’re off — very cool.
3. Importing from Blogger: Losing 20+ posts and 200+ of your excellent comments in the move wasn’t an option, but fortunately clever — and generous! — people have made this switch before me. I used a custom script by Andy Skelton to import all of my posts and comments, and followed Catsudon’s step-by-step tutorial for that script; both are excellent. I wound up having a couple of minor problems, both fairly easily solved by reading the comments on those two sites (and neither of which affected the outcome, which was 100% good).
4. Choosing a Theme: There are oodles of themes for WordPress, and I leaned on two great resources to choose mine: the WordPress Theme Viewer and Emily Robbins’ massive list of WordPress templates. In the end, I settled on Connections, by Vanilla Mist, which was just about perfect for what I had in mind.
Tweaking the Site: I have good knowledge of HTML and limited knowledge of CSS, but combined with the extensive documentation on the WordPress Codex and a willingness to play around with the files, that was enough to get the results I wanted.
So what what was I after that Blogger couldn’t provide? Four things in particular, all standard in WordPress:
- Categories
- A comment form
- Native trackback
- Great customization
Blogger’s hosted-only comments — which took you away from the site, onto a clunky comments page, and then back — were what really drove me to switch. (Well, that and Spring Clean Your Blog, a post on ProBlogger, my favorite blog about blogging — it came along at just the right time!)
Unless you just want to stick with the default template (nothing wrong with that!), WordPress requires more tinkering than Blogger — but there’s a lot more to tinker with, and I think the tradeoff is well worth it.
Welcome to the new Treasure Tables — I hope you like it!
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Comments
6 Responses to “Treasure Tables Now on WordPress!”

how many hours did this take, would you be so kind as to tell me? and do you have broadband? thanks!
It took me about 2 hours to do the import, because of the problems that I mentioned; with no issues, it would have been a few minutes.
Picking a template took about 8 hours over several days. I’m anal — your mileage may vary.
Tweaking the site (again: anal) has taken about 12 hours of fiddling so far.
I do have broadband, which certainly helps.
I’m picking templates right now. It’s sloooooow going, however. Most are pretty bad. You’re right, Connections is pretty nifty; I immediately liked it. (It helps that the 10 just prior to it are junk)
Any tweaks/plugins you currently using?
My other top choices for themes were Minima Plus, Relaxation (and its three-column variant) and Almost Spring. Connections won out in part because it needed the least tweaking.
The only plugin that I installed was Live Preview, which is what generates the as-you-type preview of your comment that appears just below the comment box.
Haven’t made it to those yet.
Almost Spring is on my short list #2, right behind subLIMEnal. Blix, draft, and FastTrack all get honorable mentions. =)
Check out Popup Image Gallery and Bad Behavior, too.
…and Live Preview is gone: it was the source of the Firefox flashing/resetting comment box problem I’ve been trying to figure out for the past couple of days!
I’ve replaced it with this little slice of deliciousness: Filosofo Comments Preview. (The author even provides canned templates for some popular themes, including Connections. w00t!)