Behind This Blog...

3 min read
Updated 1 month ago

Rife2Current Hardware

  • AMD Ryzen™ 7 7700
    • Octa-Core
    • 64 GB DDR5
    • 2x 1 TB NVMe SSD (Gen4)

    Hosted in Helsinki at Hetzner

Current Software

This blog is powered by the technology we've been developing for the last few months. The same technology used for our E-commerce hosting services. Both are based on JSP, although entirely developed using our own Custom Tag Library, jTalk.

I used PostgreSQL during most of the development phase, but ultimately found MySQL to be faster at processing queries. Similarly, I started with Tomcat 3.2 but decided on version 4 as it seemed to provide better overall performance.

The History

My first blog was started in December 2000 using UserLand's ManilaSites. Unfortunately, most of their servers are currently maxed out, which results in unacceptable performance. Since the service is provided free of charge (or advertising), there's really not much to complain about; although one could easily argue that the value of a piece of software being actively beta tested by such a vast number of simultaneous users easily outweighs the cost of any additional hardware or bandwidth.

Using Manila for close to a year, gave me a pretty good idea of what I really needed in a blog. Manila is very powerful, which also makes it fairly complex at times. I knew I wanted something similar but straightforward, simpler, and more importantly, database-driven.

It quickly became apparent that the technology we were engineering for our E-commerce portal could easily be used to develop a weblog. So, I did.

The core development was done over one weekend. I think I actually spent more time working on the HTML templates than I did on the logic. One of my focus was to make sure that, contrary to Manila, all the HTML and CSS templates were fully W3C validated. It probably took another couple weeks (1-2 hours per day) to work all the kinks out. The only real challenge was with exporting my old Manila weblog data and importing it into a database. I ended up modifying the TheXmlFiles script with Radio UserLand in order to export the data in a database-friendly format, although I still had to do quite some cleanup by hand.

I also devoted a little time implementing some key Manila features, such as RSS content syndication and Weblogs.Com update notification.

Behind The Scene

The blog administration interface is what I use the most. As it is an area you don't normally see, here are a few screenshots.

From this panel, I can easily edit/create stories or news articles. Administration
Editor The stories and new articles editor.
The search panel is used to find specific stories or articles. Search
Navigation This panel is used to configure the navigation bar.
The global settings are changed using this panel. Settings