Note: This is one of a series of posts I'm doing about exporting your Vox content to other sites. See here for my introductory post about porting your main blog over.
For those folks who choose to export to TypePad, word on the street is it will back up your audio files and make them available on your new blog there. But what about those folks who chose to go a different route (e.g. WordPress, Posterous, etc)? Those export tools don't back up audio, which may leave you frustrated, especially if you have files that you no longer have on your own computer, for whatever reason.
Two solutions for those folks:
1) Simplest way to back up specific audio files is to download the files individually. Install my Greasemonkey script (must have Greasemonkey installed first) and then go to the individual page for one of your audio files (e.g. this is a specific page for an audio file). Once the script is installed, you'll see a "Link to mp3" link that you can right-click on and download the .mp3 to your computer. You'll have to rename it, but at least you'll have the file again!
2) You can try a program I wrote a while back called Vaudio
to create a list of all of your blog's files, hyperlinked to the .mp3
files on a single page. Once you have the list, you can use DownThemAll (or any other download assistant) to download them all at one time to your computer. The page and the instructions are here (sorry, they're as clear as I could make them without spending a lot of time on it). Some caveats to note:
Edit: Upon re-reading my post, I realize I sounded a little bitter and accusatory of SixApart. I am sure their decision to scrap Vox and move everyone out is not one they made easily or without consideration for the dedicated members of the Vox community. The efforts they have gone through to provide export tools to TypePad and Flickr shows that they do care about the people that made Vox great, and they hope that those folks will have enough faith in them to follow them over to the platform that they DO plan to focus their attentions on. I'm revising my post below to be a little less negative and try to focus more on what people can do to keep their content, wherever they decide to go from here.
I've been away from Vox for quite some time now, for work reasons and family commitments. In fact, I probably wouldn't even be posting this today if it wasn't for the announcement that Vox has decided to close its doors and bulldoze the community that has been slipping away quietly in dribs and drabs as people became dissatisfied with what in the recent years has become a sort of pariah of the SixApart group. As support for the Vox platform declined, so did the number of users who cared to deal with the idiosyncrasies of the tools, poor server loads, and influx of spam comments. But now even those who stuck around through it all will need to make a decision. The word is out folks, and it's time to pack your bags hit the road. Luckily, there's a lot of handy tools and helpful instructions out there to insure that you don't lose your content, and can hopefully transition on to bigger and better things on another blogging platform.
SixApart's primary suggestion is that you transition your Vox blog to TypePad, another one of their blogging products, and one which, based on Steve's recent post and comments below, looks to have A LOT of good people and support behind it to make it a fun and worthwhile product. Although I have not used it (and thus really can't express an opinion on it), I do recommend you give their Export to TypePad tool a chance and see what all the hooplah is about. If you don't like it, there are other export options that you can do that I'll go into more detail about.
Right now, your options to export your Vox blog are as follows:
1) Export your blog (posts, photos, and audio) to a free TypePad blog
2) Export your photos and videos to a Flickr account (free or paid Pro)
3) Export your blog (posts, photos) to an alternative service such as WordPress or Posterous
Note: These are not mutually exclusive - you can export your blog + photos and audio to TypePad, and then export your photos + videos to flickr, and do another export of your blog to WordPress or the like)
Vox has #1 and #2 covered in pretty good detail - while logged in, go to www.vox.com and read the info there to see the links to export to TypePad or Flickr. Also, more info can be found at closing.vox.com - including details of when you'll not be allowed to post anymore, and when you'll not be allowed to get your data any more.
As for #3, my suggestion? Export to a WordPress blog. Even if you don't think you're going to use WordPress, they will automatically import your Vox blog (posts and pictures - sorry, it still doesn't do video or music) using their import tool. Once there, you can easily export your entire blog contents to a single file that can be imported to almost any of the big named blogging platforms out there (there's either direct import or conversion tools). Plus, your pictures will be hosted by WordPress until you can find somewhere else that you want to host them.
Please note that you can either do a WordPress.com blog (i.e. they host it there) or a self-hosted installation of WordPress on your own site. If you want to import to a self-hosted wordpress blog without any intervening steps, follow the instructions here to install the import plugins on your self-hosted installation and go to it.
If you're not a WordPress fan and don't want to try TypePad, you can also check out Posterous. Vox has details and the link to export to Posterous here. There are also tools that will allow you to import a WordPress blog into Blogger, if that's more of your thing - just export to WP and then use one of those tools to transfer over.
I'd love for my Vox neighborhood to leave me comments to this post for where I can best keep in touch with you. Just because I've been absent from Vox doesn't mean I want to lose touch with those folks I used to converse with regularly. It's still going to be a little bit before I'm back in the office and around a computer all day (and thus have time to start posting again) but I'm not giving up on blogging and don't want to stop reading everyone else's funny, insightful, and entertaining blogs just because SixApart decided to nix Vox.
If you guys want to find me, I'll be porting my blog over to http://rossotron.com . I'll transfer over any comments from this post, too, so if you want to use this as a reference for where to find people, you can check for the related post over on that site to see where people think they'll end up, at least in the interim.
Two Fridays ago, I got the go-ahead from my doctor to start wearing a regular shoe and get back into walking like a normal human being instead of the clumping, bumbling boot-wearing boy that in itself was a huge improvement over the clanking, creaking crutch-goer immediately following my Achilles tendon surgery. This happy news was eclipsed, however, by the news that with my newly recovered mobility, I would have to go back up to the plant site and play catchup on everything I missed in the previous 2.5 months.
Well, now I'm back up here in Minnesota, and even though the weather is wonderful and the countryside is beautiful, I'm not really enjoying it. I've got my head down and blinders on trying to get caught up on everything that has changed so I can get back to being a useful contributor to the plant startup effort, and between that and the fact that my wife is once again forced to take care of our kids all by herself, I'm feeling sort of down. Writing has been one of the last things on my mind lately, even though I enjoy it when I sit down and do it. At least this time around I get to go home a lot more often, and I'm restricted to 60 hours a week of work, so it shouldn't be quite so frenzied up here once I finally get caught up. Hopefully, at that point I'll get back to blogging more often, or at least on a semi-regular basis.
A couple months ago, I wrote about a new ability developed for WordPress.com that allows you to export your Vox blog to a Wordpress blog. I was really excited about this at the time, because I'm always in favor of services allowing you to take your data with you when you want to leave - nothing is more frustrating than devoting time/energy to a project/blog/site and then finding yourself with the choice of either staying locked-in to your current situation or giving up all your work and starting over fresh.
At
the time, I mentioned that the only way to port from Vox to a
self-hosted WordPress blog (i.e. on your own domain, not a WordPress.com
sub-domain) was to use WordPress.com as an intermediary - exporting
from Vox to WordPress.com, and then exporting a WXR file and importing
it into your other blog. While this technically works (I tried it out),
it's a little messy and leaves all the pictures hosted on the
WordPress.com domain site, instead of pulling them into your self-hosted
site.
Brian Colinger, a developer of WordPress.com and WordPress plugins, contacted me a few weeks ago to let me know that he's now developed a WordPress plugin that you can install on your self-hosted domain that will do the same export functionality as before, but this time directly to your self-hosted blog. Yep, now there's a Vox exporter to self-hosted blogs!
The process itself is pretty easy, and Brian's post gives step-by-step instructions, so I won't repeat them here. You have to install the WP_Importer base class plugin first, and then Vox Importer plugin. Pretty soon, you'll be pulling all your posts over to your own self-hosted WordPress blog!
Just like the ability on WordPress.com, this importer should:
Hat's off to Brian for another job well done!
Stop by his blog and leave a comment for him on the post if you end up
using the plugin, and let him know how it went. Also, if you have any
further questions/bug reports, be sure to let Brian know so he can
fine-tune this plugin for all the folks out there that had no choice but
to remain with Vox, lose their work, or laboriously copy it by hand to
another platform!
Fridays are the days I post one or two "drabble", the 100-word stories that test your ability to convey an entire story idea in an extremely brief format. Feel free to join in and write your own 100 word stories on Fridays, and tag them with "friday drabble". Link to them in the comments and/or on Twitter with the hashtag #fridaydrabble.
Funny Business
When Jeremy was 7, his grandfather told him "laughter is the best medicine." Jeremy, being seven, believed him. When his sister got the chicken pox, he tickled her mercilessly. He only succeeded in catching it himself, but he wasn't dissuaded.
When Jeremy was 17, he made an old widow laugh until tears streamed from her eyes. She thanked Jeremy for helping her come to terms with her husband's death.
When Jeremy was 47, he successfully distilled the giggles into liquid form. Ten years later, his concentrated chuckles proved successful in curing AIDS.
Jeremy laughed all the way to the bank.
I
Kissed a Zombie, and I Liked It by Adam
Selzer
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Even though a 30-year old male is not the target audience for this satire of the vampire/paranormal romance novels that seem to be spontaneously appearing on the shelves of bookstores everywhere, I found I did enjoy this novel for what it was - a light, humorous take on the subject matter that is sure to be engaging for teens and genre-fans who can take a little good-natured ribbing.
Eighteen year-old Algonquin "Alley/Ali/Gonk" Rhodes is the self-proclaimed Ice Queen of the "Vicious Circle" - a clique of close-knit friends who not only run the school newspaper (blog), but somehow are allowed to turn the escapades of their classmates into gossip-rag fodder for mass publication. One of their favorite topics of ridicule is the excessive efforts teenage girls at the school make to try to nab a vampire boyfriend; in Alley's school, dating the undead appears to be the epitome of cool.
Alley acts above all of that, clinging to her reputation and her independence like a badge. But when reviewing a band at a local venue for her paper's music column, she falls head-over-heels in love with Doug, who, she belatedly realizes, is not really a really-cute goth boy, but rather a zombie hipster who shares her eclectic taste in music.
Selzer's world is intriguing - vampires, werewolves, and zombies do exist, and they live (mostly) peacefully alongside humanity. Of course, there was that whole issue with Mega Mart raising and enslaving zombies for a cheap workforce, but now that the lawsuit has been settled and all those zombies are free to live their lives coexist, people have pretty much accepted the "post-humans", and aside from all the vapid teenage girls wanting to date (and eventually become) "post-humans", things are pretty normal.
I had a little bit of trouble believing in the character of Alley - here's a bright young teenager with the scathing wit of a college junior who appears to be able to psychoanalyze her own motives in staying single, yet it takes her a couple of dates (and 60-something pages) to discover that Doug is a zombie. She explains this incongruity near the end of the novel, but by then I'd already written it off as something just to get past and treat the novel as a fluffy, witty (but not sparkly) book that will surely be snapped up by teenagers anxious for a novel take on both teenage romances and the paranormal. This isn't a book I'll be hanging on to myself, but if you know someone 13-18 in your life, they'll probably enjoy giving it a read.
Note: I received this book as part of a contest giveaway.
Or at least pretty close to it - Friday I had my followup with the doctor, and he gave me the go-ahead to ditch the crutches and start hobbling around on my now-mended leg! I still am carrying one crutch around with me, but I'm trying to keep my weight off it and only use it when my leg gets extra tired. Of course, I still have to wear the big, bulky, black boot, but only for another 3 weeks and after that, I truly am free, as it'll be back to regular shoes, being able to walk barefoot, etc. And just in time for summer, too!
I still will have a long recovery period. No ladder climbing for another 2 months, and who knows when I'll be able to do high-impact stuff like running again. But just being able to walk unassisted seems like enough of a treat for me, now. You never realize how much you take walking unassisted for granted until you can't do it!
Fridays are the days I post one or two "drabble", the 100-word stories that test your ability to convey an entire story idea in an extremely brief format. Feel free to join in and write your own 100 word stories on Fridays, and tag them with "friday drabble". Link to them in the comments and/or on Twitter with the hashtag #fridaydrabble.
ALSO! Some of the drabble I am writing are part of the 100 Word Stories Podcast Weekly Challenge! Because of this, I will also post an audio recording of my reading of any challenge submissions. Hope you enjoy!
My Summer Vacation
by Billy Jenkins
The End
I have a little desk clock that I keep by my computer. It's a little freebie-thing from Brookstone that I got for spending $40 there one day (I had a birthday gift card for the place) but I like it because it has a nice big clock face, displays the date and day of the week on it, and if you rotate it 90, 180, or 270 degrees, it turns into a thermometer, count-up timer, or world clock, respectively.
I've been out of the office pretty much since last July, so it was only this morning I noticed something interesting - instead of showing the year 2010 as '10, my trusty little clock has rolled over to '90. Yes, I get to live the 90s all over again!
From what I can tell, the clock (made in China) uses
some sort of cheap computer circuit board that was programmed with the
minimum function set required to provide the features advertised on
clock. Rather than expand the memory/processing power of the clock to
handle dates outside the range of 1990-2009, the designers decided to
just let the clock roll over and never show the correct date after the
functionality-imposed "end-of-life" of the clock. Probably they
expected that the hardware itself would only have a lifespan of a few
years, anyway, so those folks like myself who got the clock in 2003
would never have it last long enough to see this bug "feature" in the
design.
But my clock survived (against all odds?) and is a great of example of what I like to call the "Just Enough" syndrome.
"Just Enough" can apply to any number of aspects of your life, whether it be you doing just enough work in your job to get the task at hand completed, paying just enough on your credit card debt to stay off the "finance charge" list, cleaning just enough of your house/car/workspace to keep it from looking like a total dump, or studying just enough to get by on your test/presentation/speech. The results of "Just Enough" work can be described by a single word - mediocre. Mediocre can also describe the quality of life you might have if you employ the "just enough" attitude regularly.
However, attempting to go "Above and Beyond" on everything you do creates a different peril; spending so much time and effort on a single task could mean you end up not having enough time/resources to finish everything else, and have to sacrifice something to make up for it. This is what I personally tend to struggle against, both at work and at home.
The solution, or course, like so many other things in life, is moderation. The "Just Enough" attitude is perfect for throwaway work that you don't need to deal with ever again, or things that would suck up your time without providing you with enough return on your time investment. You can still go above and beyond on things that are important to you, whether it's playing with your children, putting together that big report for work, cooking a fantastic meal, working to get out of debt, doing something creative, or participating in a hobby. The key is thinking about what you're doing, and really consciously deciding up-front how important the activity is and how much you want/need to invest in it. Waiting until you're halfway done (or sometimes, even after you've been done for hours/days!) won't work - you've missed your chance to repurpose your time for more important things, and all you've got left now is a lesson to learn from for next time.
I hope my poor little clock continues to run. I'd like to keep it here on my desk to remind me to evaluate whether what I'm working on deserves more than a "Just Enough" solution. And because that isn't always the right answer, I've paired it with my Staples Easy Button to remind me that I often take things well beyond what is needed, and need to scale back my effort and time investment accordingly. If I can keep my behavior somewhere in the middle, I'll have a few new single-word handles to hang on my quality of life - Happy, Contented, Fortunate, and Worthwhile.

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