It’s been over eight months since I migrated my blog (Jane Talks Tech!) from WordPress to Habari. It wasn’t done lightly and I did my due diligence by creating a test installation of Habari, making sure the importer worked, ironing out issues (credit entirely due to the devs in the Habari IRC channel) and finally pulling the trigger. That said, my experience with Habari has been a rollercoaster, but I’m still hanging on. 😛 I feel connected to this fledgling blogging system and believe it has a strong chance of surviving in the crowded content management space. Here are my thoughts on things that could make Habari even more of a contender today and ways you can help make it happen. So here goes:
There are a lot of Habari plugins listed in the official Habari repository. However, beating a dead horse, a small amount don’t work for the stable release version of Habari (i.e. v 0.6.4). Those that work are great at what they do and serves to tease me about the possibilities with Habari! I’m currently working on my bare-minimum and recommended list of Habari plugins. The list below picks on select plugins that would be pretty cool to have working in Habari v. 0.6.4:
- Polls: I found out about this plugin for creating polls, but it works with the bleeding edge or trunk version of Habari. According to a tweet by one of the Habari developers, version 0.7 of Habari might be hitting stores sometime in August. So until then, I’m hoping the community can help to polish some of the plugins.
- Video Embeds: Currently, besides grabbing the embed code from whatever video-sharing site you are on, there’s no relatively easy (as compared to WordPress) way to share videos. I’m thinking of a plugin that when activated, will allow you to plug in the unique ID number of the video and have it be recognized, etc. Not a biggie, but it removes yet another hurdle to the content-creation aspect of things. 🙂
- Photo Sharing support: When I started with Habari, I was a SmugMug user and I made good use of the fantastic SmugMug (#shamelessplug: coupon DGwxx0rcYaTWQ) silo plugin by Colin. Then, I switched to Zenfolio and wouldn’t you know it, no plugin for Zenfolio (#shamelessplug: Referral Code: WRC-655-RUY). Again, Zenfolio has code that can be embedded into blog posts as well as direct links, but man, I’d love to have a Zenfolio silo for Habari. 🙂 There are several photosharing sites and it’d be unfair to ask that the developers create site-specific plugins for the dozens of sites out there! This is where the community steps in and I’m hoping the next Habari developer on board has a Zenfolio website.
- Plugin/Theme discovery and updates: The official place to get plugins & themes from Habari is http://habariproject.org/dist/themes and http://habariproject.org/dist/plugins. One thing that would be nice is for there to be demo wherein people would preview themes without downloading, uploading and activating on a live blog or for the more technically inclined, a test blog. With the Habari plugin, I’d like to see some way to sort the plugins. Off the top of my head, perhaps it would be good to have folders corresponding to 0.x habari releases and then having *only* 0.x compatible plugins loaded in that directory. Plugin update notification is another pain, but so far, I’ve simply just check the plugin distribution site to see if there are changes. Perhaps an email subscription or a way to monitor changes to plugins would be a way of notifying users that plugins have been updated. Documentation with regards to plugin installation is an area that sorely needs help. A select few of the activated plugins on my blog use the neat ‘Help’ icon and some plugins lack readme files. Not a big deal because I’m a big fan of users educating themselves, doing due diligence by reading the manuals (in the case, the plugin.php files can be quite helpful) and asking for help before giving up. 🙂
One way I’ve been ‘trying’ to help is letting the devs know my problem(s) via Trac and writing on my blog about problems I’ve face and my workarounds or tweaks. Any CMS user will understand that with plugins and themes, there’s the almost-obligatory post-activation code and theme-tweaking (gravatar styling for comments, adding edit links to posts, adding code to certain parts of the themes as part of plugin installation, etc). Fact of life, but clearly documenting what needs to go where will go a long in easing the pain.
That said, I always find new Habari-powered blogs daily and I also check the Habari Plugins repository frequently. You can get an alternate listing of Available Habari Plugins and Available Habari Themes on the Habari Wiki. I also just found about an unofficial community theme repository called the Ziada Project which pales in comparison to the official repository so far.
Minor gripe: I’ve so many different Habari themes in the wild and speaking as a complete user & parasite, I selfishly wish that those coders who’ve created new/interesting themes should please consider releasing some themes. I’ll leave your link(s) in the footer/sidebar/wherever. 😛 Heck if I can’t get excellent themes for free, I won’t be opposed to paying for one! As I tweeted earlier, I can’t wait for the rise of premium themes in Habari. 🙂
So far, I’m still hooked on the Habari content management system for technical reasons I know nothing about and the fact that Habari comes with less cruft. The Habari cabal is aware of most of the shortcomings and from being a lurker on the habari-dev mailing list, they’re listening to feedback. With the demands of IRL work and personal stuff, they’ll get it done. 🙂 In fact, Trac is where much of the behind-the-scenes magic keeps happening as you’ll see stuff being fixed/updated.
For new users of Habari, if you run into trouble of *any* kind, the absolute best thing you can do is visit the Habari IRC channel.
Here’s how:
- Download and install an IRC client like mIRC or XChat or TurboIRC or .. My point is: there are several free options for getting an IRC client up & running.
- Once you have installed your IRC client, connect to the Freenode network which should be one of several options on whatever Chat/IRC client you have. Or you can click this link: irc://chat.freenode.net/ and it should allow you to open the Freenode network in your default IRC client.
- Once you have connected to the Freenode IRC network, connect to the #Habari channel by typing #Habari when prompted to connect to a channel.
- Once in the Habari IRC channel, ask your question and make sure you are able to make on-the-fly changes to your blog and provide feedback to the developers.
- OR, did you know that there’s a Live Help for Habari plugin? Yes, you can pretty much forget everything I wrote in the first 4 bullet points and simply install the LiveHelp plugin. It connects you directly to the Habari IRC channel from the comfort of your Habari blog administration panel! I love it and it’s frankly easier to do that installing and all the fun stuff. 😛
- OR, if you don’t care to be logged into your blog’s administrative interface to use IRC, simply visit http://webchat.freenode.net/ and join the channel #habari.
For users who have issues that could be considered bugs or if not fixable via IRC, you can always file a ticket in the Habari Trac system.
Here are some basic tips about using the Trac system:
- For issues that are NOT because of a plugin or theme being broken or incompatible, visit https://trac.habariproject.org/habari and create an account. It is extremely helpful if you can copy & paste the error codes you’ve seen into a text file and then upload that file as part of your bug filing. I’m also a fan of taking screenshots of the relevant details and uploading those as well. The point is that any helpful information that will lead to the solving of that bug is highly appreciated.
- For issues that ARE because of a plugin or theme being broken on incompatible, visit https://trac.habariproject.org/habari-extras and as you can see, I am rather whiny. 🙂
- Whatever you do, be honest about the severity i.e. if it’s a wishlist for a plugin or an ‘extra’, don’t mark it as a showstopping bug or as major or urgent. Remember the golden rule. 🙂
For users happily coexisting with Habari and want to help out:
- Spread the word about Habari via tweets, articles, blog posts and posts on your social networks. I haven’t been too shy about contacting people as asking/letting them know about the new kid on the block. 🙂
- Contribute to Habari via creating plugins or themes for Habari and/or contributing to the codebase or helping with documentation.
- Notify the developers of security issues or file tickets about bugs.
- Join a Habari working group to dedicate yourself to any issues you’re passionate about.
- Join the Habari forums, Habari Users mailing list and/or the Habari Developers mailing list to be of assistance to newbies like me and developers new to Habari.
Either way, I’m eager for v. 0.7 of Habari.
It is thisclose to release and I’m excited to be a part of this burgeoning community even if my most significant contribution was a plugin request. 😀 For a list of blogs running Habari, visit http://wiki.habariproject.org/en/Habari_Powered_Sites. I’m aware that because Habari’s still growing, it might not be for everyone. Here’s a link that describes how to migrate your content back to WordPress if that’s where you came from. Earlier this week, I did a test migration back to WordPress 3.0 with this same script and it worked. My posts, comments, user(s) and tags and pages were properly imported into the new WordPress installation, but my categories were gone i.e. all posts were listed as Uncategorized. I don’t think this is a dealbreaker. I’d be more worried if my tags weren’t imported because tags are another way of keeping things ‘categorized’ if you will. Just a FYI. 🙂
Tip for attempting a test migration from Habari to WordPress: use a new WordPress install with a new MySQL database and new username. It’s ridiculously easy to do on Dreamhost so you have no excuse not to. I just like things clearcut and that’s my only reasoning. 🙂