NOTE: This was a post over on Vox that I’ve exported over since the service is shutting down.
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.
Possibly related posts (auto-generated):
September 2nd, 2010 on 6:52 PM
Does the WordPress option have privacy settings?
September 2nd, 2010 on 7:08 PM
Well okay then! I guess when I decided to move entirely over to WP a bit ago, I was just sensing the impending downfall.
Look forward to seeing you over at your other blog! I'm here: http://www.letseatgrandpa.com. :)
September 2nd, 2010 on 7:11 PM
Wow, not even LiveJournal actually died. It's funny, I was just going through the motions of sprucing up a site and working out how I wanted to participate in the blogosphere and this happens. Sheesh.
September 2nd, 2010 on 7:13 PM
Thanks for the details, Ross.
September 2nd, 2010 on 7:22 PM
Laurie – I believe WordPress allows Private posts, as well as "password protected" posts (i.e. if you know the password, you can read the post, regardless of whether you're a WordPress user yourself). I haven't used TypePad but a cursory search made it look like the do something similar. I'm wondering if SixApart will try to take the Vox neighborhood/graduated privacy concept and port it over to TypePad (if they haven't already) – it would make sense that they could reuse portions of Vox to do so, if they think it's a smart move.By the way – when you import to WordPress, you can choose to assign a password to all of the entries you import. Entries marked as Private (You Only) become private on the import. It sounds like there may be some issues if you have photos marked as private embedded in posts – if you think you might export to WordPress, you may want to go through and save these off and/or make them public temporarily and then do your import…
September 2nd, 2010 on 7:31 PM
Wow — we kind of knew it was coming, didn't we??
September 2nd, 2010 on 7:32 PM
Heh, I know…LJ may not be "going strong" but they at least didn't kill it dead dead. Let me know when/where you decide to participate in the blogosphere once you get going…
September 2nd, 2010 on 7:49 PM
Ross, thanks for shepherding your community while we go through this transition. I just wanted to mention, because I'm not sure if it's clear, that if you export to TypePad, all of your photos go with you. They become assets on your TypePad blog and remain embedded in your posts as they are here. Audio files, I believe, become assets on the blog as well, with the player being replaced by a link to download the file. If you or any of your neighborhood have any questions, feel free to contact me. Also, please feel free to delete this comment if you find it intrusive.
September 2nd, 2010 on 7:54 PM
buddblack.wordpress.comScifimedia.blogspot.comIt could have been great. It was for a while.
September 2nd, 2010 on 8:04 PM
Steve, I really appreciate you commenting here – it's very helpful to have someone with experience with TypePad fill all of us clueless people in that path of transition. I certainly don't know enough about it to give any sort of guidance, and I hope people do explore the paths available. I'm going to revise my post to point out a couple more resources (your post, the closing.vox.com links, etc) so people have a little more info, and take out some of the cruft that was a result of an impulse-post on hearing the news.Reading back on my post I see it does sound a little bitter, and actually I'm anything but – I see and wonder at people who take a free service for granted (any, not just Vox) and act like it is their god-given right to always have said service available, for free, for as long as they want to use it. I'm appreciative of the efforts SA put into Vox to turn it into such a wonderful community and hope that their decision to scrap Vox means a hugely successful next-level for TypePad. I also hope that the way that SA goes about shutting the doors and turning off the lights does not sever the ties and bonds many in the Vox community have formed over the years. We'll all try to make the best of the situation and move on from here. :-)
September 2nd, 2010 on 8:13 PM
Thanks Ross. Honestly, I don't mind people saying what's on their mind, even if it's not polite or tactful or whatever. Not saying that describes you at all, but I know what you're referring to, and it doesn't bother me at all. My main concern is that people figure out where to go and how to get there. I don't want to see anyone lose their content or their community. Part of why I'm psyched about getting people over to TypePad is that I want to rebuild my community there, and I know that we're doing really cool stuff to make an incredibly robust community. Every day, people are building more fun stuff there that's inclusive of not just TypePad users, but anyone with a Facebook, AIM, OpenID, WordPress, or any other portable account. Check out http://make-a-face.org for an awesome example of the type of community we're building for people to participate in. http://postthelove.com/ is another really great example. We're doing some good stuff, and community is the center of it. I wish I could explain it all more eloquently or in better detail, but the truth is I'm just on the edge of it. My role here is to build specific things on the platforms that 6A has created. It's a lot of fun, and there's a ton of potential. Enough evangelism, though. You know where to find me if you need me!
September 2nd, 2010 on 8:43 PM
I've been using wordpress to back up my files for a while. littleoddme.wordpress.com.
I'm so sad to see this come to an end.
Wordpress allowed me to import all of my photographs, and they imported just fine. I'm probably going to create a typepad as well from my imports, and eventually find out which I like best.
September 2nd, 2010 on 8:51 PM
Thanks, Ross.
I couldn't get "lauriewrites", so I'm "lauriewritesablog.wordpress.com". Unwieldy, but familiar.
September 2nd, 2010 on 9:10 PM
thanks Ross. http://mariser.wordpress.com
September 2nd, 2010 on 9:28 PM
Unwieldy, maybe, but I like the cadence. Even in your blog domains, you've got writing chops, Laurie!
September 2nd, 2010 on 9:47 PM
The irony is how ticked off I am at Sixapart mostly because Vox is so damned brilliant and has made me the best friends ever across the world – something I'm grateful for yet also very very pissed off that we've been abandoned.
I use my blog not just for rinky-dink conversation but for posts on vital science and biology / conservation / endangered species info. It is so valueable to me and my community. Sigh.
Thank you so much for this post, Ross. I wish other sites explained all this in plain English as you have.
September 3rd, 2010 on 3:09 AM
Thank you, Ross, for such detailed instructions. I'm currently exporting to ensue.wordpress.com, but am considering Blogger (en-sue.blogspot.com) and en-sue.livejournal.com. I'll be sure to follow your blog. I'm glad we are friends on Facebook. Please keep in touch.
September 3rd, 2010 on 12:09 PM
I appreciate all the hard work you've done for this community, Ross. The scripts were fantastic and I used many of them regularly.Ironically, it was here and at the LJ group that I really came to understand that the VOX API is based on Blogger's Atom API and the privacy controls here were loosely based on LiveJournal's. (I tried in vain to post here from Semagic.) So… not original, but I liked the particular spin put on them.I didn't quite understand the password protection on the WP import tool. Not a biggie– I plan to trim/modify what I imported pretty heavily to better fit the environment there. I was collaborating on an existing WP blog and created a separate space for myself after I signed on for that, so exporting to WP overall was a fairly simple decision, even if the seams show.
September 3rd, 2010 on 4:30 PM
You're welcome – I'm happy some of the things I created/researched were useful.The password protect feature on the import applies a password to all entries that get imported. In order to read them, you then have to type in the password to open the entry. You can see the title of the entry, but nothing else.You can always modify a post once it is in WordPress to make it Private or Password-Protected. You also have the option to make the entire blog Private, in which case only 35 folks that you personally "invite" (i.e. add to your access list) will be able to read it. For unlimited users on a Private blog, they charge $30/year.
September 3rd, 2010 on 10:06 PM
Ah, okay. I simply opted for Private. I don't think I'll have more than 35 readers.
September 4th, 2010 on 6:38 AM
http://innice.typepad.com/
September 5th, 2010 on 10:47 AM
http://morgaine.typepad.com/vox/http://morgaine.wordpress.com/and, more importantly,http://blog.morgaine-lefaye.net/http://soup.morgaine-lefaye.net/ (nsfw)
September 5th, 2010 on 11:07 AM
I think your comments reflect a lot of the sentiments among soon-to-be ex-Voxers. My understanding is that Six Apart is "cleaning house," prior to a sale to another company. Vox, as you so expertly stated, was full of cobwebs and needed a paint job, so they decided to dump it.
September 5th, 2010 on 11:22 AM
Yes, this might be the case, see: http://social.venturebeat.com/2010/08/25/six-apart-deal-rumors/
September 7th, 2010 on 1:08 PM
heya Ross!
wanted to pop in and leave my current address, mariser.wordpress.com
September 9th, 2010 on 5:53 PM
Ross, we gotta thank you for keeping it together in some trying times. Your tips for making the transition less painful have been enormously helpful. We've exported to typepad http://ravenjake.typepad.com/blog/ and WordPress http://ravenjake.wordpress.com/ just to see. It's still an experiment with formats etc to see what's going to work. Anyway, you made this way easier for us and for a whole lot of other folks that are just wondering what the hell happened and how am I going to get out of this trainwreck? Thanks.