Showing posts with label Tech Wars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tech Wars. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Tech Wars - Blogger vs Wordpress

Copyright 2014 Joshua Zenn. All trademarks in the image
are property of their respective owners.

Welcome to Tech Wars! Every Tuesday and Thursday we take two or more tech services/products and put them side-by-side to see which one prevails. Follow us on Twitter (@allstuffnerdy) to get updates when a new Tech War comes out. To see more Tech Wars articles, click the "Tech Wars" link at the top of the page.

Blogging has revolutionized the information sharing age. Now anyone with experience as a writer has a chance to be heard. No need to mess with nasty code or deal with domain registration and server upkeep. But many people seem stuck on which platform to use. We narrowed down the playing field to the top two in the industry. Let's begin by stacking up the stats.




Blogger Wordpress Winner
Price Free Free (requires external host) Blogger
Created 1999 2003 Blogger
Owned by Google Wordpress Not scored
Websites that use it Unknown 60 million Wordpress
Main programming language AJAX, HTML5, CSS3 PHP not scored
Main features Dead simple design and customization Expandable through plugins Wordpress
Limitations Must be hosted on blogger server with a *.blogspot.com domain. Limited customization. Must have own hosting service. Difficult setup for newbies. Tie
Allows posting media (pictures, video,...) Yes Yes Tie
Search engine friendly Yes (duh, it's run by Google) Yes Blogger
Allows editing source code Yes (it's well hidden in the template settings) Yes, once you learn the file structure Wordpress
Allows use of custom domains Yes Yes Tie
Hosting Google servers only (as of 2010) any hosting service or free hosting on wordpress.org (with limited functionality) Wordpress

Conclusion: Wordpress is the winner.
Despite being somewhat difficult to set up, it is the most feature rich and has the largest website share. We didn't have any data showing the share Blogger had on the internet, but we did have sources that indicated that Wordpress was the #1 most used blogging platform. The only thing Wordpress is missing is it's not search friendly. Blogger sites all use the *.blogspot.com URL template. Therefore, according to Google, blogspot.com gets one Alexia score in the search engine. and since the blogspot.com "website" has so many backlinks and content (not to mention it's run by Google), it does get a higher ranking in Google and other search engines compared to its Wordpress counterpart. So with that, Wordpress dominates the Blogshere, making it a winner for today's Tech Wars.

So let us know in the comments, do you agree with our pick? Would you have picked something else? Do you think we left out a worthy competitor? Let us know in the comments. And stay tuned every Tuesday and Thursday for more Tech Wars.

Hey blog readers! If you want to follow our meaningless updates, check out our pages here:
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/U9s2Ld
Twitter: Follow us @allstuffnerdy
Google+: https://www.google.com/+AllstuffnerdyBlogspot
If you have a business you would like us to mention at the beginning of a post, check out our gigs on Fiverr:
Joshua: http://fiverr.com/armmaster17
Brandon: http://fiverr.com/maltzy
Spreadshirt: http://allstuffnerdy.spreadshirt.com
Check out our SpreadShirt shop for our awesome selection of geeky apparel. We offer Mens, Womens, and kid sizes of T-shirts, Long-sleeve shirts, and hoodies in addition to coffee mugs and more. Check out our store here: http://allstuffnerdy.spreadshirt.com

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Tech Wars - Important announcement!

Welcome to Tech Wars! Every Tuesday and Thursday we take two or more tech services/products and put them side-by-side to see which one prevails. Follow us on Twitter (@allstuffnerdy) to get updates when a new Tech War comes out. To see more Tech Wars articles, click the "Tech Wars" link at the top of the page.

Hello blog readers. Unfortunately there is no Tech Wars article for today. The first reason being that the items we were going to review have not arrived yet, so we can't do a comparison without any real-world experience with the device/service. The second reason being we are a little stumped on ideas. If you have a great idea for our next Tech Wars article, just drop a comment below.

Hey blog readers! If you want to follow our meaningless updates, check out our pages here:
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/U9s2Ld
Twitter: Follow us @allstuffnerdy
Google+: https://www.google.com/+AllstuffnerdyBlogspot
If you have a business you would like us to mention at the beginning of a post, check out our gigs on Fiverr:
Joshua: http://fiverr.com/armmaster17
Brandon: http://fiverr.com/maltzy
Spreadshirt: http://allstuffnerdy.spreadshirt.com
Check out our SpreadShirt shop for our awesome selection of geeky apparel. We offer Mens, Womens, and kid sizes of T-shirts, Long-sleeve shirts, and hoodies in addition to coffee mugs and more. Check out our store here: http://allstuffnerdy.spreadshirt.com

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Tech Wars - PC Gaming Platforms

Welcome to Tech Wars! Every Tuesday and Thursday we take two or more tech services/products and put them side-by-side to see which one prevails. Follow us on Twitter (@allstuffnerdy) to get updates when a new Tech War comes out. To see more Tech Wars articles, click the "Tech Wars" link at the top of the page.

PC gaming has been evolving at a rapid pace. Many years ago, most people didn't play games on their computer. That's what consoles were for. But now with the turbocharged power of desktop hardware, the majority of gamers prefer PC's for gaming. We can now put multitasking power into the hands of the average consumer. I know people who stream music, video chat, play games, and record their screen all at the same time with minimum lag. So we now have the need to put that multitasking power to use. That's where PC gaming platforms come in.

In the past few years, many game client platforms have come through, but two stand out. Valve's Steam service, and EA's Origin service.

To kick this Tech Wars off, let's put the two side by side and see how they stack up:
Valve's Steam EA's Origin
Membership cost FREE FREE
Created 2002 2005 - Renamed to Origin in 2011
In-game overlay Yes Yes
Social network (friends, disscussion boards...) Yes Yes
online game streaming (Ex: twitch.tv) No Yes
game streaming (Ex: read here) Yes No
Game store Yes Yes
Allow running external games Yes Yes
Fanbase 75 million 9.3 million
Games on store 3,000 Unknown (less than 500)
Cloud support (for saves and game data) Yes Yes
RAM usage 28,000 Kb 159,000 Kb
Flagship games Valve branded games EA branded games

After stacking these up, it's time to see which one dominates. But first, it's worthy mentioning the types of sales that go on in the two game platform stores. EA sells many expensive games (avg $50 USD). It does, however, offer occasional discounts and On the House deals (see here). Valve on the other hand offers a wide range of prices on their products, and often has deep sales (ranging from 25% to 90% off the original price). Now with that out of the way, we can go through it and come to a conclusion. So obviously both are free to use. And Steam is a much more experienced player in this field considering it was created back in 2002 for the purpose of distributing updates for it's then popular game Counter-Strike. Origin is much more recent in the respect that it wasn't a gaming platform until 2011. Before that, it was just a download manager and digital game store. Both have an In-game overlay that you can access by pressing a pre-defined key combination to access. From there both platforms support their own social network (chat, friend activity, forums...). Origin has a surprising feature where it can stream your game online to services like twitch.tv. Valve however allows streaming to other devices on your network in a different way. Basically Valve has made it so you can stream any game that you have set to launch through Steam to any device on your network that is running Steam. The client also supports sending key presses back so essentially you are remote controlling your computer. If you want to read more about this, read here. Both platforms support buying games online from their custom store as well as importing existing games by searching your computer for their executable (.exe). And Steam has the largest pool of active users while Origin is seriously far behind. And not to mention that Origin is lacking in a selection of games. And both Steam and Origin use a considerable amount of RAM, Origin seems a little greedy in this category. And of course both platforms are heavy supporters of their own games. Valve's flagship line includes Left 4 Dead, Counter-Strike, Team Fortress 2, Garry's Mod, Portal, Half-Life, and more. EA's top games include Titan fall, Battlefield, Crysis, Sim-city, The Sims, and a few others.

The conclusion:
My conclusion would have to be Steam. Despite not supporting in-game streaming to the internet, it beats Origin in all the other categories. It has the largest store and fan base, it uses much less memory when running in the background, and it's the oldest which means it has the most experience. Plus Steam releases lots of updates so there are always new features being released. And that's a winner in our book.

So let us know in the comments, do you agree with our pick? Would you have picked something else? Do you think we left out a worthy competitor? Let us know in the comments. And stay tuned every Tuesday and Thursday for more Tech Wars.

Hey blog readers! If you want to follow our meaningless updates, check out our pages here:
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/U9s2Ld
Twitter: Follow us @allstuffnerdy
Google+: https://www.google.com/+AllstuffnerdyBlogspot
If you have a business you would like us to mention at the beginning of a post, check out our gigs on Fiverr:
Joshua: http://fiverr.com/armmaster17
Brandon: http://fiverr.com/maltzy
Spreadshirt: http://allstuffnerdy.spreadshirt.com
Check out our SpreadShirt shop for our awesome selection of geeky apparel. We offer Mens, Womens, and kid sizes of T-shirts, Long-sleeve shirts, and hoodies in addition to coffee mugs and more. Check out our store here: http://allstuffnerdy.spreadshirt.com

Thursday, June 05, 2014

Tech Wars - Music Streaming Services

Courtesy of w8themes.com
Welcome to Tech Wars! Every Tuesday and Thursday we take two or more tech services/products and put them side-by-side to see which one prevails. Follow us on Twitter (@allstuffnerdy) to get updates when a new Tech War comes out. To see more Tech Wars articles, click the "Tech Wars" link at the top of the page.

We all like streaming music. Music keeps us productive when we are working. But we can be quite opinionated on which one we think is the best, so we stacked up three of the top streaming music services to find out which one comes out on top.

Today we have the following up for comparison:
Pandora Grooveshark Spotify
Created January 2000 2007 2006
Total users 25 million 20 million 40 million
Services Free and Paid Free and Paid Free and Paid
Access with free service Unlimited listening with limited skips and occasional audio and visual ads Unlimited listening with visual ads Limited selection of music with limit of 10 hours of listening a month with audio and visual ads
Features of paid service No ads and unlimited skips No ads and features such as crossfade and access to the desktop app along with offline playback Unlimited ad-free listening with mobile and desktop app access and offline playback
Cost of paid service $4.99/month $9/month $9.99/month
Music selection method Radio Radio and manual Radio and manual(only for Premium)
Song catalog size 800,000+ (2011) 15 million 20 million
Platforms Web and most mobile devices Web, PC, Mac, and Android (other mobile users can use online HTML5 interface) Web, PC, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android, and Windows Phone

All stacked up, let's compare them. Starting at the top we see that both Grooveshark and Spotify are relatively new players in the game. Pandora and Grooveshark hover around the 20 millions mark while Spotify is up there at 40 million. Grooveshark places almost no restrictions on free users. Pandora limits the skipping ability (which also applies to paid accounts, but with more skips allowed). And Spotify has the harshest of all with severe restrictions on free users with only 10 hours of allotted listening time. For both Pandora and Spotify they both lift their restrictions on paid users while Grooveshark adds features for it's premium members. Pandora has the cheapest paid plan with $4.99 a month while the other two sit around the $9 mark. Pandora is the only streaming service on this list to not offer on demand listening while the others make it their main feature. While Pandora seems a little bit behind in song catalog size, Spotify takes the lead with 20 million songs and with Grooveshark just around 5 million behind. And while Pandora supports the majority of devices, Grooveshark supports pretty much all modern devices with it's Flash-based website and HTML5 site for mobile users.

The results:
After looking through the results, the best one would have to be Grooveshark. With almost no restrictions on free users (and no audio ads), combined with universal device support, it has to be AllStuffNerdy's top choice of music streaming client.

So let us know in the comments, do you agree with our pick? Would you have picked something else? Do you think we left out a worthy competitor? Let us know in the comments. And stay tuned every Tuesday and Thursday for more Tech Wars.

Hey blog readers! If you want to follow our meaningless updates, check out our pages here:
Facebook: http://on.fb.me/U9s2Ld
Twitter: Follow us @allstuffnerdy
Google+: https://www.google.com/+AllstuffnerdyBlogspot
If you have a business you would like us to mention at the beginning of a post, check out our gigs on Fiverr:
Joshua: http://fiverr.com/armmaster17
Brandon: http://fiverr.com/maltzy
Spreadshirt: http://allstuffnerdy.spreadshirt.com
Check out our SpreadShirt shop for our awesome selection of geeky apparel. We offer Mens, Womens, and kid sizes of T-shirts, Long-sleeve shirts, and hoodies in addition to coffee mugs and more. Check out our store here: http://allstuffnerdy.spreadshirt.com