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Why I migrated 2 of my domains to Medium.com

Why I migrated 2 of my domains to Medium.com 1

I just migrated two of my personal domains: AllanTepper.com and AllanTépper.soy from self-hosted WordPress installations to Medium.com. (My other domains remain with WordPress or Sparkle.) This article explains why I migrated these two particular domains (the major benefits for those two cases, not for the others); to alleviate the the doubts and objections that many people have about this idea, and to share some details about the migration process.

In this article

A short comparison with other platforms

Every website platform has its unique advantages and disadvantages. Here is a brief summary of a few:

Advantages of bringing your domain (or subdomain) to Medium.com for blogging

Here are some advantages I like about having my sites AllanTepper.com (a standard domain) and AllanTépper.soy (an IDN, or International Domain Name, with an accent mark) on Medium.com, rather than on a WordPress (self-hosted) as I did before:

Advantages of eliminating the old-fashioned www prefix.

Here are some branding advantages of removing the old-fashioned www prefix, which is really an unnecessary subdomain (while retaining compatibility for those people who still enter www by habit, or have an old permalink somewhere):

The above mentioned advantages are true with any language (including English). There is also one additional advantage for Castilian-speakers, since the letter W in that language is even more problematic than the letter Z in English. Most people from the United States know and accept that the letter Z has a different pronounceable name outside of the US (“Zed” instead of “Zee”). However, in the Castilian language (commonly but imprecisely called “Spanish”), there are about 5 different names for the letter W, and many people are oblivious to the fact that the letter has other acceptable names. That becomes both distracting and causes conscious —or unconscious— disdain for the person speaking.

Approximately in 2014 (when I added SSL for HTTPS to most of my websites after the Google decree), I removed the www prefix.

Relief to many people’s concerns about “not being on your own turf” & integration with the rest of your website

Many people are concerned about what might happen if (in the future) Medium.com ever closed its doors, or changed its policy very negatively. If you do the following two steps, having your own domain on your own turf is essentially the same as having it with WordPress on any other contracted server, which could just as easily close its doors in the future.

  1. Have your domain on an independent registrar. (In fact, at least for now, Medium.com doesn’t sell domains anyway.) So you own your domain independently, regardless of what may happen to Medium.com in the future.
  2. Write your content offline with a writing tool that can publish directly to either Medium.com or to a WordPress site. I use one called Ulysses for Mac. There are probably others for Windows or even for the web.

I am very optimistic about Medium.com’s future, but I know that there is a way out if that ever changed, since I could re-point my domains anywhere and republish all of my articles by pressing a button. This doesn’t even depend upon Medium.com’s export feature, which may or may not be better. I am not concerned, since I have both options available, and I hope I’ll never have to use either of them.

The other concern is: how to handle other elements of a website. Since both are both blog-centric, I sent the “naked” or “apex” domains AllanTepper.com and AllanTépper.soy to Medium.com, and separately created the subdomains contact.AllanTepper.com and payments.AllanTepper.com. Both can be linked from the main sites at Medium.com, and vice versa. If your website is not blog-centric, you can do the opposite, and create the subdomain blog.YourDomain.com to Medium.com. For these two sites, I also wanted to eliminate the time investment in WordPress maintenance, although I still continue to do that for other sites like my radio show CapicúaFM and others.

Medium.com’s partial support for non-English websites

Fortunately, Medium.com now works 100% with IDN domains, i.e. those with accent marks, diacritical marks or other alphabets. However, if you see what appear to be “garbage characters”, you may be interested in reading the following subsection:

IDN domains, and some browsers’ attempt to prevent phishing

If instead of seeing allantépper.soy in your browser’s URL bar, you see the ugly xn--allantpper-g7a.soy, it’s because your browser (or version of your browser) is trying to prevent phishing attempts and isn’t currently set to include the Castilian language (sadly called “Spanish” or “español” in the majority of browsers). Some older browsers were designed to show IDNs in Punycode when the domain’s language isn’t currently included in your browser settings. This was done to avoid phishing attempts via what Wikipedia calls a homograph IDN attack(which is not to be confused with a Big Mac Attack from the 1970s era). For example, if a malicious individual purchased a domain like BankofAmerica.com using the Greek o instead of the standard one, to the naked eye, you could innocently believe that you reached the proper BankofAmerica.com website. Fortunately, I have observed that most newer browsers (with the notable exception of Microsoft Edge) now deal with this potential problem (at least with my IDN domains) via other means and fortunately no longer display IDNs in Punycode, even if the internaut hasn’t previously added Castilian to the list. Microsoft Edge now gives you an suggestion to add another language to the browser’s allowable list.

However, Medium.com fortunately still doesn’t allow translation/localization of several strings, including:

Fortunately, the last five strings mentioned appear only in the footer of the page by default. Medium.com has told me that the company will add localization capabilities in the future. I hope it happens sooner rather than later.

Some observations regarding the migration from WordPress (self hosted) blog to Medium.com

I am not going to attempt to cover all of the steps (as many other writers have). The reason for not covering all of the steps is because many have changed recently, and may change again. The most important thing is that it is quite simple to export all of your Posts from WordPress into an XML file and then import them into a new Publication you have created at Medium.com. It must be a Publication, not just your user name at Medium.com. As of publication time of this article, no payment is required to create a Publication at Medium.com. As long as you do this part before changing the pointing of your domain, all permalinks continue to work, and all images are also included and re-hosted by Medium.com, with the notable exception of WordPress’s Featured Images in Posts. Those are currently excluded. As a result, what I did was to re-add the Featured Images of the past five Posts manually, after importing the XML file at Medium.com, and before publishing them all via a single click.

Another important point is that in all of the articles I read on the topic, Medium.com was originally charging nothing to accept the domain. That has now changed: Medium.com now charges a one-time fee of US$75 per domain, which includes their internal adjustments and the SSL certificate. On the one hand, it hurt me to have to pay US$75 x 2 when others before me did not. However, on the other hand, the fact that Medium.com is now charging makes me realize that its financial future is probably much safer from here forward.

Upcoming articles, reviews, radio shows, books and seminars/webinars

Stand by for upcoming articles, reviews, and books. Sign up to my free mailing list by clicking here. Most my current books are at books.AllanTepper.com, and my personal website is AllanTepper.com.

Si deseas suscribirte a mi lista en castellano, visita aquí. Si prefieres, puedes suscribirte a ambas listas (castellano e inglés).

Follow @AllanLTepper on Twitter.

https://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/tecnotur.us/capicuafm/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/CFM_000021.mp3

Listen to his CapicúaFM show at CapicúaFM.com in iTunes or Stitcher.

FTC disclosure

As of publication date of this article, there is no commercial relationship between Allan Tépper or TecnoTur LLC and Medium.com, other than the fact that Allan Tépper/TecnoTur LLC paid a total of US$150 to have both domains there. No manufacturer is specifically paying Allan Tépper or TecnoTur LLC to write this article or the mentioned books. Some of the other manufacturers listed above have contracted Tépper and/or TecnoTur LLC to carry out consulting and/or translations/localizations/transcreations. Many of the manufacturers listed above have sent Allan Tépper review units. So far, none of the manufacturers listed above is/are sponsors of the TecnoTur programs, although they are welcome to do so, and some are, may be (or may have been) sponsors of ProVideo Coalition magazine. Some links to third parties listed in this article and/or on this web page may indirectly benefit TecnoTur LLC via affiliate programs. Allan Tépper’s opinions are his own.

Copyright and use of this article

The articles contained in the TecnoTur channel in ProVideo Coalition magazine are copyright Allan Tépper/TecnoTur LLC, except where otherwise attributed. Unauthorized use is prohibited without prior approval, except for short quotes which link back to this page, which are encouraged!

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