More on the Wordpress vs. Typepad comparison.
Comparing Wordpress with Typepad seems to have ruffled a few feathers. Some say it’s not a fair comparison. Some say it is. Some call it apples & oranges. Most suggested comparing Movable Type with Wordpress.
I still stand by the original post, however, I agree that the huge diversity in features between all blogging tools makes it very difficult to compare any of them, like for like – especially from the point of view of someone trying to establish a network.
True, as lots of people have pointed out, a better comparison would have been Movable Type vs. Wordpress. But hang on, an appropriate licence for MT would have cost me $999. Wordpress – free. Also, MT inherently allows multiple blogs. Wordpress currently requires a fresh install for each blog. So the comparison already becomes tenuous.
What about Blogger vs Typepad? Similar products, but again, one’s paid, the other’s free. One’s hosted, the other’s either hosted (via blogspot) or requires hosting. Plus, there’s a huge difference in feature sets. Maybe Wordpress.com vs Typepad, or even vs Blogger would be a more acceptable comparison? Not in my case – I was looking for a solution to building a network and I knew from experience that neither Wordpress.com or Blogger were appropriate for the job in hand.
That’s *not* to say that they *aren’t* fantastic tools for other purposes, though.
There are pros and cons and benefits and payoffs whichever blogging software you want to compare – blog networks are a relativey new idea, and a lot of the software out there just isn’t geared up to making that easy – or even possible in some cases.
My post was simply an account of my experiences in setting up a network using just two of the tools. And hopefully, there are a couple of useful points in there which might just help anyone else starting a network to choose the right software.
Contributor: Barry Bell
I'm a freelance writer and designer with over 10 years’ experience of creating award-winning recruitment and consumer marketing communications, together with a wide range of other creative marketing colateral. ... more »
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Contributor website: http://barrybell.com

I, too, am busy comparing WordPress and other platforms – admittedly – particularly Movable type :-)
So far, I have to agree with you. Wordpress wins on:-
Cost
Configurability
support
spam protection
Ease of use? Stay tuned.