Showing posts with label Mail2Post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mail2Post. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2011

mail2Post: Using email to update your blog

Blogger's mail2Post tool lets authors make blog-posts, without using the Blogger software.   All you need to do is set it up, and write posts using your regular email tools.

Mail2Post and Blogger. 

The mail2Post feature, sometimes known as Post-to-profile, is a way of putting content on your blog without using the full Blogger software for writing the post.

It's not quite as good as using Blogger itself - there are a few features missing - but it is good enough in many situations.



How to set up mail2Post

Log in to Blogger with the Google account that you want to have mail2Post rights to your blog:  this account needs to already be set up as an author for the the blog.

Go to
  • The Settings tab - if you are logged on with an author account, or
  • The Settings > Mobile & Email tab if you are using an administrator account  
    (The tab is called Settings > Email & Mobile in the old Blogger interface.)

Beside Posting using email (or Email Posting Address in the old Blogger interface), there is a place where you can enter some "secretWords", to make up an email address that you can use to post to your blog.

Enter some suitable words:  make sure it's not too easy to guess (your surname would not be a good choice!), so that spammers cannot get into it:


Choose either to publish emailed updates as soon as they arrive, or to save email as drafts so that you,  or another administrator, can review them before posting.

Note down the full email address, ie   NAME.your-secret-words@blogger.com   (you will need this later - and unfortunately because of the way it's displayed, it is not easy to copy-and-paste the value).

Press Save (old interface) or Save Settings (new interface).


Using the mail2Post address:

Once mail2Post is set up, anyone who sends an email message to the email address you copied can post to your blog, with what ever restrictions you set.

You might put message on your blog saying
 "send contributions to YOURNAME.YOURSECRETWORDS@blogger.com"
But be aware that this could generate a lot of spam.   And in the worse case, the spam could get your blog deleted for breaking Blogger's terms and conditions.

Alternatively, you might just tell the address to selected people - or perhaps even just use it yourself.


How is a Post constructed from an email message:

When a message is sent to your mail2Post address:
  • The subject-line of your email message becomes the Post-title
  • The body of the email message becomes the body of the post
  • I think:  If you automatically publish emailed posts, then the post date-and-time is the moment at which Blogger's servers received the incoming email message - expressed in Blogger's default time zone (PST OR PDT, I think).
  • No labels are applied to the post
  • The post-author is the profile name of the blog-author who set up the mail2Post address.

Pictures and Videos
People have reported various results when they include images and videos inside messages sent via mail2Post.   Personally, I have tested:
  • An attached picture - posted ok, the image is show before all the text from the body of the email message
  • An attached video file (4meg) - posted ok with the video appearing to be above the text from the email message
  • An in-line photo - worked perfectly, the picture is placed in the post in the same position (relative to the text) that it was in the original email.

I suspect that the results  depend on they type of picture, the email client you are using, and the message format settings.   My testing was with Mozilla Thunderbird, which has a particular way of thinking about "attachments", slightly different from other email systems that I have used (eg Microsoft Outlook).

Probably the only way to discover how photos are handled when you use your email to send them is to set up a test-blog and experiment with different options.


What your readers see:

People who read your blog in a web-browser see mail2Post entries just like any other posts.   If your blog displays the poster's name, then mail2Post entries have the name of the blog-author who set up the mail2Post address.

As mentioned before, the positioning of pictures and videos may not always be as good:  attached pictures, in particular, may be shown as the very stop of the post.

Apart from that, there is nothing to show visitors that the post was created using email - in either the post or in the blog's RSS feed.



Related Articles:



Giving someone write access (ie author permissions) to your blog

Setting up a blog administrator

Understanding Google accounts

Setting up a test-blog to try things out in private

RSS, and why it matters for your blog
Read more > mail2Post: Using email to update your blog

Friday, January 22, 2010

Email Posting - knowing who posted what

Blogger's mail2Post tool lets you - and others - post to your blog from using email.   But it shows the post-author as the person who set up the mail2Post address that was used, and doesn't show the email address that the post was from.  Combining mail2Post with email forwarding tells you the email address, and gives some other tracking and post-management options.

Mail2Post and Blogger. 

The mail2Post feature (sometimes known as Post-to-profile or M2P) is one way that you can lets other people write to your blog - or that you can post yourself without using the full Blogger tool.

It's easy to set up, and works well enough, although there are some limitations (no labels, pictures may not be handled well).

But if you want other people to write for your blog using mail-to-post, one problem is that all posts that are send to your blog via mail2Post are shown as having the same author,  ie the profile name in the Blogger profile of the Google Account that set up the mail2Post feature.   So you have no way of knowing who sent in which posts.

Email fowarding is a way around this, and gives you a tool for fixing other problems (eg pictures not showing up in emailed posts) too.


How to set up mail2Post with a forwarding address, using Gmail:

Note:   These instructions use Gmail to make the forwarding email address.   You need to log in to and out from your Google account several times - it may be better to use a separate browser, or even to use a different email system that supports forwarding (e yahoo mail, hotmail, your ISP) to make the forwarding address.  


1  Firstly, set up mail2Post for your blog - and remember the secretWords address that you set up.

2  Turn off your blog's RSS feed.  
(This is so that you don't accidentally tell the world about SecretWords address when you approving the forwarding.)

3  Set up a new gMail account, just for this purpose.    
I'll call this the mail2Post-forwarding-address in the rest of this article.  Make sure that you remember the password for this account.

4  Request mail forwarding in this account, by
Choose Settings from Options gear-wheel (NB this is based on the "new look" gmail - see Gmail help if you need to find the equivalent option in the older gmail interface).


Choose the Forwarding and POP/IMAP tab


Click Add a Forwarding Address


Enter your secretWords address in the window, and press Next



Click Ok on the message telling you that a confirmation code has been sent.


5  Go back to Blogger:  in your blog, there should be a new post which contains the message with the verification code.   View this post.




(The formatting of this message may seem a little strange - it's written to be handled as an email, not a blog post - but the approach works.)


6  Click the verify link that is shown in this post.   (fyi, your blog is the ONLY way you can access your secretWords "email address" -  there is no way that you can send email messages from it).

7   Test that forwarding is working correctly, by using your personal email  to send a test message to your new mail2Post-forwarding-address.

8  Check that  the test message from your email appears in your blog as post, either draft or published depending on what settings you used.   If it's not there, go back and double-check the mail forwarding options.

9  Once forwarding is working correctly:
  • Delete the test-postings and the forwarding-validation email from your blog.
  • Turn the RSS feed on again.

Result:
You, and anyone else you tell the address to, can now use the  mail2Post-forwarding-address to make posts to your blog, according to the options you selected when you  set up mail2Post.


What your readers see

Your readers, even ones who use RSS-readers or follow-by-email, will see posts in the normal way, authored by the author associated with the mail2Post address.   To them, everything will look the same.



What you can see, and do:

Your blog will look the same to you - both when you're viewing it and in the dashboard screens and postings list.

But you can also log into email using your  mail2Post-forwarding-address - and here you can see all the email messages that were forwarded to your secretWords address.  This lets you see who they came from.     It also gives you some more options.

Pictures and videos:
If attached pictures that haven't made it through mail2Post correctly, you can save them to your computer and then put them into the post in the usual way.

Notifications:
As well as forwarding incoming posts to your secretWords address, you can add extra rules to notify other people (eg blog-administrators or authors) of new posts.

Advanced filtering:
Maybe there are some posts that you would like to be automatically posted, while others should stay as draft.   You cannot quite achieve this - but you may be able to use gMail's filtering rules to send some posts to your blog and some to you.

Spam and hackers:
Any email address, including your secretWords address and you mail2Post-forwarding-address, may get some spam.   Gmail's filtering tools will remove most of this (which is an advantage of using just your secretWords address, which AFAIK has no spam filtering).    However:

  • If hackers guess your secretWords address - you need to change your secretWords address and then change the auto-forwarding rule in your  mail2Post-forwarding-address.
  • If hackers guess your  mail2Post-forwarding-address, you can either add extra filters yourself to deal with them, or just delete it and set up a different  mail2Post-forwarding-address and only tell it to appropriate people.


And more?
I have a hunch that this approach will let you do other things to - what can you think of?


Related Articles:



 Setting up mail2Post for your blog

Turning your blog's RSS feed on or off

Giving someone write access (ie author permissions) to your blog

What is RSS and why it matters for your blog

Putting a picture into a post

Putting posts into pages on your blog - using Labels
Read more > Email Posting - knowing who posted what
 
 
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