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Spunkieyesterday at 6:19 PM1 replyview on HN

I don't think I could ever go back to SSR like WordPress. My only real concern with SSG is if the build will work, and even when it doesn't it's never an emergency.

Whereas the concerns for something like WordPress is

1. Has our website been hacked and publicly defaced?

2. Has our website been silently hacked and is being used to secretly distributing malware or worse, aka the FBI randomly shows up at your business.

3. Will updating one random plugin nuke your entire live site, resulting in multiple sleepless nights? Will not updating it cause your site to get hacked also resulting in sleepless nights?

4. Or better yet something in your underlying environment changes and nukes your site, usually in the middle of a weekend out with your family, and your hosting provider pinky swears they didn't change anything. So you spend your whole weekend investigating just to find out your provider did change something, usually something stupid too.

5. Considering all the above your off-site backup solution is vital so better keep that maintained and thoroughly tested as well.

6. Plus a thousand other reasons to waste time, worry, and lose sleep.


Replies

Tallainyesterday at 6:22 PM

We're talking about blogging here, not business-critical website infrastructure. If my blog went down I wouldn't lose a sleepless night over it. I'd figure it out later.

If I were choosing a CMS or tech stack for a critical piece of infrastructure my requirements would be different and I might find some other tool.

Also, if all these were so much concern, I doubt so much of the web would run on Wordpress. Yes, you need to keep your install and plugins up to date. But you need to keep your toolchain up to date no matter what you use. Risk of breakage on update is a thing everywhere, not just Wordpress. I'm by no means a Wordpress fan, but it really is not as bad as it's painted.

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