Farewell Disqus - Commentshttps://stephencoakley.com/2016/11/09/farewell-disqus/comments.atomComments on "Farewell Disqus"2020-06-24T07:10:25Zhttps://stephencoakley.com/2016/11/09/farewell-disqus#comment-a3AbOComment on 2016/11/09/farewell-disqus by Jacob Mischka2016-11-09T22:59:00ZJacob MischkaI saw Isso advertised a couple months ago and it seems nice. Disqus not requiring a backend is a big advantage though, if your site is just statically generated then it's still a better option.
Plus, I think Disqus is in general a better experience when/if it works. I like being actually logged into something vs entering name and email every time.https://stephencoakley.com/2016/11/09/farewell-disqus#comment-LxwkxComment on 2016/11/09/farewell-disqus by Stephen Coakley2016-11-10T00:40:25ZStephen Coakleyhttp://stephencoakley.comI agree, that is a big advantage to Disqus is that it is quick to log in with Facebook, Twitter, or what-have-you. At the same time though, there's a surprisingly large group who prefer to comment more anonymously than Disqus allows.
I think it would be a fair compromise if Isso could "remember" your user info via a cookie, so that you would only need to fill out the parts of your profile you wanted once for each site.https://stephencoakley.com/2016/11/09/farewell-disqus#comment-xwXk3Comment on 2016/11/09/farewell-disqus by Vignesh2020-06-24T07:10:25ZVigneshhttps://vikky.devBut I think isso remembers me, I commented on your first post yesterday and it keeps the data I entered after that. It is pretty nice, I myself hate disqus but have to keep it since my site is Jekyll based SSG. I am thinking of removing comments altogether to get rid of disqus.