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I know that Wordpress is popular among bloggers, and Movable Type as well. But HOW popular? And what other platforms are being used? To find out, I went through the Technorati top 100 blogs and investigated what blog platforms they are using. It turned out to be a highly interesting survey with plenty of surprises along the way.
As a by-product we also found out some interesting things about the more popular blog networks. For example, did you know that Weblogs, Inc. and Gawker Media together have 22 of the top 100 blogs?
When you read this article, you might want to keep in mind that we have chosen to make a distinction between blogging services and self-hosted blog software.
Now let’s get on to the data.

I found that Wordpress is the most-used platform among self-hosted blogs, which perhaps isn’t a huge surprise. It has more than twice as many blogs in the top 100 as Movable Type, the blog platform that came in second place.
An interesting side note is that very few Wordpress blogs in the top 100 have updated to WP 2.7 so far.
Though Wordpress is more popular among the self-hosted blogs than Movable Type, the situation is reversed when it comes to the blogging services based on these blog platforms. Typepad (based on Movable Type) is more popular than Wordpress.com (based on Wordpress). Blogger comes in at third place.
That’s at least if you count the commonly available blogging services. If you also count the AOL-owned Blogsmith that is used by Weblogs, Inc., that ends up having almost as many blogs in the top 100 as Typepad, leaving Wordpress.com and Blogger in a distant third and fourth place.
Traditional media like Entertainment Weekly, CNN and Wired often use blogging services for their blogs, and most seem to have chosen Typepad.
If you combine the hosted and self-hosted versions of Wordpress and Movable Type (i.e. include Wordpress.com and Typepad as well), they dominate, claiming 60 of the top 100 blogs.
Something I noticed while going through the top 100 blog list at Technorati is that two big blog networks have taken a large chunk of the top 100 blogs. In addition to these, Wired has created a small blog empire of its own.
We have sorted the list by blog platform, largest first.
| Blog name | Technorati rank | Platform |
|---|---|---|
| Perez Hilton | 18 | Wordpress |
| Problogger | 46 | Wordpress |
| Chris Brogan | 69 | Wordpress |
| Zen Habits | 77 | Wordpress |
| Copyblogger | 89 | Wordpress |
| Think Progress | 27 | Wordpress |
| VentureBeat | 56 | Wordpress |
| /Film | 80 | Wordpress |
| Global Voices Online | 95 | Wordpress |
| The Caucus Blog – NYTimes | 22 | Wordpress |
| Bits Blog – NYTimes | 51 | Wordpress |
| Freakonomics – NYTimes | 70 | Wordpress |
| Pajamas Media | 45 | Wordpress |
| Just jared | 86 | Wordpress |
| Smitten Kitchen | 97 | Wordpress |
| Hot Air | 48 | Wordpress |
| Neatorama | 59 | Wordpress |
| TechCrunch | 2 | Wordpress |
| Smashing Magazine | 10 | Wordpress |
| Washington Wire – WSJ | 38 | Wordpress |
| Michelle Malkin | 39 | Wordpress |
| Daily Blog Tips | 63 | Wordpress |
| Yanko Design | 81 | Wordpress |
| Mashable | 11 | Wordpress |
| Roy Tanck’s weblog | 20 | Wordpress |
| CrunchGear | 49 | Wordpress |
| Delicious:days | 99 | Wordpress |
| Popwatch | 76 | Typepad |
| Seth’s Blog | 14 | Typepad |
| The Daily Dish | 21 | Typepad |
| Threat Level – Wired Blogs | 24 | Typepad |
| Gadget Lab – Wired Blogs | 26 | Typepad |
| Wired Science – Wired Blogs | 31 | Typepad |
| The Pioneer Woman | 32 | Typepad |
| Listening Post -Wired Blogs | 52 | Typepad |
| Political Radar | 53 | Typepad |
| The Underwire – Wired Blogs | 57 | Typepad |
| Epicenter – Wired Blogs | 60 | Typepad |
| Danger Room – Wired Blogs | 61 | Typepad |
| Geekdad – Wired Blogs | 71 | Typepad |
| How to Change the World | 73 | Typepad |
| Marginal Revolution | 82 | Typepad |
| Game | Life – Wired Blogs | 93 | Typepad |
| Engadget | 4 | Blogsmith |
| TMZ | 23 | Blogsmith |
| Joystiq | 25 | Blogsmith |
| BloggingStocks | 29 | Blogsmith |
| TUAW | 30 | Blogsmith |
| Cinematical | 33 | Blogsmith |
| Gadling | 36 | Blogsmith |
| Download Squad | 37 | Blogsmith |
| TV Squad | 40 | Blogsmith |
| Autoblog | 43 | Blogsmith |
| Slashfood | 47 | Blogsmith |
| Luxist | 85 | Blogsmith |
| Engadget Mobile | 94 | Blogsmith |
| Engadget Japanese | 100 | Blogsmith |
| Power Line Blog | 96 | Movable Type |
| Huffington Post | 1 | Movable Type |
| Talking Points Memo | 35 | Movable Type |
| Gothamist | 66 | Movable Type |
| Beppe Grillo’s Blog | 74 | Movable Type |
| http://kottke.org | 78 | Movable Type |
| Microsiervos | 79 | Movable Type |
| Stereogum | 91 | Movable Type |
| TreeHugger | 28 | Movable Type |
| Pharyngula | 92 | Movable Type |
| ReadWriteWeb | 15 | Movable Type |
| Boing Boing | 5 | Movable Type |
| Gizmodo | 3 | Gawker Media platform |
| Lifehacker | 6 | Gawker Media platform |
| Gawker | 12 | Gawker Media platform |
| Kotaku | 34 | Gawker Media platform |
| Consumerist | 50 | Gawker Media platform |
| Valleywag | 67 | Gawker Media platform |
| Defamer | 87 | Gawker Media platform |
| Deadspin | 88 | Gawker Media platform |
| Apartment Therapy | 65 | Custom |
| Seeking Alpha | 72 | Custom |
| Ars Technica | 9 | Custom |
| The Corner on NRO | 44 | Custom |
| Google Blogoscoped | 58 | Custom |
| MacRumors | 75 | Custom |
| A List Apart | 83 | Custom |
| Ben Smith’s Blog | 41 | Custom |
| GigaOM | 55 | Wordpress.com |
| I Can Has Cheezburger? | 13 | Wordpress.com |
| CNN Political Ticker | 17 | Wordpress.com |
| Scobleizer | 84 | Wordpress.com |
| Swampland – TIME | 90 | Wordpress.com |
| Dooce | 42 | Drupal |
| NewsBusters | 62 | Drupal |
| Crooks and Liars | 64 | Drupal |
| 43 Folders | 98 | Drupal |
| The Official Google Blog | 7 | Blogger |
| PostSecret | 16 | Blogger |
| The Sartorialist | 54 | Blogger |
| Glenn Greenwald – Salon.com | 68 | Bricolage |
| Gigazine | 19 | Expression Engine |
| Daily Kos | 8 | Scoop |
Gathering this data wasn’t entirely trivial. In many cases you can see directly from the HTML source what blog platform or CMS is being used, and in the cases that won’t work there’s always Google, but sometimes I ended up having to email the site owner for information. I hope you found the resulting collection of data interesting.
It’s always nice to get some actual facts and figures, isn’t it?
Now I know for sure what the current situation is for the various blogging platforms, at least among the largest blogs.
I are sure there are plenty of ways to analyze this information that I haven’t thought of. Please feel free to share your thoughts with us in the comments.
And what is your favorite CMS or blog platform? I use Wordpress for TeraTips.
If you have any suggestions and question than feel free to ask me i will response you.
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Hi, readers this is welcome comment to appreciate you to share your thoughts, comments, and ideas about this post, THANKS (mk)