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Blogger, on the other hand, allows you to edit the whole code of a theme. You could write a custom theme if you wanted to (and I think there are a bunch out there).
Typepad.com, as a comparison, only offers CSS editing unless you pay for the most expensive account.
So from a web designer point of view, Blogger isn't that bad of a choice for a free blogging system. I'd go with a self hosted Wordpress blog though.
Keep in mind when you're trying out that cool new theme you downloaded, it could be running arbitrary commands or phoning home with your passwords. I assume this is why the free Wordpress.com doesn't let you edit the templates.
Looking at my Dashboard, Blogger offers per-post and site-wide comment feeds for my site. The trick is that each user may chose to activate them or not. And some templates don't include links to those feeds by default.
Sidebar editing is now pretty easy, with decent pre-built items.
Lots fewer themes for Blogger than WordPress. A few outside designers are creating. Full theme editing is available. I'm a big fan of the Stretch Denim theme, and I use it a bunch.
Just more info from my personal experience.
I'm not that big on changing themes very often so while you're right about the limited choices, it's not a problem for me.
And as far as the sidebar stuff, there is a drag and drop interface for page layout on Blogger now. The number of available widgets is limited compared to what I see people doing with their Wordpress blogs, but it's a lot more rare to have to copy/paste things directly into my template nowadays. It's basically a checkbox and then an ajax-y drag and drop interface for laying out stuff on the page.
I see your point, however, and let me tell you that as a developer of an upcoming multimedia blogging platform - it's a lot of work - be glad for what you DO have.
I don't know about the subscription for comments to a single post, although in the setting it is set to yes.
@mark... i agree about the trackback
and while it is simple in certain respects; given the features of other platforms... it does miss the mark
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