Trying out Disqus once again
Almost exactly a year ago I tried out the Disqus commenting system with great success. Since then, WordPress has gained built-in support for nested comments and other cool features available in Disqus at the time. That was the incentive I needed to stop using Disqus and revert back to WordPress a while ago.
Since then, Disqus has been greatly improved and is much faster. The almost 200 comments on my mail server guide loads quickly enough, and the new design is quite clean and attractive. Other cool features such as the Twitter, Facebook and OpenID integration makes it clear that Disqus mean business, and makes it easier and more accessible to comment. So I decided to enable Disqus again and see how it does this time.
The only downside I found so far is the incomplete support for syncing comments from Disqus back to WordPress. While the syncing itself works flawlessly, there is this problem with replies – all comments are just posted sequentially and are not indented like they appear in Disqus, or if I were to use the standard WordPress comment system.
That said, I am looking forward to try bringing a bit of life back to this site.


Disqus treats an email reply to an comment thread as as additional comment. it is a under active development.I think Disqus is greater than Intense Debate.
Disqus integrates with other social networks and services. Readers can login to leave a comment via Facebook, Twitter, OpenID, or Yahoo.
Disqus has always been my favorite commenting system. The speed of it always amazes me.Disqus is under active development.it is a listen to user feedback.