The latest posts tagged with tumblr
Tuesday — January 17, 2012
Announcing the newest Tumblr blog today: MY KEYRING
I only have the one photo so far. But submit your own pics or tag your tumblr post with “my keyring” and I’ll snag it.
Thx!
This post was reblogged from My Keyring.
Why does the Tumblr Dashboard keep putting up the red flag with a number of unread posts that has no basis in reality?
Sometimes it’ll show “4”; I click; only one new post appears. Or none. Or four.
WTH?
Tumblr, you’ve been flaky since Friday. My Dashboard was wonky then and now you’re dropping the href portion of anchor tags when I try to hyperlink stuff via the normal wysiwyg interface.
Man, fix this shiznit.
New CHUNKY theme!
Observation: the three-across approach is one I usually avoid. In other themes I’ve tried, the layout is somewhat rigid and you end up with a lot of space when an item in one column is really tall but the others on the same row are relatively short.
Chunky, on the other hand, appears to dynamically re-layout everything intelligently to eliminate that whitespace. Pretty frickin’ cool.
Is it weird that I seem to “like” nearly the same number of other people’s posts as I make of my own?
It’s not intentional. It just works out that way. Crazy that it’s within 0.01% margin of error.
How’s yours?
Forget formspring. →
Ask me anything via Tumblr directly.
Stupid photobooth tricks.
Why does the Tumblr Dashboard scroll so slowly in Firefox?
My Tumblr page scrolls just fine. And the Dashboard just scoots along lickety-split in WebKit browsers and even (gasp!) in IE7.
So, what’s the deal? I gotta believe FF is the #1 browser used by Tumblr content creators. Why the slow scroll, yo?
Holy frijoles!
I just saw Tumblr’s Twitter page from the Dashboard.
It loads your Twitter feed… which you might expect. And wonder, “why would they bother?” I mean, the Tumblr color scheme is nice and all, but what’s the point?
Well, here’s the point: Tumblr just completely kicked Twitter’s ass with how they show @replies. The person’s reply to you is shown in context of what you wrote previously.
Ever get an @reply and wonder what the person was talking about? Then it turns out, they replied to something you said twenty tweets and three days ago. And you normally would hafta scroll back through your tweet history to try and figure it out.
Tumblr just blew that craptastic workflow right out the water.
Just remember, when twittering, Tumblr > Twitter.



