Tumblelogs Vs. Blogs December 5, 2007

Posted by Todd Zeigler in Blogs, CMS, Social Networks, Technology, Web 2.0, Website review

I became aware of the term tumblelog around a year ago and have been running across examples of tumblelogs with greater and greater frequency lately. According to Wikipedia, a tumblelog “is a variation of a blog, that favors short-form, mixed-media posts over the longer editorial posts frequently associated with blogging. Common post formats found on tumblelogs include links, photos, quotes, dialogues, and video. Unlike blogs, this format is frequently used to share the author’s creations, discoveries, or experiences without providing a commentary.” This site has a list of examples.

After circling around the concept for awhile, I set up a test tumblelog for myself using the Tumblr service. Here are my impressions of tumblelogging generally and Tumblr specifically:

Things I Like

(1) The interface is dead simple and slick. As you’ll see from the screenshot below, all you do is click on the content type you want to post and your off.

tumblelog

(2) Being able to categorize your posts by content types makes a lot of sense. In blogging, you are trapped a bit in the title/post format. Tumblelogs recognize that sometimes all you want to do is post a photo or a link that doesn’t need to be categorized or have a title (you can post in a traditional blog format if you want to). I also like how tumblelogs format the different types of posts slightly differently.

(3) Tumblr makes it really easy to simply import your del.icio.us links, Flickr photos, your Facebook status, essentially any RSS feed you want. So you can easily aggregate all your activity in one place and update your site without ever going to the Tumblr administrative tool. You can do this with a regular blog, but this is pretty much Tumblr’s sole focus.

(4) Tumblr features a slick bookmarklet that makes it very simple to post snippets of text/photos/video directly from your browser. See screenshot below.

tumblr_post

(5) I just like the way tumblelogs look and flow.

Things I Don’t Like

(1) There is no way to add comments to your posts, at least in Tumblr.

(2) I think the lack of titles and structure could make tumblelogs confusing to people not familiar with them.

(3) Tumblr is great, but it is currently a hosted service. For people looking for an open source solution a la Wordpress for blogging, there aren’t a lot of great options. Gelato CMS looks interesting, but I’m not sure how mature it is. You can also hack Wordpress to make it function like a tumblelog, but that doesn’t seem ideal. I’d bet this sorts itself out in the next few months, with Gelato CMS becoming more popular and/or people developing more powerful tumblelog plugins for Wordpress.

Bottom Line

I think there is a potentially huge market for tumblelogging among people currently trying to maintain personal blogs. The fact is, blogging requires too much of a time commitment for many of us trying to maintain personal website. I think the emphasis on posting of short bits of information instead of longer content pieces makes tumblelogging a really attractive option for lots of people who have tried and failed at personal blogging.

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Trackbacks/Pings

  1. Vote -1 Vote +1ABC Digital Futures » Blog Archive » The emergence of tumblelogs - December 6th, 2007 at 7:18 pm

  2. Vote -1 Vote +1links for 2007-12-10 « David Black - December 9th, 2007 at 9:23 pm

Comments

  1. Vote -1 Vote +1Jason - December 5th, 2007 at 5:26 pm

    Tumblr strikes me as a lot like what Blogger was back in 2001, just a box for quick thoughts. Sure it has a few more bells and whistles, but it’s not about having the long, drawn out posts and the like. It’s handy, but after playing with it a bit I still like blogging better.

  2. Vote -1 Vote +1Brian Humphrey - December 6th, 2007 at 12:42 am

    Todd,

    We’ve had great fun (can we say that?) with lafd.tumblr.com, which we use as an aggregator for many of our Web2 offerings.

    The RSS availble from that Tumblelog becomes a master feed for several disparate systems. Sort of like Yahoo Pipes without the er, uhm.. pipes! :)

    Thanks for your blog, which is a daily must-read.

    Respectfully Yours in Safety and Service,

    Brian Humphrey
    Firefighter/Specialist
    Public Service Officer
    Los Angeles Fire Department

  3. Vote -1 Vote +1Todd Zeigler - December 6th, 2007 at 3:33 pm

    Jason – I really think tumblelogs for people that are intimidated by having to stair and write something. Its just easier than regular blogging.

    Brian – that is a cool site you have there.

  4. Vote -1 Vote +1Judy Shintani - December 21st, 2007 at 6:41 pm

    Hi, I had a tumblelog for my first try at blogging. I liked it but also wanted to have comments so I switched to wordpress.com. Another cool thing about wordpress is that you can see stats on visitors. I feel more in touch with my readers over at wordpress.

  5. Vote -1 Vote +1Todd Zeigler - December 21st, 2007 at 7:09 pm

    Judy,

    I played around with Tumblr and found you can add comments using a service called Disqus. You can also put Google Analytics code into your template if you want stats.

    Regardless, you are right. This stuff is a LOT easier in Wordpress at this point.

    Thanks for your comment.

    Todd

  6. Vote -1 Vote +1Adrian Cho - January 8th, 2008 at 2:07 am

    I actually use my tumblelog more for blogging than tumblelogging but I simply much prefer the elegance and simplicity of the Tumblr admin system and themes. Integrating comments using Disqus is dead easy and works great and yes you can also add Google Analytics too. I think the Tumblr team is onto a good thing but of course it’s early days yet and it remains to be seen whether they can keep the same elegant approach while adding features.

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The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research, analysis and conversation on web-based communications and its increasingly powerful role in the economy, politics and society. TBR content is created, posted and managed by internet strategists, media/communications analysts, web developers, designers and programmers, all of whom are employees of The Bivings Group.



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