Diesel Civil Trust

Why We Tumbl

hamandheroin:

The other day, we were browsing around, as dinosaurs do, and remembered we’d been meaning to respond to this post, which asked the very sensible question: Just what the hell do you think you’re doing with that Tumblr, Newsweek?

The problem with the magazine industry is that they all too often latch on to new technology (Let’s make an iPhone app!  Let’s build a Facebook fan page!  Let’s create print ads with RFID scan technology!  Let’s start a Tumblr blog!) without understanding the REASON behind that beautiful technology.  It’s not a strategy; it’s a last gasp tactic.

Though we’re (and, as a note: though I tend to use the royal “we” when posting for Newsweek, the opinions expressed here are mine alone; I, Mark Coatney, take responsibility for all this, so please, don’t send any outraged letters to Jon Meacham) tempted to dismiss this with our usual devastating wit, it is a good criticism, and one for which, honestly, we don’t fully have a full answer (Believe us, we know all about dumb technology being put to even dumber uses; we keep a CueCat around the office as a cautionary tail (to be fair, we thought that particular feline was a dumbass idea even when the Dallas Morning News was hyping it as the thing that was going to save journalism)).

Ahem. So. Tumblr. Though I see some glimmers of an interesting future for magazine journalism (and I believe this format is adapted especially well to magazine journalism, since it encourages a deeper engagement and dialogue in the same way that Twitter, all fast-twitch muscle, works best with quick hits and breaking news), there’s no real blueprint. There are, though, some glimmers, and most of them have to do with new ways to connect to readers. Most publishers tend to think of the things their audience has to say as, at best, graffiti that they allow to be put on the sides of their nice building. One of the many beauties of Tumblr is that it gives the audience equal footing. There’s a real communication here, not just a lot of people shouting across the comment ghetto to each other, and that’s a rare thing that we should encourage.

Still, I have no idea how to monetize this Tumblog. Maybe this space will have its greatest value as a source of traffic, referring people back to the Newsweek site. Maybe this will be valuable in creating genuine two-way dialogue of like-minded people that are the next generation of our committed, core readers; I think that’s supremely important and I hope this will happen. Maybe this will be super valuable in creating mindshare. Maybe terms like “mindshare” are a load of crap. Who knows? Right now, that’s not as import as experimenting with the form, to see where it takes us.

Why do we Tumbl? In the end, we use Tumblr not because it’s a great way to connect with our readers (though it is that), or because we believe this or something like it is a part of a new way forward for interaction between publishers and audience (though we think that too). We use Tumblr because it’s fun and while, you know, you can’t eat fun, or trade it in for fistfulls of dollars to fund serious journalism, we believe there’s a value in doing things we like simply because we like to do them, and that hopefully our fellow Tumblrs will too. [via.]

That last paragraph sums up the draw to Tumblr quite nicely.

Small UI Updates and a Help Request

If you’ve spent any time on the Diesel Civil Trust site in the last 24 hours, you may have noticed some small user interface updates. I’ve added a Share This button to all permalinks, and finally solved the issue of empty tags appearing in the markup (yawn.)

What I’ve really focused on was the search box. I’ve integrated a Google Custom Search to shore up an abysmal prior solution, and need your help, fellow Tumblrs. If you could swing over to the site and run a few search terms through the new mechanism, I would be greatly appreciative.

I need to make sure the search tracking works, because so far, it has been an epic fail.

Thank you,

Trevor

Tumblarity Going WAY Down

I was at 220-something for a high. Now with regular postings, new followers and reblogs, I am down below 135. Some unscientific reasoning leads me to believe that people with 5-digit tumblarity spend a lot of time on Tumblr, get a lot more traffic than I do and/or have identified a hole in the system as yet unbeknownst to me.

DCT RSS Feed Moving in 5-10 Minutes

Hello everyone,

At long last, the DCT theme 1.0 is coming to a close. I’ve finally got the code written, the jQuery figured out and some new feeds rolled. RSS is now being sourced from Feedburner and can be updated to such:

http://feeds.feedburner.com/dieselciviltrust/iODX

I have a sneaking suspicion a lot of my readership is via RSS, and this will help me deliver that content better. Be on the lookout for periodic style upgrades, including a breaking news module, an interactive world map and anything else that suits my fancy. In the meantime, be sure to contact us with support, criticism and/or dislike. Thank you for reading The Information Paradox and supporting my vision for a better America.

Trevor

Someone Is Listening: Dear Tumblr Part II

Yesterday my frustration with what I feel is an imperfect ( but full of potential ) feature boiled over. And I let the crew at Tumblr have it—in King’s English, but I didn’t pull any punches.

I’m not backing away from those statements—it is necessary to raise your voice once in awhile. The trick is not to dilute your message by doing it too often and to respond equally when something positive happens. Which is why I am crafting this follow–up.

It seems the crew at Tumblr reblogged my Dear Tumblr message yesterday and stored it as a private post. Now this either means I am about to be permanently booted, or they’re really listening. My hope trends to the latter, so thank you Tumblr crew. Your service remains the best one out there for random thoughts and links; I am such a vocal, cranky user because I know this to be fact.

Signed,
Trevor Pierce

Dear Tumblr…

Tumblarity is a lemon, the algorithm is cranked and your counting of the community’s reaction to my updates isn’t even accurate. I’ve seen at least three reblogs and one like that has been noted in the dashboard but not in my tumblog stream, all in the last three days. These events make me wonder how accurate tumblarity could possibly be, and given that most of my traffic is generated from being in the top five ranking under /directory/economics, really piss me off.

Thank you.

Signed,
Trevor Pierce

Apparently, Too Much Activity Bad for Tumblarity

Every time I reblog or post too many stories (the number moves around a lot but seems to be centered around 10,) my tumblarity is cut in half. Half. It comes back sometime later in the day, but seriously, fix the fucking algorithm if you’re going to trumpet this thing as a feature. General community etiquette says you don’t penalize those users who obsessively use your site/app/whatever.

I Quit Tumblarity

possiblydreaming:

hunsonisgroovy:

Dear Tumblr,

I played your game called Tumblarity ever since it was released. I believed you guys had good intentions when you released it so I went with it since you guys haven’t steered me wrong… until now.

My Tumblarity fell over 200+ point when I went to take a shower. Then another 300+ when I went to class. WTF? I want to know how this number is calculated right now. I don’t want a figurative explaination, I want mathematical answers.

So with that said, I quit Tumblarity.

I tried to be civilized and rational. But this? This is utter bullshit. My following has increased 66% this week, I’ve been more actively tumbling, reblogging and liking this week than any prior, and for this, I am downgraded 137 points?
Houston, the system is broken.

I tried to be civilized and rational. But this? This is utter bullshit. My following has increased 66% this week, I’ve been more actively tumbling, reblogging and liking this week than any prior, and for this, I am downgraded 137 points?

Houston, the system is broken.

For anyone who wasn’t sure…

lunaticpill: if you don’t post for two days your tumblarity is halved… ;-)

Fuckyeah(whatever): Not the Only Thing on Tumblr

The past few days I’ve been taking notes and forming a theory of just how “tumblarity” is figured. While I’m sure the exact algorithm is a closely guarded secret (the house blend usually is), I am putting it out there: Fuckyeah(whatever) blogs are not the only thing on Tumblr.

I don’t say this to slight anyone or run down the thousands of tumblrs more highly ranked than myself. I follow a lot of them, at a 5:1 ratio to my own followers. I reblog, comment and like as much or more content than I post myself. And I hope for (ney expect) the same with the things I post.

I will be eager to see if the forthcoming Tumblr Directory really does surface not just the most popular, but also rising, tumblelogs. If this is the case, I stand a fighting chance to surface stories that matter to me. Stories about government corruption, intrusions into our privacy and well-being, healthcare wins and losses and the overwhelming sense that we’d better be looking out for ourselves when it comes to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

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