Tag Archive for 'tumblr'

Secondbrain.com - For when one just isn’t enough

In my everlasting quest to find the ultimate lifestreaming service to combine the data from all the shit I use online, I today stumbled upon SecondBrain.com (”stumble upon” meaning “read on TechCrunch“, really).

Unlike other services like FriendFeed, Tumblr, Profilactic, and a myriad of others, SecondBrain actually doesn’t just want your lifestream, it wants your stuff. Yes, that’s right. Plugging into the APIs of the services you want them to track, they’ll import everything into your SecondBrain account.

Now there are good and bad sides to that. The good one? It’s really a library of sorts, aggregating and making searchable the content you have created online. This is clearly a lot better than what most other lifestreaming services do, especially since SecondBrain imports all of the metadata associated with your content too. Thus, you get a real tagcloud of the stuff you do online.

Now, here’s what’s bad: Needing the service to access an API makes it a lot less flexible. Right now they’re supporting 11 services, which is good for a start, but simply not enough when you want to give people the ability to aggregate all their user generated content. Adding RSS feeds is not possible, so you are stuck with the services SecondBrain offers.

SecondBrain also lets you import your documents from Zoho and GoogleDocs, switching the status of the documents to private automatically. This is what I expected, but I also expected them to not show people that I’m actually synching my GoogleDocs (which SecondBrain does, as it displays publicly what services the lifestream’s owner is using).

Apart from that library focus, SecondBrain gives users the option to add content to SecondBrain directly or to comment on another user’s items. Of course you can decide to follow other users’ lifestreams as well.

Overall SecondBrain is a good service, even though the lacking support for RSS feeds is making it a lot less flexible than many of its competitors.

Tumblr - a bit more than yet another vowel missing webservice

TumblrIf you are like me, you quite probably won’t read this because your attention span is similar to that of a freshly hatched fruit fly.

That’s why the good people of Tumblr have created their service: It caters to the ones with no attention span whatsoever and to those who just can’t be bothered to turn every idea, link, photo, video, conversation or quote into a full-fledged blog posting anymore.

Now, if I haven’t lost you yet, you are indeed not like me, but I’ll still show you what Tumblr does. Basically, it’s a blog hosting service (complete with your own subdomain or even the option of using your own domain name), but the whole setup adheres to the principle of the tumblelog. From the Wikipedia article:

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.

So, here’s the good news: Using Tumblr, you are relieved of the burden of adding witty commentary to everything you post. The bad news? It can get really messy, and people just may get bored by no commentary at all.

The good people at Tumblr probably anticipated that, that’s why in addition to simple text and link postings, they added a template for conversations. And this, my friends, really can add a lot of personality to your tumblelog. Just take a look at the conversation I posted yesterday on my very own log at Tumblr:

Tumblelog conversation

As you can see, the possibilities to wow your audience are endless. Here’s what the backend looks like:

Tumblebackend

Obviously very clean, very simple.

Overall, a tumblelog seems to be a very good idea. When usually I’d just let certain links, photos, quotes and whatnot slip, simply because I couldn’t be bothered to actually comment on them, Tumblr now provides me and everybody else with a template that’s perfect for the lazy blogger. And the way it’s implemented, it may well become as fun as blogging once was.




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