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cheers,
Tim
The bigger problem is conversation fragmentation: do you want people to comment on your blog, on Twitter, on Friendfeed, on Tumblr or what?
If Web 2.0 is user generated content, then Web 2.5 is about decluttering and making sense of all the stuff we're generating. Google did it for the web; I'm not sure who will do it for UGC. I'm a fan of Paul Buchheit, but FriendFeed seems to be adding to the problem, not solving it.
That along with the scheduled posting bit, makes it a little different than the other re-blogging things I've seen around (so far)...Charlie uses it on his blog ( www.thisisgoingtobebig.com ) to share his delicious links and his recent last.fm tracks, so that's probably a good place to see it in action.
(I personally use it to wrap up a days worth of Twitter tweets as an email that automatically gets sent to my consulting clients -- so I can use twitter as an up-to-date list of what I'm working on, and fubnub to alert my clients of the details of that list once a day without making them actually follow me on twitter).
Now I know.
Will try it on my blog and let you know how it goes. Thanks!
please feel free to email me directly (info at falicon.com) or search
around on the blog link on the fubnub site to find various ways/places
to contact me...
But the other thing I've learned is auto pulling a feed is very different from reblogging
I much prefer the latter
Its quickly becoming very difficult to manage redundancy in all of one's feeds, especially when trying to create a lifecast for facebook/etc. I have decided to use each service as they are originally intended and present them in aggregate with a focus on the aesthetics on my main .com blog. Once Facebook connect goes live and others continue to promote data portability I really hope this will become a thing of the past.
Toodleloo.
As for reblogging your tumblr posts onto AVC, isn't that what Zemanta is for?
2. tumblog, tumblelog = today's potato, patahto?
3. Now stormy and grey against the old buildings on St Marks Place-- sort of the feeling of Northern England!
This reminds me of a similar syndication/aggregation issue I currently have with Tumblr. I've emailed Tumblr support and Marco directly with this suggestion. Perhaps hearing it from you will get the ball rolling.
I'd like for Tumblr to offer a second RSS feed that contains ONLY a users posts that are not imported from other sources (i.e. direct submissions to Tumblr and reblogs only). I'd use this feed to avoid double posting when syndicating my Tumblr activity to other all-encompassing social aggregators (primarily FriendFeed and Facebook), where I already import the feeds I throw at Tumblr (my blog, twitter, and select flickr photos).
Due to this double posting issue, I DO NOT syndicate my Tumblr activity anywhere, which greatly reduced the utility of Tumblr and, likewise, my inclination to use Tumblr.
This is a shame. Tumblr is a great service and I really appreciate the ease with which it allows you to share a variety of content. If Tumblr gave me a "Tumblr Only" version of my RSS feed for syndication purposes, my use of the service would skyrocket.
Basically everything but text
If its text, I generally blog it here
I use tumblr for the other forms of media
Fred