WebProNews

Tag: Blogs

  • How Google Evaluates The Merit Of A Guest Blog Post

    It’s Matt Cutts video time again. This time, he answers the question: “How can I guest blog without it looking like I pay for links?”

    “Let’s talk about, for example, whenever we get a spam report, and we dig into it in the manual webspam team, usually there’s a pretty clear distinction between an occasional guest blog versus someone who is doing large scale pay-for-links kinds of stuff,” he says, “So what are the different criteria on that spectrum? So, you know, if you’re paying for links, it’s more likely that it’s off topic or an irrelevant blog post that doesn’t really match the subject of the blog itself, it’s more likely you’ll see the keyword-rich anchor text, you know, that sort of thing. Whereas a guest blog, it’s more likely to be someone that’s expert, you know. There will usually be something – a paragraph there that talks about who this person is, why you invited them to be on your blog. You know, hopefully the guest blogger isn’t dropping keywords in their anchors nearly as much as you know, these other sorts of methods of generating links.”

    “So it is interesting,” he continues. “In all of these cases, you can see a spectrum of quality. You can have paid links with,you know, buy cheap viagra, all that sort of stuff. You can have article marketing, where somebody doesn’t even have a relationship with the blog, and they just write an article – 500 words or whatever – and they embed their keyword-rich anchor text in their bio or something like that, and then you’ve got guest blogging, which, you know, can be low quality, and frankly, I think there’s been a growth of low quality guest blogging recently. Or it can be higher quality stuff where someone really is an expert, and you really do want their opinion on something that’s especially interesting or relevant to your blog’s audience.”

    These are the kinds of criteria Google looks at when trying to determine if something is spam, Cutts says. He also cautions against spinning content for contribution on a bunch of blogs. That’s not the best way to build links, he says.

    Go here for more past comments from Google related to guest blog posts.

  • Mayim Bialik Opens Up About Divorce Blog

    Mayim Bialik Opens Up About Divorce Blog

    Mayim Bialik, one of the stars of “Big Bang Theory”, has been penning blogs for Kveller–a site devoted to Jewish parenting–for a while now. In the past, her writings have gotten her a lot of attention–some unwanted–because of her belief in “attachment parenting” and lengthy breastfeeding. Recently, she began posting about another controversial subject: her divorce.

    “I wanted to write about some of the more complicated aspects. And specifically, also, there’s certain things [related] to Jewish divorce that people don’t know about,” she said. “There’s something called a ‘Get’. There’s a religious process. You sit in the same room and you watch your divorce deed be written. It’s actually a very interesting thousands year old document that you watch written and you have to be in the same room as your ex.”

    Some readers and fans of the show were perplexed as to why she would want to talk about such a painfully personal topic, but Bialik says she hopes it will help other women in the Jewish faith get through their own difficult time when a relationship comes to an end.

    “To me, it was a very cathartic, very emotionally powerful sense of closure for us,” she said. “It’s very intense. So I wrote for Kveller about some of those aspects in hopes to kind of maybe [be] helpful to other people or other women.”

    The actress has had to explain herself quite a bit over the past year after her blog became so popular and said people would stop her on the street to confront her about her parenting choices, particularly breastfeeding past a certain age.

    “If I’m talking to girlfriends, if I’m talking to random people, and we’re talking about parenting, I tell them what works for me and why. But a lot of people want to ask me things so that they can fight with me,” she said. “And just because I’m a public person, who happened to have breastfed and slept with her kids, that doesn’t mean that I want to fight with you on the street or in the supermarket. So, I think you have to be really careful to understand why people want to know what they want to know.”

  • Tumblr Isn’t Removing Porn, Just Making It a Hell of a Lot Harder to Find

    Imagine someone baked you a cookie and promised you that you could have it whenever you wanted. “You promise not to take it away?” you ask them. “Yes,” they say. “I promise. Even though your dad doesn’t really want you to have cookies, I promise that I’ll leave the cookie in your house for you.”

    Then, let’s imagine that they put it in a box and hid it from you. Sure, you can find it – but it’s really hard to find and almost not worth the effort. At that point, would you say that they have basically taken your cookie away from you?

    With that story in mind, know that Tumblr has just released a new set of guidelines for NSFW and Adult blogs that basically puts your porn in a box and hides it from you.

    “Tumblr welcomes and encourages all forms of expression. However, we have to be sensitive to the millions of readers and bloggers from different locations, cultures, and backgrounds with different points of view concerning mature or adult-oriented content. There are a lot of people in our community who would rather not see this stuff and could even get in trouble if they did,” says Tumblr on their new NSFW and Adult blogs guideline page.

    With that, Tumblr is asking blog owners to help protect those who do not wish to see adult content by tagging their blogs as either NSFW or Adult, if applicable. NSFW means that your blog has some occasional nudity – maybe an artful nude photograph or a breastfeeding photo. Adult means that your blog contains a substantial amount of nudity and adult-oriented content – which means full on porn, I guess.

    Of course, if blog owners don’t do this on their own, they could be flagged an given either a NSFW or Adult tag automatically.

    Now, if your blog is tagged as NSFW, it will no longer appear in tag pages and searches for logged-out users. Your content will also not appear in the streams of users who don’t follow you.

    The big hit here is taken by Adult blogs, however. Adult blogs no longer appear in search engines like Google or in Tumblr search results.

    Tumblr isn’t removing adult content – they’re just making it really hard to find.

    When Yahoo announced its Tumblr acquisition back in May, Tumblr users threw a fit. Part of their concern stemmed from the fact that they believed Yahoo’s influence would lead to Tumblr censoring all of the adult content on the site. And as we know, there’s a hell of a lot of it.

    Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer assuaged some fears when she said that Yahoo is not interested in restricting content on Tumblr. And just this week, Tumblr CEO David Karp echoed that sentiment, saying,

    “Look, we’ve taken a pretty hard line on freedom of speech, supporting our users’ creation – whatever that looks like. It’s just not something that we want to police.”

    Despite that claim, it appears that the porn crackdown is here. In with the ads, and out with the porn.

    Of course, this is a bigger blow to blog creators that frequently feature adult content. The average Tumblr user will be fine – they can find porn and other adult content anywhere. But this decrease in visibility will most likely hurt tons of Tumblr blog owners.

    Tumblr is hiding your cookies. The question is, will users look for another baker?

  • Instagram Finally Lets You Embed Photos (and Videos, of Course)

    Instagram has just announced that they are now allowing photo and video embeds – something that the service has needed for as long as it’s been around. Now, anyone wishing to embed a photo or video in an article for their blog or website will be able to do so with an automatically generated embed code, now available via a new share button beside Instagram content on the web.

    That’s if the photo/video is public, of course. You won’t be able to embed private content. Here’s what the new share button will look like:

    Instagram, always weary of appearing to give away content ownership after that whole privacy policy photo-selling debacle, had this to say:

    “As always, you own your photos and videos, and we want to make sure that’s understood no matter where your content appears. Whether you want to embed your video on your blog or a friend wants to feature your photo on a website, everyone will clearly see that your content belongs to you. Your embedded photo or video appears with your Instagram username, and clicking on the Instagram logo will take people to your page on Instagram.com where they can discover more of your photos and videos.”

    Finally, Instagram allows people to add content to their blogs with ease. No more screencapping. For Instagram, it’s a no-brainer – it spreads their content across the vast reaches of the web.

    While it took Instagram years to allow this, Twitter’s Vine enabled video embeds back in March, just two months after launching.

  • WordPress Just Got A Spike In Imports From Tumblr

    WordPress might have quite a bit to gain by Yahoo’s purchasing of Tumblr for $1.1 billion. As noted, a bunch of Tumblr users are already freaking out about Yahoo buying the massively popular blogging platform (and the promise of new ads coming into the feed likely isn’t doing anything to slow the freak-out down).

    Even before the acquisition was officially announced this morning, on onslaught of users importing Tumblr blogs to WordPress already began. That is, at least, according to WordPress Founder Matt Mullenweg.

    He writes, “Imports have actually spiked on the rumors even though it’s Sunday: normally we import 400-600 posts an hour from Tumblr, last hour it was over 72,000.”

    Despite what would appear to be a mass exodus of users leaving Tumblr for WordPress, Mullenweg appears to think that’s not the case. After he initially wrote the post, he updated it to say, “Some people are reading too much into the import numbers — I don’t think there will be an exodus from Tumblr.”

    He then pointed readers to the comments on this post, where he said, “I don’t think there will be any sort of exodus from Tumblr. For most folks habits overcome internet-outrage. Even if a million people left, that’s just about a week’s worth of signups.”

    Even still, other blogging platforms are likely to get a little bump out of this.

    According to a recent report from Pingdom, WordPress’ share of the world’s top blogs has already been on the rise.

  • Tumblr Porn Not Likely to Be a Problem for Mayer, Yahoo

    The news the Yahoo is acquiring Tumblr for $1.1 billion has brought along its fair share of grumbling from the Tumblr community. Though Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer promised “not to screw it up,” Tumblr users are worried that Yahoo will march in and paint their beloved blogging platform purple – cleaning it up and making it more “family friendly” in the process.

    If you are unfamiliar with Tumblr, know this: there is a lot of porn on Tumblr – artsy nude content, straight up porn, pretty much all colors of the NSFW rainbow. It makes up a significant part of the Tumblr landscape, and without it, Tumblr wouldn’t really be Tumblr. Some Tumblr users are concerned that Yahoo will waltz in and attempt to change all of that. Before the acquisition went official, some analysts worried that Tumblr’s NSFW underbelly would be an issue for the folks at Yahoo who were considering the deal.

    But it wasn’t. Now that the acquisition is official, it’s looking like Yahoo is committed to keeping Tumblr running as is, and that the porn problem, well, isn’t really a problem. During her conference call to discuss the deal, Mayer had this to say when asked about all of the “not-brand-safe” content out there on Tumblr.

    “The width and breadth of content on Tumblr is what’s exciting and has allowed it to reach more users.”

    And when it comes to possible concerns from advertisers? Well, Mayer noted that Yahoo will just have to have good targeting. Mayer said that Yahoo is going to put more ads inside the Tumblr feed, so we know it’s coming. But Yahoo can pick and choose where they throw those ads, and can steer clear of any content that may concern potential clients.

    “We promise not to screw it up. Tumblr is incredibly special and has a great thing going. We will operate Tumblr independently. David Karp will remain CEO. The product roadmap, their team, their wit and irreverence will all remain the same as will their mission to empower creators to make their best work and get it in front of the audience they deserve. Yahoo! will help Tumblr get even better, faster,” said Mayer in her announcement.

    And in his, Tumblr CEO David Karp said that “before touching on how awesome this is, let me try to allay any concerns: We’re not turning purple. Our headquarters isn’t moving. Our team isn’t changing. Our roadmap isn’t changing. And our mission – to empower creators to make their best work and get it in front of the audience they deserve – certainly isn’t changing.”

    That sounds like Yahoo is going to adopt a fairly hands-off approach to the Tumblr, and that’s good news for Tumblr users. Sure, people lie and things change, but as of right now it appears that Yahoo isn’t that concerned about all of those naughty parts on Tumblr. Carry on.

  • WordPress’ Share Of The World’s Top Blogs Increases

    The majority of the world’s top 100 blogs are using WordPress, according to a new report from Pingdom, and the content management system’s share of these blogs is on the rise.

    According to the firm, 52% of these blogs are using WordPress, up from 48% a year ago.

    To come up with the top blogs, Pingdom looked to Technorati, which is famous for its annual State of the Blogosphere report, which has transformed into the “Digital Influence Report“. It’s worth noting that Pingdom was only able to identify the platform in use by 94 out of 100 sites.

    WordPress

    As you can see, the next largest piece of the pie comes from custom systems, followed by Drupal, N/A, Gawker, BlogSmith, Movable Type, TypePad, Blogger, Ceros, Joomla, and Tumblr.

    Considering Tumblr’s rising popularity in recent months, it’s interesting to see it carry such a small percentage here (1 site).

    TypePad has increased from two sites to four sites, while Movable Type decreased from seven to four. Drupal dropped by one site. Google’s Blogger gained one site, reaching three.

    Here’s the list of blogs, and which platform each uses:

    Top 100 blogs and their blog platforms – complete list
    Technorati ranking Site Platform
    1 www.huffingtonpost.com Movable Type
    2 www.tmz.com Ceros
    3 mashable.com Custom
    4 www.techcrunch.com WordPress
    5 www.gothamist.com Movable Type
    6 www.mediaite.com WordPress
    7 www.theverge.com Custom
    8 www.gawker.com Gawker
    9 arstechnica.com WordPress
    10 www.buzzfeed.com Custom
    11 jezebel.com Gawker
    12 www.gizmodo.com Gawker
    13 bits.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    14 www.infowars.com WordPress
    15 laughingsquid.com WordPress
    16 theonion.com Custom
    17 www.theblaze.com WordPress
    18 hotair.com WordPress
    19 www.joystiq.com Blogsmith
    20 www.zerohedge.com Drupal
    21 www.scotusblog.com WordPress
    22 www.engadget.com Blogsmith
    23 googleblog.blogspot.com Blogger
    24 krugman.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    25 www.eurogamer.net N/A
    26 www.deadline.com WordPress
    27 politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com WordPress
    28 www.boingboing.net WordPress
    29 thenextweb.com WordPress
    30 www.deadspin.com Gawker
    31 9to5mac.com WordPress
    32 funnyordie.com N/A
    33 www.towleroad.com TypePad
    34 www.wired.com/wiredscience WordPress
    35 www.neatorama.com Custom
    36 www.neowin.net Custom
    37 www.businessinsider.com Custom
    38 www.macrumors.com WordPress
    39 www.slashgear.com WordPress
    40 thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    41 americanthinker.com Movable Type
    42 www.redstate.com WordPress
    43 bleacherreport.com Custom
    44 mlbtraderumors.com TypePad
    45 www.sbnation.com Custom
    46 artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    47 thisisnthappiness.com Tumblr
    48 marginalrevolution.com WordPress
    49 ycorpblog.com N/A
    50 blog.us.playstation.com WordPress
    51 blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/ WordPress
    52 www.extremetech.com WordPress
    53 www.dailykos.com N/A
    54 townhall.com Custom
    55 www.wired.com/threatlevel WordPress
    56 eurekalert.org Custom
    57 www.tor.com Joomla
    58 americablog.com WordPress
    59 sethgodin.typepad.com TypePad
    60 www.whitehouse.gov/blog Drupal
    61 www.autoblog.com Blogsmith
    62 thebiglead.com WordPress
    63 joemygod.blogspot.com Blogger
    64 www.refinery29.com N/A
    65 flavorwire.com WordPress
    66 www.lifehacker.com Gawker
    67 blog.twitter.com Drupal
    68 rightwingwatch.org Drupal
    69 www.tuaw.com BlogSmith
    70 thisiscolossal.com WordPress
    71 www.dlisted.com Drupal
    72 www.comicbookmovie.com Custom
    73 inquisitr.com WordPress
    74 economix.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    75 www.geekologie.com N/A
    76 www.geekosystem.com WordPress
    77 thelede.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    78 opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com WordPress
    79 directorblue.blogspot.com Blogger
    80 www.bleedingcool.com WordPress
    81 www.bostonherald.com/sports Drupal
    82 www.kottke.org Movable Type
    83 economistsviews.typepad.com TypePad
    84 blogs.the-american-interest.com/wrm/ WordPress
    85 consequenceofsound.net WordPress
    86 www.cinemablend.com Custom
    87 www.wired.com/dangerroom WordPress
    88 wattsupwiththat.com WordPress
    89 www.geek.com WordPress
    90 consumerist.com WordPress
    91 www.popsugar.com Drupal
    92 www.celebitchy.com WordPress
    93 trailblazersblog.dallasnews.com WordPress
    94 www.siliconera.com WordPress
    95 www.nakedcapitalism.com WordPress
    96 www.mediabistro.com/galleycat WordPress
    97 www.ubergizmo.com WordPress
    98 hip2save.com WordPress
    99 animalnewyork.com WordPress
    100 phandroid.com WordPress

  • Tumblr Launches New Mobile Ads

    Users of Tumblr’s iOS and Android apps will begin to see ads in their streams – ones that look and feel like organic blog posts inside the apps.

    The new ad push marks a first for Tumblr – putting sponsored content in the same context as regular posts. First reported by AdAge, users will now see as many as four of the new ads per day. You’ll be able to tell the difference between the ads and the normal posts by a dollar sign that accompanies the sponsored content.

    You may recall that this dollar sign is the same way that Tumblr identified its current ads – the decidedly less-intrusive “Radar” ads that Tumblr debuted in May of last year. These ads appear on the “Spotlight” page, which highlights editor-selected blogs, as well as the Radar, which is seen on the sidebar of Tumblr pages. Back in May, the starting bid for these “Radar” ads was reported to be around $25,000.

    “This mobile advertising opportunity is native to how our consumers experience content on our apps; as a continuous stream,” said Tumblr sale head Lee Brown in a statement.

    Tumblr is launching the new ads with a handful of high-profile partners, including ABC Entertainment and ABC Family, GE, Pepsi, and Warner Bros. You can expect to see heavy promotion from Warner Bros, who will be serving up ads for upcoming films to the Tumblr mobile community.

    This is a mobile-only push, but only for now. Tumblr confirmed to AdAge that these new types of in-stream ads will eventually pop up on the desktop version of Tumblr, but they were unwilling to give a specific date.

    Tumblr recently announced that they had crossed the 100 million blogs milestone. As of now, there are over 48.6 billion posts on the site.

  • Google Finally Announces Google+ Comments For Blogs

    As I reported in October in 2011, and others picked up on about five months later, Google would be launching a Google+-based comment platform for blogs.

    Today, Google made the announcement, but it’s only for Blogger blogs, at least at this point. The feature can be enabled from the Blogger dashboard.

    “Now when you’re browsing your blog’s comment threads, you’ll see activity from direct visitors, and from people talking about your content on Google+,” says Google Principal Engineer Yonatan Zunger . “For example, if there’s a public Google+ discussion about one of your blog entries, those comments and replies will also appear on your Blogger blog. This way you can engage with more of your readers, all in one place.”

    “Your blog readers will now have the option to comment publicly, or privately to their circles on Google+,” adds Zunger. “And when they’re browsing blog comments, they can view all of them, just the top ones, or only those from the people in their circles.”

    Google+ Comments on Blogger

    Everyone will, of course, only see the comments they have permission to see.

    Facebook has had a similar offering for quite some time, and it’s a bit surprising that it’s taken Google this long to offer something, and still only for Blogger.

    You can see the feature in action here.

  • Google Tweaks The Blogger Template HTML Editor

    Google announced that it has made some adjustments to the template HTML editor for Blogger. It now supports line numbering, syntax highlighting, auto-indentation and code folding.

    In a post on the Blogger Buzz blog, Google software engineers Samantha Schaffer and Renee Kwang walk you through the steps for moving the date of a blog post from above the post title to underneath it, as an example.

    “Finally, we’ve added a ‘format template’ button that automatically cleans up the indentation of the template, and made it possible to search for text by pressing ‘Ctrl+F’ once you’ve clicked into the editor,” they write. “To find and replace text occurrences one by one, use ‘Ctrl+Shift+F’ or to find and replace all occurrences at once, use ‘Ctrl+Shift+R’.”

    According to the engineers, this project was conceived as part of Google Australia’s BOLD Diversity Internship Program.

  • Tumblr Tops 100 Million Blogs, Which House 44 Billion+ Posts

    Tumblr has just hit a major milestone in its path to blog network domination. Today, Tumblr officially topped the 100 million blog mark.

    Tumblr currently has 100.1 million individual blogs, which are responsible for 44.6 billion posts.

    The Next Web first noticed that the ticker had crossed the 100 million mark.

    Tumblr, which was founded in 2007, hit 50 million blogs about a year ago. At the beginning of March, Tumblr reported 93 million blogs. That means that Tumblr has added around 7 million blogs in less than a month. That’s some serious growth.

    If you want to get a sense on how post blog posts are rolling in on a daily basis, Tumblr reports that there have been over 80 million post today alone.

    In the last few months, Tumblr has launched a new native iOS app, and has added tablet support for both Android and iOS.

    Tumblr also broke into the top ten sites in the U.S. rankings, although they currently sit at #14 in terms of Quantcast data.

    Tumblr is growing like a weed – even topping Facebook in a recent usage survey of teens. Here’s to another 100 million blogs, guys.

  • AOL’s MapQuest Launches Travel Blogging Feature

    AOL has launched MapQuest Travel Blogs for the web and iOS (via a dedicated app). The feature lets users create blogs of their trips with photos, stories, reviews, etc. According to the company, the Travel Blogs will automatically map out your entire trip.

    “Free travel blogs are the perfect way for you to seamlessly capture all of your memories from your journeys and share your adventures with friends and family,” says MapQuest’s Anke Corbin. “It’s easy to set-up and add photos, stories and more, making it possible for everyone to create their very own travel blog!”

    The offering, of course, includes features to let you share your stuff on social networks or with automatic email updates. The iOS app features offline access.

    Additionally, you can read journals from other people, which might be just as helpful while you’re traveling as keeping your own. There are privacy settings that allow you to share with only who you want to.

    “Travel Blogs is not just a tool to help users document their recent day trip up the coast or two week cross-country excursion,” says AOL’s Brian McMahon. “As part of our library of over 24,000 blogs from Everlater, now part of the MapQuest family, our goal is to help give people valuable and authentic stories that inspire them to set out on their own adventure.”

    No word on a possible Android launch.

  • Quora Launches Blogs, Rich Text Editor

    Last month, Quora CEO Adam D’Angelo announced the company’s new mission, which involves sharing and growing the world’s knowledge. He indicated that Quora would be expanding beyond the simple Q&A the site is known for. It appears that expansion has begun.

    Today, Quora made a pair of announcements, including the launch of new blogs, and that of a rich text editor.

    Like its Q&A, blog posts will be categorized by relevant topics (there are over 300,000 of them). These topics are, of course, followed by users, so these people will have a chance to read your blog posts.

    “This is different than other platforms where your audience is dependent on how many people follow you personally,” says Quora’s Kah Keng Tay. “In addition, because of the way that Quora works (i.e., feed, search, the topic system, other distribution channels), your old posts and answers remain discoverable and re-discoverable as Quora’s audience grows.”

    Quora Blogs

    More on the blogs here.

    The new rich-text editor is for the iPhone as part of a new update the company is launching. More on that here.

    Quora says its active writers average 30,000+ monthly views and 350,000+ estimated annual views. Its most active writers average 90,000+ monthly views and 1+ million estimated annual views.

  • Is Twitter Shutting Down Posterous Spaces?

    A little less than a year ago, Twitter announced that it acquired Posterous, though the companies said that Posterous would remain up and running “without disruption,” some users have now found that they are unable to sign up for new Posterous Spaces accounts.

    TechCrunch reported on the finding after receiving a tip. As we’ve confirmed separately, if you try to sign up for a new account, you’re greeted with the following message:

    Oh noes! Something went wrong.

    There was an error loading the page you requested. Please try again later, or send us an email
    at help@posterous.com.

    According to TechCrunch’s source, this has been going on for over a week. Here’s what Twitter and Posterous said when they announced the acquisition:

    Posterous Spaces will remain up and running without disruption. We’ll give users ample notice if we make any changes to the service. For users who would like to back up their content or move to another service, we’ll share clear instructions for doing so in the coming weeks.

    To our knowledge, no notice has been giving of any changes, and as TechCrunch notes, the Posterous URL-shortening service Post.ly is still up and running.

    We’ve reached out to Twitter for comment, and will update accordingly.

  • Tumblr Apologizes for Huge Outage That Cost Bloggers “Almost 100 Million Views”

    If you operate a Tumblr blog, you’re probably aware that the site experienced a major outage yesterday. After experiencing intermittent errors and slow loading times on a number of pages, Tumblr decided to take down the whole site “in order to resolve the network issue.”

    That resulted in 4 hours of down time and a loss of nearly 100 million views to user blogs, according to the company. They’ve issued an apology this morning for the outage

    Here’s the full Tumblr staff post:

    Our engineering processes seriously failed this afternoon and cost you and your blogs nearly 4 hours of downtime and almost 100 million views.

    Painfully, this isn’t the first time this winter I’ve had to give you similar news.

    When incidents like this happen, our entire engineering team comes online to support the recovery as needed. Immediately after, we begin taking every measure to protect from the uncovered issue in the future.

    We are constantly working to shore up our processes and solidify the stability of this quickly growing network, even more so as we’ve fallen behind the last few weeks.

    Tumblr’s success is supporting your success, and we take this mission very seriously.

    Tumblr was hit with a major outage back in October, too. And earlier this month, the site was plagued by a worm that ended up hijacking thousands of blogs.

    Why issue an apology for a 4-hour outage you might ask? Apart from the fact that Tumblr often does this whenever there is a sustained problem, the site is one of the biggest in the U.S. Late last month they announced that based on Quantcast data, they were currently the 9th biggest site in the country. Globally, Tumblr has a monthly audience of 170 million people.

  • Tumblr Announces Tumblr Analytics From Union Metrics Now Available

    After two months, Tumblr Analytics from Union Metrics is out of beta, and has launched with new features. Tumblr announced the news itself on Twitter, and Union Metrics says it is Tumblr’s preferred analytics provider.

    “We’ve added full ad-hoc date filtering, so you can drill into any date or date range from your Tracker’s history, and access to lists, so you can view (and sort) the full list of posts, contributors, curators and tags in the Tracker UI,” Union Metrics says in a blog post. “These are the first of many features to come that will make it even easier to pinpoint precisely how and where engagement happens on Tumblr for what ever your tracking.”

    “We love Tumblr and we especially love the diversity and creativity that goes into making it the wonderful place that it is,” the company adds. “And we know that not everyone works at a company with the budget for these plans. We’re working on more analytics offerings for everyone, including a version for anyone interested in measuring their personal blogs.”

    The offering provides insights into post and note volume, top contributors and curators, analysis of posts and tags, post engagement details, and trackers for monitoring Tumblr presence.

    The offering comes in Standard, Premium and Max plans. It’s $499 a month for Standard and $999 a month for Premium. You can contact Union Metrics for a quote on Max.

  • Instagram Launches Badges to Promote New Web Profiles

    After seeing signs that it was on the way for a few months, Instagram finally launched web profiles for its growing user base. Accessible by going to Instagram.com/username, the web profiles feature your profile photo, bio, and all of your recent photos. Instagram also gives users the ability to like and comments on photos, as well as follow new users via the web. Instagram used to put of of its eggs in a big mobile basket, but they have been slowly but surely moving toward a bigger web presence.

    Now, in order to promote that snazzy new web profiles, the company is unveiling Instagram Badges.

    “Today, we are very excited to launch Instagram badges, a tool that will help you link to and promote your Instagram web profile. Add them to your personal blog, brand website, or campaign promotions to direct new followers to your Instagram web profile and encourage others to discover and engage with your Instagram content,” says Instagram in a blog post.

    All you have to do is log in and visit the Instagram Badges page. From there, you can select which badge you want to display on your blog. There are currently 5 different options – 4 different sized camera logos and one that reads “view on Instagram.”

    All that’s left to do is copy your code and add it to you site. Now, people can easily find you on Instagram and interact with your content from the web.

  • Google Redesigns Its Blogger Android And iOS Apps

    Google announced the launch of new updates to its Android and iOS apps. These include a new design and the addition of some new features.

    The new apps include landscape support for post composition. This is good news. Who really likes composing a blog post in mobile in portrait?

    They’ve added the ability to share to Google+. Frankly, I’m very surprised this was not already a feature, considering how much Google has been integrating Google+ into its various products, but it is an ongoing process. One step at a time.

    They’ve added the ability to view a scheduled post time, and added international support in over 30 languages. Finally, the iOS app supports the iPad.

    Blogger mobile update

  • Newsweek Goes Strictly Digital After 80 Years

    Newsweek, which has been in publication for nearly 80 years, is adopting an all-digital format. In 2010, the publication merged with online publication The Daily Beast, and now the combined company has decided the print business is no longer needed.

    It won’t be all TheDailyBeast.com. Tablet apps will remain a major part of the strategy, as well as a premium web version of the publication.

    Editor-in-Chief of The Daily Beast and Newsweek, Tina Brown, made the announcement in an article on the site this morning. She writes:

    Newsweek Global, as the all-digital publication will be named, will be a single, worldwide edition targeted for a highly mobile, opinion-leading audience who want to learn about world events in a sophisticated context. Newsweek Global will be supported by paid subscription and will be available through e-readers for both tablet and the Web, with select content available on The Daily Beast.

    Four years ago we launched The Daily Beast. Two years later, we merged our business with the iconic Newsweek magazine—which The Washington Post Company had sold to Dr. Sidney Harman. Since the merger, both The Daily Beast and Newsweek have continued to post and publish distinctive journalism and have demonstrated explosive online growth in the process. The Daily Beast now attracts more than 15 million unique visitors a month, a 70 percent increase in the past year alone—a healthy portion of this traffic generated each week by Newsweek’s strong original journalism.

    Brown admits that the business has been increasingly affected by the “challenging print advertising environment”.

    The transition to all digital will happen early next year. The last print edition in the U.S. will be the December 31 issue. Newsweek will celebrate its 80th anniversary next year.

  • Web-Based Penske Media Buys Century-Old Publication Variety

    The web claims a historic print publication.

    Penske Media Corporation, which owns publication/blog brands like BGR, Deadline, Hollywood Life, HollyBaby, ENTV, MovieLine, TVLine, and OnCars, has now acquired Variety, the entertainment news publication that has been around for over a century.

    Variety was founded in 1905 by Sime Silverman, and now it has been purchased by Penske from Reed Elsevier for an officially undisclosed sum (though the New York Times is reporting $25 million). Reed Elsevier has owned the publication since 1987.

    Variety President Niel Stiles said, “We are enthusiastic that PMC will become the new steward of the great Variety franchise, which Reed Elsevier has built over the past 20 years, and the Silverman family for the 80 years before that. PMC is uniquely positioned to preserve and build the market presence of Variety. Their shared values and complementary assets provide for many new opportunities for the business model and brand.”

    Jay Penske, Chairman and CEO of PMC, said, “Since 1905, Variety has been the world’s premier entertainment news source, and is today one of the most recognized global media brands. We are thrilled to welcome Variety and its exceptional team into the PMC organization. As a company we plan to rapidly build upon Variety’s foundation, while extending this invaluable brand’s presence across web, broadcast, mobile, and international markets.”

    Brooks Barnes at the NYT reports, “There was some trepidation in Variety’s genteel newsroom on Tuesday about how Deadline, known for its aggressive reports, might affect news-gathering; other Variety staff members were glad to be free of Reed, which rarely invested in the newspaper.”

    The Variety business currently includes Daily Variety, Weekly Variety, Conferences & Events, and Variety.com’s archives, which include film and TV information dating back to 1914.

    Variety.com gets about 320,000 unique monthly visitors according to comScore data, compared to Deadline’s 2.4 million. Variety.com, however, has a paywall. It will be interesting to see if this is lifted under Penske.

  • Twitter Launches New Embeddable Timelines

    Twitter Launches New Embeddable Timelines

    Twitter launched embeddable tweets (though we’re partial to our own SocialDitto) late last year, but now they’re taking things a step further. The company is launching a new way to embed interactive timelines of tweets on any website.

    “Whether it’s an author’s Tweets alongside their blog, a hashtag about an event like #DNC2012, or a list of competitors at the US Open, Tweets add a live, real-time dimension to articles, news reports, and the web at large,” says product manager Brian Ellin in a blog post. “These new embeddable timelines enable publishers, writers, developers, and any Twitter user to drop a rich, interactive piece of Twitter into their websites.”

    Just as with embeddable tweets, users can interact with the embedded timelines just like they would be able to do on Twitter.com.

    Embeddable Twitter Timeline

    “Expand Tweets to see photos, media, and more,” says Ellin. “Start a conversation from the Tweet box, follow users that you discover, and reply to, retweet, or favorite Tweets directly from the page.”

    To add a timeline to your site, simply add a line of HTML to deliver ANY account’s tweets, favorites, lists, search queries or #hashtags.

    “These new tools are built specifically for the web: they load fast, scale with your traffic as your audience grows, update in real-time, and work great in modern, legacy, and mobile browsers,” says Twitter’s Sylvain Carle.

    To create an embeddable timeline, you can do so from this new timeline settings page. More information can be found in Twitter’s developer documentation.