![]() Based on what you'll be using your Tumblr for, there are several theme options available. Tumblr provides a pull-down theme menu, with thumbnail images of themes currently available, many designed by other Tumblr users. First, go to your site's page on the Dashboard. Tumblr makes it easy for the non-computer coder to do so by offering dozens of free site templates, which it calls "Themes." Users can fully customize their Tumblr sites, changing the colors and fonts, how pictures are displays, where modules are presented, and so on. But the public "face" of a Tumblr blog goes out to the whole of the Internet (unless privacy features are enabled), which means that they require some cosmetic maintenance. Tumblr users see the blogs that they subscribe to, as well their own posts and notes, on the Dashboard interface. (Tip: scroll through posts easily by pressing the "J" key while in the Dashboard.) Similar to a Facebook news feed, it plainly displays, in reverse chronological order (most recent at the top), all activity by the user and the blogs he or she follows. The Dashboard is Tumblr's main interface. This way, anytime an author updates with a new article, picture, video or shared item, it shows up in the Dashboards of his or her subscribers. Tumblr users connect by subscribing to other Tumblr blogs. Click on the correct one, enter in the materials, and then click "post" at the end (or, queue it, or set it to run on a specific date).īut Tumblr is a social network, too. (The user name does not have to be the same as the blog's title, by the way.) On the user's blog entry page (accessible via the Dashboard, which we'll talk more about in a second), Tumblr guides the blogging process with icons for text, photo, quotes, links, chat, audio or video. Simply sign up with an e-mail address and a password, choose a user name, and start blogging. Using Tumblr is as easy as using e-mail - which is how a Tumblr account is created. Although you don't have to be a registered user of Tumblr to read others people's Tumblr blogs, you do have to be registered if you want to leave notes. Each day, 25,000 new users sign up for the site, and altogether, 71.6 million new Tumblr blog entries, photos, videos and audio files are posted each day. As of 2012, Tumblr hosts more than 64 million "tumblelogs." More than 13 million people visit Tumblr a month, most of them with their own active blogs. Tumblr refers to itself as a platform for short-form microblogging, also known as tumblelogging, a name that predates Tumblr itself. To further the social aspect, authors can opt to post their Tumblr entries simultaneously, or at least link to them, via other services, such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. It's also possible to give "notes" to other subscribers in several forms - you can reblog someone's content on that user's Tumblr site, "like" it, or reply. Users subscribe to as many other users' pages as they like, which show up on the user's feed, or Dashboard. Written entries, photographs, video clips or links to other Web sites - you can share all of these things with your friends and followers. It's part blogging platform (like Wordpress, Blogger or Posterous) and part social networking service, letting users create and post their own original content. ![]() Tumblr is a network of millions of user-generated, personal Web sites. ![]()
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