tumblelog

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English

Etymology

From tumble +‎ log, an early term for microblog, coined by Jonathan Gillette in 2005, based on the tagline of Leah Neukirchen's Anarchaia blog (“experimental, impressionistic sub-paragraph tumblin’”).[1][2]

Noun

tumblelog (plural tumblelogs)

  1. (Internet) A microblog, especially one on the Tumblr microblogging service.
    • 2006, Chad Fowler, Rails Recipes, Raleigh, N.C.: Pragmatic Bookshelf, →ISBN, page 195:
      For a concrete example, imagine you've created a Tumblelog, which is like a weblog but with many small posts of different types.
    • 2007, The Deal, volume 5, page 26:
      Tumblr, launched in March, allows users to publish digital files or brief blog posts to a single online location, dubbed a tumblelog.
    • 2009, Gavin Bell, Building Social Web Applications, page 133:
      Twitter and tumblelogs work equally well in this case. However, blogging and longer forms of writing are still important for communicating complex or longer ideas.
    • 2010, Richard Powers, Generosity, New York: Picador, →ISBN, page 10:
      Sue Weston details her current artwork. “It’s called 'Magpie.’ I stand in Daley Plaza, jotting down the things people say into their cells. Then I post it on a tumblelog. Amazing, what people will tell a street full of strangers.”
    • 2011, Dr Kay Irie, Dr Alison Stewart, Realizing Autonomy:
      At the same time as maintaining activity on my tumblelog, I was communicating with other bloggers outside the group, collaborating with other teachers at my own institution, reflecting alone and reading both online and on paper.

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References

  1. ^ Tom Cheshire (2012 March) “Tumbling on success: How Tumblr's David Karp built a £500 million empire”, in Wired UK, →ISSN
  2. ^ why the lucky stiff (2005 April 12) “Stop, For Blogging's Sake”, in RedHanded, archived from the original on 2005-11-07:[] I don’t think I’ve seen a blog like Chris Neukirchen’s Anarchaia, which fudges together a bunch of disparate forms of citation (links, quotes, flickrings) into a very long and narrow and distracted tumblelog.