Snake thoughts.
Canadians, on May 9 at 12:30 I'm speaking at the Point Pelee Festival of the Birds. It's a free talk included with park admission. Come say hi.
trying on a metaphor

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
One Nice Bug Per Day

JBB: An Artblog!
Sweet Seals For You, Always

★
wallacepolsom

@theartofmadeline
🪼

Origami Around
Cosmic Funnies
styofa doing anything

No title available
No title available
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
AnasAbdin
todays bird

Kiana Khansmith

if i look back, i am lost

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

seen from Malaysia

seen from Indonesia

seen from Morocco
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Canada
seen from India

seen from Australia

seen from Ireland

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Sweden

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Belgium

seen from Mexico
@curieously
Snake thoughts.
Canadians, on May 9 at 12:30 I'm speaking at the Point Pelee Festival of the Birds. It's a free talk included with park admission. Come say hi.
It’s a beautiful day in queernorm alt Russia and the gay tsarevich is having a lovely stroll along the boulevard with the controversially lower class boyfriend the narrative has provided for a scintilla of conflict! Look how happy they are together now that all that unpleasantness got brushed aside with a single, sensible conversation.
And who’s that coming out of the cheese shop now? It’s the lesbians whose role in the story is exclusively “holding the brain cell”! How wonderful to see… wait a moment. What’s that? I’m getting word that one of the lesbians is taking off a prosthetic mask she’s been wearing all this time… what is the lesbian’s true identity?!
It’s Vera Zasulich! RUN, GAY TSAREVICH!!! IT’S TOO LATE! HIS CARRIAGE HAS EXPLODED! I’M HEARING THE CONTROVERSIALLY LOWER CLASS LOVER SHIELDED HIM HEROICALLY WITH HIS OWN BODY AND THE TSAR WILL RECOVER! JEWS TO BE EXPELLED FROM MOSCOW IMMEDIATELY!
Another beautiful day in queernorm alt Russia 😊
Here’s Lystrosaurus murrayi ignoring the Great Dying, the mother of mass extinctions, just getting on with its parrot-pig-reptile-bulldog business…
just a little boy
i have a confession to make. i saw 2 fat frogs crossing the street yesterday and for but a split second some atavistic french instinct kicked in and i felt the urge to go jerma birdhouse on those things
Reblogs in a chain now get their own notes
The reblog chain is one of the things that makes Tumblr unlike anywhere else. All the notes on reblogs are attributed to the original post, no matter which branch people actually liked or reblogged. We want to keep encouraging conversations, and give contributors the recognition they deserve.
Soon, you'll be able to like, reblog, or reply to any part of a reblog chain, and that note will go to that reblog's author. Each reblog will have its own counts, instead of one aggregated number from every version of the post. And yes, you’ll be able to like multiple posts in one chain.
If a reblog doesn't add anything, the love flows up to the last person in the chain who did. Your post doesn't lose notes just because people spread it quietly.
Past notes will stay on the original post — we're only changing what happens from here on out. Retroactively re-attributing all of them would be... a lot.
This is just the beginning. More changes are coming as we keep building this out – stay tuned!
Let's talk about reblog notes.
We rolled out a significant change to how notes work on reblogs, and the reaction has been strong. We're not going to pretend otherwise.
First things first: We're reversing the change. Your feedback in comments, emails, and especially reblogs, made clear that the rollout created problems we need to address before moving forward. We also should have communicated this differently from the start, and we didn't.
We still believe there's a better version of how reblogs can work. One that gives every voice in a chain the credit it deserves. But we want to get there with you.
In the coming days we'll share more on how we plan to do that, including ways to work directly with some of you on this and future changes before they ship.
Keep an eye on @staff for updates to come soon.
so that's BETTER as a response but still sounds like a lot of bull and 'in the coming days we'll share more' is coming off as very 'ughhh guys but it was suuuuch a great idea you just had to give it a chanceeeee' more than any real understanding of how bad a fuckup this was.
like the specific choice of saying it's the ROLLOUT that created problems and not THE CHANGES that created problems heavily implies they think the issue is how the went about it and not what they actually did. I wouldn't trust this to stay 'fixed' one bit.
still, very funny outcome and I suppose counts as enrichment for users... or something like that
interesting thing about the new and unimproved tumblr reblog function - it seems to affect stuff when the URL is like www.tumblr.com/changes but NOT when it's on the original changes.tumblr.com... and this is a hilariously good representation of WHY the changes are so ass:
Wow! 226,675 notes in a day on changes.tumblr.com! that post sure has legs!
Meanwhile, 19599+4320+2917+17914+4868+2970 = 52588 notes total on tumblr.com/changes. That's... some difference. Anyway, their crap response can be summed up as 'we hear you and we're going to do nothing (: u'll get over it' which is like, going from dogshit into regurgitated dogshit left to cook under hot sun levels of rubbish pr.
Keep on bothering them about it, it's very clear the expectation is that this is all just the userbase throwing one of their usual hissy fits and that people will get over it just like they got over Tumblr Blue going away. That means:
1) Give feedback/complaints DIRECTLY on the Help Centre.
If I know customer support (and I do, I worked in it at one point), they HAVE a system to handle stuff like this and it is NOT equipped to handle a huge, consistent, and multi-day flood of responses. Given how corpo they're being about this, the best thing you can do to actually make Tumblr Staff give a shit is to really fuck up their KPIs somehow and make it MORE difficult for them to look like they are doing a good job to their stakeholders.
2) You will get back an email, REPLY TO IT.
This is the form email that they are sending out now. What this means is that they are going 'oh we don't actually have to reply to any of these feedbacks, we'll just direct them all to the changes thing, where we've said we'll TRY to reply but not actually guaranteed anything so that lets us off the hook. hooray!' which is bull. However, at the end of the email:
So what you want to do is to reach out, say that you are reaching out to express your dissatisfaction/distaste for a new issue! The issue is the way they are handling complaints and feedback. This is NOT the same thing, you are not commenting about the changes. Rather, you are addressing their customer service, marketing, communications and feature development processes. All totally different and valid areas to take issue with. Why do this? Simple: it's true and it also fucks up their reply KPIs harder.
3) Comment (you can duplicate it) both on the original post and on the changes post.
Do I expect them to actually follow up? Absolutely not, that 'we'll follow up with as many of you as we can' is unspecific nonsense and they're probably going to cry about it and it'll turn out that the amount of people they can follow up with is like, 2 carefully cherry picked users out of 2,000 that loooove the changes actually and see nothing wrong about it. But comment anyway, because the MORE people are against it the more obviously stupid and cherry picked any attempt to find a positive view on it will look.
as a denizen of this busted ass website for half my life now i do know how staff works and i’m going to lay out what they think will happen as someone who has witnessed this exact thing play out
People get very mad for a few days and then roll over and accept the change to the enclosure. This is what they are betting on. They have had meetings about this.
Getting around it: set an alarm. Get mad not just now, but in a few days, a week, two weeks. They are expecting people to sigh and get over this very odd edit to the site in a few days. Keep flooding them for more than just tonight. Be mad for the week, for the month. Leave a message every day.
like . I cant even blame them for being like “we’ll monitor for the week”. Remember when they changed the blue back in like 2015? This website acted like staff had gone into their house and shot their dog. We’re here because we’re allergic to change and therefore it’s hard to parse if people hate the change because it’s bad or because we go into thermonuclear meltdown over what color blue the background of the website is. Just continue to bug them beyond today and beyond this week.
Reblogs in a chain now get their own notes
The reblog chain is one of the things that makes Tumblr unlike anywhere else. All the notes on reblogs are attributed to the original post, no matter which branch people actually liked or reblogged. We want to keep encouraging conversations, and give contributors the recognition they deserve.
Soon, you'll be able to like, reblog, or reply to any part of a reblog chain, and that note will go to that reblog's author. Each reblog will have its own counts, instead of one aggregated number from every version of the post. And yes, you’ll be able to like multiple posts in one chain.
If a reblog doesn't add anything, the love flows up to the last person in the chain who did. Your post doesn't lose notes just because people spread it quietly.
Past notes will stay on the original post — we're only changing what happens from here on out. Retroactively re-attributing all of them would be... a lot.
This is just the beginning. More changes are coming as we keep building this out – stay tuned!
It’s very clear that you all have strong feelings about Tumblr and about this change. We hear you. The passion people have for how Tumblr works is one of the things that makes this place special.
As this rolls out over the next few days and you explore it, we’ll keep reading your replies and reblogs, so please keep sharing your questions, concerns, and ideas.
Your creativity has always been the heart of Tumblr, whether you’re the original poster or adding something brilliant in the reblogs, and nothing about this change is meant to limit that.
If you’d like to talk directly beyond the comments, leave a reply and we’ll follow up with as many of you as we can. We want to work with you to make Tumblr better.
hey folks do we like this. reblog without commentary for reach
do we want this?
yes
no
The Death of the Digital Ecosystem: Why Decoupling Notes Destroys Tumblr
@changes (Edit: I already sent this to Tumblr Support under the feedback option. I encourage everyone to send feedback on how bad this feature actually is).
For years, the total note count on a post served as a universal metric of a piece of content's impact. Whether a user liked the original post or a reblog fifteen branches deep, that engagement flowed back to the source. This ensured that the original artist, writer, or editor received the full credit for the viral success of their work.
Under this new system, engagement is trapped within the specific reblog a user happens to see on their dashboard. If a massive, high-traffic blog reblogs a piece of art from a small creator, every like and reblog that occurs through that larger account stays with them. The original creator is left with a stagnant note count on their own dashboard while their work generates thousands of interactions for someone else.
Erasure of Creator Visibility
Instead of seeing one post with 10,000 notes, a creator may now have to hunt through dozens of different reblog chains to find where the conversation is actually happening.
If the notes no longer flow back to the original post, the creator loses the ability to see who is enjoying their work, what the tags say, and how the community is responding.
On a platform where engagement often dictates visibility, splitting that engagement into tiny, unlinked fractions makes it significantly harder for original works to gain momentum compared to the high-reach blogs that reblog them.
Incentivizing the "Big Blog" Monopoly
This system rewards accounts that have already established a large following at the direct expense of the smaller accounts that actually produce the content. It transforms reblogging from a method of sharing into a method of acquisition.
When a reblog functions as its own independent post with its own note count, the incentive to click through to the original source disappears. The platform is transitioning from a collaborative ecosystem into a standard social media feed where the person who posts the content last—not the person who made it—reaps the rewards.
Impact on Collaborative Conversations
Tumblr’s unique culture is built on the reblog chain: a chronological, evolving conversation. By allowing users to like or reblog "any part" of the chain as an independent entity, the platform is breaking the narrative thread.
If engagement is siloed into specific branches, the incentive to add to a conversation is replaced by an incentive to simply own a piece of the engagement. This change doesn't encourage conversation. It encourages the commodification of individual posts within a chain, making it harder for the original voice to ever be heard over the noise of the rebloggers.
The Disincentive to Create
Perhaps the most damaging aspect of this update is the psychological toll on the creative community. When the platform actively diverts credit and engagement away from the source, it destroys the motivation to share original work at all.
For many, the reward for posting is seeing how far their work travels. If that travel is now invisible or attributed to others, the labor of creating becomes thankless.
This system makes creators want to share nothing. If the platform is built to harvest a creator's effort for the benefit of curator blogs, the logical response is to stop providing the raw material. I am one leaning into this category. Without us creators, the curator blogs have nothing to curate.
By making it harder to protect and track one's own work, the platform is effectively telling creators that their presence is secondary to the conversations happening around their work: conversations they may no longer even be able to find.
Hello! Please have a little gecko (Hemidactylus frenatus) hanging out in my kitchen. I went to get a drink at 1am, flipped on the light, and we both startled each other. However it hung around for long enough for me to grab one unblurry photo, which was nice.
We love a surprise gecko!
Reblogs in a chain now get their own notes
The reblog chain is one of the things that makes Tumblr unlike anywhere else. All the notes on reblogs are attributed to the original post, no matter which branch people actually liked or reblogged. We want to keep encouraging conversations, and give contributors the recognition they deserve.
Soon, you'll be able to like, reblog, or reply to any part of a reblog chain, and that note will go to that reblog's author. Each reblog will have its own counts, instead of one aggregated number from every version of the post. And yes, you’ll be able to like multiple posts in one chain.
If a reblog doesn't add anything, the love flows up to the last person in the chain who did. Your post doesn't lose notes just because people spread it quietly.
Past notes will stay on the original post — we're only changing what happens from here on out. Retroactively re-attributing all of them would be... a lot.
This is just the beginning. More changes are coming as we keep building this out – stay tuned!
Not only will this ruin a core element of Tumblr, it will make it very difficult to tell where and when a post is getting traction. People are on this website because it isn't Twitter. Making it more like Twitter will turn people away.
The last thing this website needs is a culture of catty twitter-style quote-retweets. This will actively encourage more toxic users to interact with your posts because their traffic will be more difficult to track.
look at her go
My best writing advice is read a lot but specifically read a lot of DIFFERENT stuff. Read stuff that isn’t your genre read stuff you hate etc. stretch yourself. Also definitely have Something wrong with you
@v3llichor the reason I think you should read stuff you hate is because
1) you can learn from this about what you don’t like. WHY do I hate this? What is it that is NOT working for me? This can be illuminating in a way that even figuring out what DOES work and what you DO like isn’t.
2) if it’s something that you hate, but it’s really popular, it’s practice for internalizing that taste is subjective. You will need this if you want to share your writing, because some people will dislike it, and that’s a them problem
this has not turned reading into a chore for me, because reading stuff I hate isn’t ABOUT the thing I hate, it’s about the mechanics of writing
please enjoy this video of a frog getting a radiograph from @theanthonyvets on Instagram:
Using an open, moistened Ziploc bag to prevent the tree frog from jumping and to minimize exposure to environmental contaminants, we obtained radiographs with a dental X-ray unit to screen for metabolic bone disease (MBD). MBD in amphibians is most commonly associated with chronic hypocalcemia secondary to improper calcium-to-phosphorus ratios, inadequate dietary supplementation, and/or insufficient UVB exposure, resulting in impaired vitamin D₃ synthesis. Radiographic findings may include generalized osteopenia, cortical thinning, pathologic fractures, spinal deformities, and mandibular softening. Early recognition is critical, as progression can lead to irreversible skeletal deformities and decreased mobility.
Hi, I saw your post about google searches showing the wrong image for cozumel raccoons. My IRL job is in search engine optimization & tbh I kind of doubt flagging the image is going to work? (It might, I don't actually know.) If it doesn't, I could help you come up with a plan to outrank that image with a better one, if you want (like, on a volunteer basis)
I’ve done experiments on this and it actually does help remove the image! I’ve had amazing success doing this. But thank you so much!
Here is a webpage I made for my technology research class that better explains everything, though I forgot to update the results after the project ended haha whoops
@unnonexistence former (I quit lol) social media person, what you're saying absolutely does apply if you're just one person reporting or even a small group (of small business employees or similar) all checking in from the same location. however if you have a solid internet following and enough people from different parts of the world… well, this morning when I checked it looked pretty much like the screenshot @raccoonmilf shared:
But just checked again and (within a day) the same search now shows:
So like, it definitely did work in this case, lol.
BEST IN SHOW: Penny, Doberman Pinscher (4 y/o), 150th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, New York, NY
Wanted to know more about her so I looked it up and found some very cute pics of her with her handler who clearly completely adores Penny, plus some background stuff! But first, very cute pics:
This marks the first time since 1989 that this breed has won the prestigious honor of Best in Show. Even more shocking is that the owner of that 1989 win is the same as the owner of this 2026 win, Andy Linton.
and also:
"You can't attribute it to one thing," Penny's handler, Andy Linton, said from the floor following the award ceremony, "but she is as great a Doberman as I've ever seen." Linton last handled a winning dog in that 1989 competition, walking Royal Tudor's Wild as the Wind to a Best in Show award. The veteran handler was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease a few years ago. Asked on Tuesday night what it had taken for him to make it back to the winner's circle, an emotional Linton replied: "I had some goals and this was one of them."
Source for images and quotes is MSN (one, two, three)