I have never found a way to leave comments. Just 'likes' or whatever, and then you have to have your own tumblr account. Bleagh.
I do follow one tumblr blog via RSS feed, like any other blog. I find the lack of comments thing irritating, but I'll follow anyone who's got interesting stuff to say that I want to read.
Yeah, I don't find it particularly useful as a social networking platform because of the lack of interactivity. When I hear people talking about fandom potentially leaving LJ/DW for tumblr I just wonder...how?
As a general blogging platform, the lack of comments (or at least ease of commenting, since I haven't figured out if you can comment even with an account) does hurt it. Comments are usually where I find the most useful information in a blog. People are still flocking to it, though, so I suspect for many users, the lack of interactivity is not a deterrent and might even be attractive.
Not really. Well, I think they use Tumblr rather that those other platforms because it's very, very easy to post different kinds of media, and because it's more social than the other two (in the sense of being able to subscribe to people's Tumblrs easily -- all blogs have RSS, but Tumblr packages all your subscribed tumblrs right there on your Dashboard). As for the comments, I'm not sure but I don't think they were available at first. Now they're available but apparently not on by default, and I suspect people are used to using Tumblr without them so they just don't think to enable them.
ETA: Actually, you have to kind of hack comments in by adding Disqus, and not all themes support it. So, yeah. Most people aren't going to do that.
Hmm. I'm not sure I'd say that being able to subscribe to a blog more easily makes that blog "more social," expecially given that you can't freaking comment on most of them. But then I am apparently an ornery old cuss who misses the heydey of blogging. ;)
It's more ... I don't know, network-y? I'm not much of a Tumblr user myself, but I use Twitter and it seems like it has some similarities (except that you can *reply* on Twitter). I just don't think Tumblr's meant to be a conversation as much as "a bunch of people sharing cool things they made and/or came across with the world." (And then NOT TALKING ABOUT THEM, which is the part that drives people like you and me nuts.)
Ahhh, that explains a lot, including why I knew I'd seen commenting available on tumblrs before, when it doesn't seem to be possible on most of the ones I'm looking at now. Glad I'm not crazy!
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Date: 2011-10-13 08:07 pm (UTC)I do follow one tumblr blog via RSS feed, like any other blog. I find the lack of comments thing irritating, but I'll follow anyone who's got interesting stuff to say that I want to read.
-J
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Date: 2011-10-13 08:21 pm (UTC)As a general blogging platform, the lack of comments (or at least ease of commenting, since I haven't figured out if you can comment even with an account) does hurt it. Comments are usually where I find the most useful information in a blog. People are still flocking to it, though, so I suspect for many users, the lack of interactivity is not a deterrent and might even be attractive.
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Date: 2011-10-13 10:27 pm (UTC)I hadn't looked before, but I just went to one and clicked on the "0 comments" link on a recent post, and it gives you text box to comment in.
ETA: and now I see Lydia's comment about editing them in from Diskus or whatever, and...yeah.
I think that "social" is coming to mean "out there to be seen," and less "engages directly with other people". Or something.
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Date: 2011-10-13 08:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-10-13 09:09 pm (UTC)Do you have a concept of why people don't? (And why people use tumblr blogs instead of old-fashioned Blogger or Wordpress blogs in the first place?)
-J
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Date: 2011-10-13 09:11 pm (UTC)ETA: Actually, you have to kind of hack comments in by adding Disqus, and not all themes support it. So, yeah. Most people aren't going to do that.
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Date: 2011-10-13 09:25 pm (UTC)-J
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Date: 2011-10-13 09:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-10-14 03:45 pm (UTC)