Day 41 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts is one of my top three favorite Fett shirts. flic.kr/p/22RDCs1


Day 40 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts. It wasn’t a white Christmas in Dallas/Fort Worth, but… flic.kr/p/DeuSPT


Friends, as we celebrate today the birth of “the one poor child that saved this world”, I wish for you now and always, better days. youtu.be/i-kHleNYI…


Day 39 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts shouldn’t be a surprise: Holiday Special. flic.kr/p/22QaRRr


So long, and thanks for all the GIFs

If you’re still following along on here and paying attention to my little ol’ Tumblog, you’ll note it’s been a few months since I’ve posted. Lots of reasons for that, but here are the two main ones:

  1. Bandwidth. I only have so much time to devote to social networks. And despite my best attempts to treat Tumblr as just another blog host, it is a social network of a kind. And I’d rather devote my time to Twitter and Facebook, where the majority of my online friends are congregated.
  2. Owning your own space and content. My biggest complaint about Tumblr, especially right now, is that I don’t really own the content I’ve posted here. When they went to version 2.0 of the API, Tumblr killed the few backup/export tools there were for the service. There isn’t a convenient, easy way to get my stuff out of here and move it some place else.

I’ve decided to relaunch my original blog at retrophisch.com, in 2018, for long-form stuff. Short posts will live at Micro.blog, and be cross-posted to Twitter and Facebook. I’m not posting directly to Instagram any more, either. My online photos will live either on my Micro.blog site, or Flickr, where I have been a paying Pro member for many years.

If we are serious about our online identities, we need a place where we have control of our content. A place either built on open web standards, like Micro.blog, or one with easy means of exporting our content for use elsewhere. For me, Tumblr is no longer that place.

I’m not deleting my account or turning this blog invisible. It shall remain up, so long as Tumblr lives, encapsulating my time spent here for the past six years. The custom domain of retrophis.ch I have been using here is going to be repurposed for my Micro.blog site. Take care, Tumblrs!


I said goodbye to my Tumblr blog today. retrophisch.tumblr.com/post/1688…


Day 38 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts, another fun mashup. flic.kr/p/22Nz372


Took the boys to see the LEGO Ninjago movie at the dollar theater. It was a lot better flick than I was anticipating.

I also took the time to update my watched movie list and moved it from Tumblr to Micro.blog: retrophisch.micro.blog/movies/


Day 37 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts. You stay classy, Mos Eisley. flic.kr/p/HPNVLV


Day 36 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts is my kind of tarot card. flic.kr/p/D6fj2K



My kingdom for the ability to tweak the interface colors of the iOS Music app to something beside that garish pink.


Boys saw the big guy today.


New specs courtesy of Kenneth Cole.


Day 35 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts is my favorite mashup. flic.kr/p/21mXXGx


“An ambitious U.S. task force targeting Hezbollah’s billion-dollar criminal enterprise ran headlong into the White House’s desire for a nuclear deal with Iran.” www.politico.com/interacti…


Micro.blog is now open

Manton Reece announced today that at long last, Micro.blog is open to the public. Currently, he plans to limit it to 100 new sign-ups each day. This is in part because Micro.blog is a two-person operation, and they want to grow the community slowly and be able to respond to everyone easily on feedback and support issues.

Another social network??

Micro.blog isn’t another social network per se. It is a community of “micro” blogs, blogs devoted to short posts, a la Twitter. These blogs exist outside of the Micro.blog community in that each one may be visited separately at its URL if you so choose. You followed a link to this post from likely one of three places: your Micro.blog account, Twitter, or Facebook. I have my Micro.blog preferences set to cross-post to those two major social networks. Being part of the Micro.blog community allows you to interact with other bloggers through the service.

Own your own content

There are two aspects of Micro.blog, or any blog for that matter, that makes it superior to posting directly to Twitter or Facebook. One is that you own your own content. It’s your blog, and you can say what you want, without worrying about being censored by Twitter, Facebook, or any other third-party social network. While independent web projects like Micro.blog aren’t going to replace the social media giants—at least not any time soon—your posts will be more pertinent on your own space, rather than disappearing into the ephemera as seems to be the case on Twitter and Facebook. (Also: no ads! Some things are worth paying for.)

Two, it’s portable. What I mean is because Micro.blog is built on open web standards, if Manton decided tomorrow he was shutting the service down, because all of my content is normal HTML, I could export it to another blog or service of my choice, and not lose anything.

Manton is also working on ways to make it easy for folks who wish to to import their blogs from other installations, such as WordPress, into Micro.blog. I still plan to relaunch my old retrophisch.com blog on WordPress, but I like being able to use Micro.blog for short posts. And should I decide to move my Micro.blog posts to my own hosted platform, there’s a method for that while still being part of the Micro.blog community.

Take back your online identity

Even if you decide not to invest in Micro.blog, I encourage you to have a place on the web to call your own. Twitter is not it. Facebook isn’t it, either. There are better places than Instagram for your photos to live, if not on your own site. A place that is yours, where you own your own domain, own your own email, and own your own content. You may not replace existing social media usage, but you can interact with those networks while retaining more ownership and control of your own posts. Let them live somewhere else first.


Day 34 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts. I dig the ’70s/early ’80s design of this one. Looks like something that might have been around in my childhood. flic.kr/p/22F5joR


Day 34 of #NoRepeatStarWarsShirts. I dig the ’70s/early ’80s design of this one. Looks like something that might have been around in my childhood. flic.kr/p/22F5joR


Someone in @Dreamhost marketing is on top of their game. I just asked for ninja robot stickers. This notebook they sent too is awesome.