I spent an embarrassing amount of time in the last few months porting Roger’s blog (http://informationarbitrage.com) from TypePad to Tumblr. As much as I love Tumblr, this was not an easy process. My eventual workflow was:
Blog Content

Blog Comments
Disqus was easy enough. Luckily, they had just released some migration tools right around the time I was doing this (although the documentation was not at all clear enough to a non-programmer like myself). Of course, I ran into problems, but Daniel Ha and his team swooped in to save the day. But what about the older, pre-Disqus comments? Well, if you have a way to do that, please, please, for the love of god, let me know.
Parting Thoughts


Tumblr Lands “Very Big And Competitive” Round From Sequoia
The NYC-based blogging startup’s founder David Karp and president John Maloney went out to the Valley looking for money last month, and it sounds like they came back winners.
“I will say, it is nice to be well-received on the West Coast,” Maloney told us at the time.
Tumblr, a simple blogging platform, is now in an interesting spot
Congratulations to everyone at Tumblr, past and present. I’m sure though that they bristle at being called “a simple blogging platform.” They’ve built much more than that. More than any other platform, Tumblr allows people to publish as they think. Whether the thought I want to get out is shallow or deep, auditory or visual, evolutionary or revolutionary, Tumblr gives me the tools to express that thought faithfully. The value of that quality cannot be overstated.
Taking a break is not something I know how to do. As a teenager, I was lucky enough to spend every summer learning how to be an engineer at a small...
Amazing! The Atlas of the United States Printed for the Use of the Blind circa 1837 for children at the New England Institute for the Education...
Who needs paper?
Incredible art by Annie Vought. (via)
This probably should not be a drivers first rear wheel drive car…
Lamborghini Crashes in Chicago Suburbs (by DrCinadr)