![]() ![]() Some people use Feedly to subscribe to Tumblr pages. And Feedly does this by storing a simplified copy of the webpages in an RSS feed, as well as some metadata. įeedly takes URLs like this and make them look modern like Google News. Tumblr supports RSS, which is reachable at the blog’s URL + /rss, like. RSS is a web standard, existed long before things like Pocket and Google Newsstands, that let you subscribe to and see updates from a website much like how most people do it today on, say, Apple News. Most posts removed under Tumblr’s NSFW content ban are removed in this manner, meaning that there are still a lot of NSFW content on Tumblr’s server - we just don't have a good way to find/index them. What makes it so frustrating, then, is that, once Tumblr decides to either remove a post (“Oops, there's nothing here”) or mark one as NSFW (“This Tumblr may contain sensitive media”), it becomes very difficult to find out the direct image URL, since it's all hashes like 5cc472f5. (If you’d like an actual example: this post is marked NSFW, effectively not viewable, but its image at is still viewable (NSFW: actual gay porn, be warned) This means that even if you can't see the post anymore, you can still see the image, by directly visiting its URL to the Tumblr server, the URL that begins with 64., if you still have the URL. Now, let's say Tumblr has decided to remove this post, which means that you can no longer see it using the post’s URL (that begins with the blog’s name, in this case it's ).īut a lot of time, when Tumblr removes a post, it doesn’t go all the way to delete the photos in it from the servers. The post includes an image, which has the URL . Say you have a Tumblr post: (SFW, found randomly on trending). A simpler explanation of what’s going on: And there's the permanent imprint of a mosquito filled with blood on the spine. And loved.ĭo you like to keep your books in good condition? Would you be angry if someone spilled food and water and squashed an orange against it and oh look these pages are cut slightly and also it's permanently curved now. Obviously I would prefer that i had kept it safe, but i think the way it looks now shows that it's been used. My brother takes pride in keeping his books pristine. Dies not look the way it did when i got it. So this book has spent three years in my bag now. That way i would never forget where i left it. But the only safe place i could think of keeping it was my bag. It was a gift he received before going to study abroad and he hasn't been able to come back for a while so he told me where he left it, and asked me to take care of it. I have a copy of Good Omens from my brother. Reblogging this very helpful collection of answers because I got about five of these questions in today alone. ![]() ![]() There were very few asks that DIDN’T concern them, and none that I have saved. (And yes, they pretty much all relate to the angels and demons, Crowly and Aziraphale specifically. At least some of them I know I’ve missed a lot. So, for what it’s worth, here are the answers. But I’ve personally had no issue accepting author’s word with this series, since Neil has not, as yet, done anything that made me want to shout at him or eat a couch in frustration, which is a refreshing change from the writers in most of the fandoms I’ve ever been part of. Of course, none of this is meant to invalidate headcanons or whatever Neil himself is firmly against doing so. So I thought I’d present them here, roughly organized, in text form, for the benefit of anyone else who’s curious. But I went hunting long ago for basically anything GO-related and I took screenshots of a bunch. Trouble is, his ask box is deep and intimidating, and since season 2 was announced all the pre-season 2 asks have basically been buried. SO, I have been wading in Good Omens meta for months now, and I often see things come up that Neil has actually addressed in asks. ![]()
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