Page

From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three taps

Mobile Photo Jun 26 2010 6 18 08 PM From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three tapsThis is a little trick I showed to my buddy @JamesProps a little while ago that has allowed him to quickly take pictures with his iPhone, have them posted to his blog at JamesProps.com and then out to Twitter and Facebook.

It’s so quick he only has to launch an iPhone app, take a picture and tap send. Then the system takes care of the rest.

It is so easy to set up that I explained the whole process to him over a series of Twitter direct messages and a couple of emails. Here’s how it works:

godaddy From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three tapsSet up your custom domain—<yournamehere>.com

First you need to register a domain. You can get a domain rather inexpensively at GoDaddy.com ( Domain Sale! $6.89 .com at GoDaddy ), just be sure you only get the domain—don’t bother with the hosting or anything else.

tumblr From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three taps
tumblrdomain From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three tapsSign up for a Tumblr account

Next you’ll want to sign up for a Tumblr account and start a blog there.

While you’re logged into Tumblr.com and click “Customize”. In the Customize window, you can change the theme of your blog really simply and there are a ton of themes to choose from.

When you’re done customizing everything else, click the “Info” tab and tell Tumblr you want your blog at the domain you just registered.

You’ll also want to look under the “Services” tab and add your Facebook and Twitter accounts. This will announce every post your make to your Tumblr blog to your Twitter followers and your Facebook friends.

tumblrtwitter From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three taps
domainmanage From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three tapsPoint your domain at Tumblr

Now, you’re going to have to tell GoDaddy.com that you want traffic to your domain to go to your Tumblr blog. So, log into GoDaddy.com, go to Domain Management, click on your domain in the list of domains.

domainlist From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three tapsOnce you arrive at the Domain Manager page for your domain, click “Total DNS Control”

(Almost there!) Click the little paper & pencil icon under A (Host) in the @ row…

totalDNS From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three tapsThen plug 72.32.231.8 into the “Point To Ip Address:” field and click OK.

Now, give it a minute or two and then go to your domain name …it should now be domainmanagerA From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three tapsyour Tumblr blog. Free website with your own custom domain.

The app that makes is simple by making it Quickr

There is a free Tumblr app which is pretty great, but there is also a 99¢ app called Quickr from Basil Apps that makes posting pictures to your page a much simpler procedure: Launch, snap, (type a description if you like) and post—DONE!

domainredirect From iPhone to your blog to Twitter and Facebook in three tapsThe thing I love about services like Tumblr is they integrate so well (and evolve to continue to integrate well) with other social networking and web services. A lot of people trying to establish a “personal brand” make an over-the-top “Hollywood” website that they can’t maintain themselves and they’re often too complicated to update often enough to build an audience. A simple, free Tumblr site kicks their ass.

You should also go to Tumblr’s Goodies Page and drag the “Share on Tumblr” bookmarklette into your bookmarks bar on your browser.

Then, any time you’re on a super awesome website reading an article, click the “Share on Tumblr” button in your toolbar and a little window will pop up and help you post a link to that article any way you would like (text, photo, video, quote…whatever!)

I’m really liking Tumblr. Let me know how this process works for you.

What online services do you use to express yourself and reach your friends…your audience? Please tell me about it in the comments.

Web 2.0.1

Just like the beta-filled days of ’99, we have an ever growing crop of new web services out to win your hearts and clicks. Some of them are good too. This week we’re looking at some new services that could become regulars.

Pageflakes

The idea of the AJAX portal isn’t new. In fact, NetVibes already has a great one. But there is always room for improvement. And this month we have Pageflakes.

pageflakes Web 2.0.1

With an emphasis on community contribution, this Web 2.0 start page gives you always updated, no-need-to-refresh access to your web accounts and services including Gmail, feeds and ZohoWriter documents.

30 Boxes

This AJAX online calendar has an awesome interface. Adding and managing events is a breeze, and there is support for advanced functions like email notifications of events and sharing.

30boxes Web 2.0.1

You can also load your 30 Boxes calendar right into iCal via a remote calendar link.

Turbo Admin

For users who manage their MySQL databases via the web, this solution is great. Edit a configuration file, upload the php to your web server and view, edit and add values to your database tables with a smooth click-where-you-want-it interface. It is not nearly as comprehensive as phpMyAdmin, but it’s the easiest way I’ve seen to directly edit your database.

Bloxor

With Bloxor – a web-based feed reader – you get the best of both worlds: you can subscribe to the service on their servers, or install it on your own. The Open Sourced project has a streamlined in-browser setup for following your news feeds and supports OPML import for easy migration from your current reader.

There’s the latest on the greatest in new AJAX web services. In a month they could be Yahoo or Google’s newest acquisition, or dead and gone for that matter. Better sign up today!

Brian

Shiira, iBackup and More

Shiira

Yes, I know, another web browser? I’m a firm believer that there is a web browser for every style of user. Shiira builds some interesting and useful features into a clean interface.

shirra Shiira, iBackup and More

Build on Web Kit, it uses Safari’s stable base. Unique features include sidebar management of RSS feeds, advanced download management, access to Safari and Firefox bookmarks and a sidebar page holder.

iBackup

Like browsers, there are plenty f OS X backup solutions. But this one excels in its user friendliness. While applications like Carbon Copy Cloner are great at making full bootable backups, iBackup goes a different route.

ibackup Shiira, iBackup and More

This free backup application backs files up to another location (with support for remote servers), but the refreshing approach to selecting what you back up is what makes it great. iBackup lets you select system and application prefs, pictures, movies, music and more by the folder or file. With iBackup, it is easy to be selective in what you back up and restore – and you are saved from having to root around for preference files.

Gcal.app

This is an ultra simple way to directly access Google Calendar with all its AJAX goodness, outside your browser. Gcal is basically nothing more than a dedicated, streamlined browser that gets you straight to your calendar.

gcal Shiira, iBackup and More

That’s my list for this week. I’ll be back again with more of the Mac’s best free software next week.

Brian