Posterous vs. Tumblr vs. WordPress Comparison Chart

Jan 20 2010

Logo of Posterous
Image via Wikipedia

I am a big big fan of WordPress but I am working on a project where I want to set up a blog quickly and add lots of posts quickly.  I will work on a more detailed blog set up a later.  So the two options I am looking at are Posterous and Tumblr – each has some great features for quickly adding posts here is a comparison of some of the features I think are useful.

Image representing Tumblr as depicted in Crunc...
Image via CrunchBase

Mashable wrote a nice comparison of Posterous and Tumblr in June 2009 but didn’t list out some of the specific features I was interested in.  After looking at both Tumblr and Posterous – I decided to add WordPress.com to the comparison.

platform Posterous Tumblr WordPress.com
Comments comments are powered by Posterous.  Commentors can login with Facebook or Twitter. Some tumblr themes let you display comment from Disqus. Disqus lets commentors login with Facebook or Twitter. Currently no option for a commentator to login with Facebook or Twitter.
Private Posts Posts can be marked as private. “Private posts will not show up on your Posterous page or RSS feed. You can share these posts with a select group of people by sending them the direct url.” More info about private posts on the Posterous Blog. Posts can be marked as private. Posts can be private or password protected. From the WordPress.com support page “Protected – The post is protected with a password you set. Any user that has the password can view a protected post.
Private – Posts are only visible to blog Editors and Administrators. Private posts are not visible in Blog Surfer, feeds, or in any search. A post can be private without being password protected.”
Ability to transfer blog to WordPress? Not yet.  See this thread for some info – one person is working on an importer for WordPress.com There doesn’t seem to be an easy way to move Disqus comments on Tumblr to WordPress. Yes – can be exported to a wordpress.org (self-hosted) blog anytime.
Quick post bookmarklet? Posterous has a bookmarklet – more info here. Tumblr offers a bookmarklet for browser posting. Press This bookmarklet opens a pop-up window to edit and publish a new post. “Press This” is available under the Tools section of the menu.
Post by email? Each blog has a quick email address to publish posts. Can send multiple formats – text, mp3, photos and more to email address for posting by email. Post by email is available – create a secret email address.
Image representing WordPress.com as depicted i...
Image via CrunchBase

I like the features of both Tumblr and Posterous but I decided to use WordPress.comso that I would know I would be able to move my entire project to a self hosted WordPress blog if I wanted to in the future.  I did want to use Disqus for comments but I know that I can import my WordPress comments into Disqus in the future.

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View Comments

  • i like posterous better than any other blogging platform out there. the only issue is Tags from mail - support

    cheers
    olga-shulman-lednichenko
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