Should we keep mini-posts?
[updated]
We’ve used them less and less frequently, especially as we’ve drifted away from our original mission and our original conversational project. I almost never post mini-posts. And there’s really no reason why short posts couldn’t fit in the main column like on other blogs. Thoughts?
Okay – so judging by the comments, we’ll keep mini-posts! I didn’t really intend to lose them, but as we have not been using them as much I wanted reader and writer feedback on their usefulness/popularity, etc.
Any other suggestions are welcome. One thought I’ve had is turning the site into more of a magazine style blog, but that may be too much of a change.
I’ve noticed that it has been used less frequently. If it’s something you’re just flat not going to use, then I guess do away with it. But if you do, it will be missed.Report
Personally, I quite enjoy the mini-posts. Often, if I only have a few minutes at work to take a quick break, so I’ll pop through one or two.
However, I’m sure I’d keep reading The League if they disappeared.Report
I’ve actually instituted them on OTB with the most recent design and did so on Manzine previously. I find that it just makes sense to segregate quickie posts from think pieces.
Then again, this really only matters to those readers who access the site from the home page. Those reading it in a feed reader or coming in from a direct link haven’t the foggiest that there’s a distinction.Report
Don’t you touch my Gifts of Gab section or I’m coming after you with an ice pick.Report
I will second what James said. When you use a reader there is no distinction between the two. My personal preference is for blogs to be as lean as possible in appearance. At my blog I’ve removed everything except one column for posts and my blogroll. I find it just makes navigating more simple. The format here at The Leage has gotten so cumbersome it almost seems you’d be better off with a website as I think you’ve nearly exceeded the cabilities of a blogging platform.Report
Keep ’em, please.Report
I dig them, for the most part. If I were to make a change, I’d just change the sidebar so that there was always one “open thread” available. When one gets pushed off, start a new one. If this takes a week, great, if it takes a month, great.
I like the opportunities that just having a “this is for dinky throwaways” sidebar offers, even if they aren’t used.Report
I like the division. And the name “Off the cuff”!Report
I should note that I didn’t realize this post was an “Off The Cuff” until after posting my last comment and noticing it in the sidebar.Report
Perhaps it’s purely suggestion, but the mini-posts seem different in spirit to me: lighter, friendlier, more inviting of a flip or silly response. By all means, keep them.Report
The “Off The Cuff” feature is one of the most charming things about this blog.
For me, it won’t matter, though. I’m generally viewing posts in a reader and if I feel impelled to comment that’s the first time I learn that it’s an Off The Cuff or a center-stage post, and it does not make any difference to me at that point.Report
I like posting stuff here that I find interesting, but haven’t got much to say about, other than, “Hey, here’s something interesting!” I’ve done that a bit less often lately because I’m not sure it’s not wasting space. But I enjoy the feature for sure.Report