Dashboard
24 Aug 2012 5:10 PM (12 years ago)
Q: I have 4 blogs only 3 show up on my dashboard. Why?
A: It also took me a while to figure out my dashboard.
3 buttons: hide, always show and show all.
Hide You click on this button next to your blog name in order to hide it temporarily on your dashboard. This is very useful when you have a large number of blogs like me (71 blogs) and do not have time to work on all of them.
show all You click on this button to see all your blogs on screen, including deleted ones, so that you can click on [always show].
Always show You click [always show] to select those blogs you want to see on your dashboard every day.
Now let's go back to your problem. The solution is simple.
On your dashboard:
1. click on show all
2. click always show next to the blog name that did not come up before.
Stop following
14 Oct 2011 10:29 PM (13 years ago)
Q: I can't find a way to stop following a blog on my Dashboard. I went to the blue manage button, and looked at the list, but there is NO link to stop following. I went to the website to see if there was somewhere I could click, and I, once again, didn't see anything.
A: I had the same problem. I think I have found a solution. Go to your Google Account settings and click on your Google Reader account. It's under "My Products." Don't click "settings" - just Reader. On the left sidebar, you will find something that says "Blogs I'm Following." Click that. Highlighted in yellow at the top of that page is something that says "
The blogs you follow in Blogger have been added as subscriptions in Google Reader. You can manage the blogs you follow using the Blogger Dashboard." The words Blogger Dashboard should be blue, indicating a click-able link. Click that.
When I was signed into my Google account and clicked that link, it sent me straight to a page with all the blogs I am following, and then I could just pick the one I wanted to drop, click on the "settings" button right beside it, and another window popped up with several options, including "stop following this blog." And viola, it was done.
But I could not for the life of me find this on my Blogger dashboard. I found it purely by accident during an episode of intense cursing while trying to find some way to just get rid of one silly blog I was no longer interested in following. I hope this helps.
source:
http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/blogger/thread?fid=0adbd4e34c3ee6490004af4d9d03b3cc&hl=en
Trolls
9 Aug 2011 3:34 PM (13 years ago)
Q: What is a troll?
A: A troll is a person who joins a forum simply because he feels bored. He does not follow proper etiquette or normal behaviour. His presence is disruptive and unwelcome in most cases.
Wikipedia: In
Internet slang, a troll is someone who posts inflammatory,
[2] extraneous, or off-topic messages in an online community, such as an online discussion forum, chat room, or blog, with the primary intent of provoking readers into an
emotional response
[3] or of otherwise disrupting normal on-topic discussion.
[4]

Q: How do I add an image to my post on the help forum?
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click to enlarge |
To add an image, click the down arrow as shown in the picture above.
You will see the following choices:
help articles
help forum
web
images
blogs
URL
Select [images]
type the word [images] inside the box
Click [search]
select [add]
This image will become an attachment to your posting.
source:
http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/blogger/thread?tid=19e18d6b81c78cc1&hl=en
Q: How do you deal with questions that don't offer details? It's difficult to guess what some of people are actually asking when they don't give details nor fill out the questions required of them.
A: This is exactly what helpers have to be prepared to deal with, on this help forum. A majority of the questions here are post by first time visitors. It is our job, as helpers, to try to educate all the new comers, in the best way that we know. I find [silent treatment] is a good strategy. It makes them think, why is there no response from any one. I find this method is very effective when used against thread hijackers, just ignore them when they are rude or trying to jump queue by using swear words, all capital letters (make noise), duplicate questions or some other tricks. I have seen them all.
Soon people will realize that helpers are not mind readers. They need to have specific data: URL, browser, location. A longer description of the problem never hurts. Many askers do not realize that helpers are unpaid volunteers. We are just bloggers who are trying to help a fellow blogger because Google does not operate a help desk; no email address and no telephone number available any where.
Q: I can't seem to find a place where I can easily change the font style of my blog description. How?
A: To change font under Advanced tab in template designer, you have to specify exactly which text you wish the font to change. It is not possible to change the font for every text all at once. Select one of these: Page, blog title, blog description, tabs text, date header, post title, gadget tile, gadget text, etc
*********************************************.
The answer to your question
design>template designer>advanced>blog description>font
Pick a font style
Click [apply to blog] to save changes
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design>template designer>templates
The permutations are unlimited under the template designer. No one has been to every corner of the template designer yet. Also, not every choice of template has the same features offered. Some times you may need to change the whole template, just to get a special feature you want:
On Blogger, we have 27 different templates under design>>template designer
Simple 7
Picture window 3
Awesome inc 6
Watermark 4
Ethereal 3
Travel 4
You can change the background, layout, adjust widths, advanced, etc to give you a unique template, different from everyone else. To save all your changes, click "apply to blog".
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Use a test blog
I would suggest starting a test blog and use that for finding your way around your blog:
On your dashboard, click [create a blog]. One Google account is good for 100 blogs
Here are my own test blogs:
Blogging is really a
personal journey of discovery. If we only have the help forum, the learning process will become too slow. We will be spending too much time asking questions and
waiting for answers on the help forum. This is a slow way of learning. A quicker method is by using a
test blog to try out ideas for ourselves. This is especially useful when we go into the the design tab to change the template in 1001 ways and we do not wish to screw up our main blog permanently. A test blog is very expendable. Please try using one or two test blogs. I know what I know now because I use test blogs, several of them.
source:
http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/blogger/thread?tid=306e5795ccec1201&hl=en&fid=306e5795ccec12010004a9dd23d18f2c
Q: How do I add a solid background to the blog title and description?
A: Remove your header image and choose a light colour background:
design>template designer>backgrounds
The permutations are unlimited. No one has been to every corner of the template designer yet. Also, not every choice of template has the same features offered.
You can even decide to change the whole template, just to get some special feature:
design>template designer>templates
I would suggest starting a test blog and use that for finding your way around your blog:
On your dashboard, click [create a blog]. One Google account is good for 100 blogs
Here are my own test blogs:
Blogging is really a personal journey of discovery. If we only have the help forum, the learning process will become too slow. We will be spending too much time asking questions and waiting for answers on the help forum. This is a slow way of learning. A quicker method is by using a test blog to try out ideas for ourselves. This is especially useful when we go into the the design tab to change the template in 1001 ways and we do not wish to screw up our main blog permanently. A test blog is very expendable. Please try using one or two test blogs.
53,000 followers
2 Aug 2011 8:11 PM (13 years ago)

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dog |
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Allie |
This blog has over 53,000 followers!
http://hyperboleandahalf.blogspot.com/
I do not understand why there are so many followers. I will try to find out the real reason for the popularity of this blog. I came across this blog on the help forum:
http://www.google.com/support/forum/p/blogger/thread?fid=760ba80bbbadaee80004a98b1761e0a1&hl=en
Update:
Here are some useful tips given by Allie the author:
Do you have any advice for new bloggers?
There really aren't any special secrets to being successful with blogging. Be nice. Try hard. If someone offers you a million dollars, say yes. Aside from that, the best advice I can give you is to just focus on what you can give to your readers.
People can't be tricked into liking something, so promotional tactics aren't going to automatically make you successful. In fact, I think promotional tactics often do just the opposite. Commonly recommended tactics like hosting blog give-aways, frequent guest-posting and/or link-trading, and posting links to your site all over the place can drastically dilute the quality of your content and make you seem very desperate. As for content, always try to view what you create from a reader's perspective - is it something you'd be interested in reading if you didn't know anything about yourself? Are your stories moving along or getting bogged down in details? Do your stories have a climactic moment or a payoff after the buildup?
Try to find ways to make your stories and experiences relatable to others. Use Google to research storytelling and test your stories out on friends and family. Spend a lot of time reading the work of people whose writing you enjoy and try to pin down what it is you enjoy about it. You can learn a lot by analyzing your own preferences. Become a sponge for information and constructive criticism. Always strive to improve and work really, really, really hard.
Also, paragraphs. Paragraphs are super important. Huge, unbroken walls of text are going to cause your readers' attention spans to shrivel up like an injured starfish.
And spelling. If you write like you're sitting there blithely hammering away at the keyboard with your fists, you will come off sounding like a troglodyte. It is terribly inconsiderate to expect your readers to wade through a wall of text speak and grammatically unsound ramblings.
If you're looking for shortcuts, you're doing it wrong. It might seem like this is an easy job or a quick way to make money, but it is absolutely not either of those things. It's nice to be able to set my own hours, but I probably end up working more hours than I would otherwise. It's enjoyable work and there are certainly much more grueling professions, but it is definitely not easy.
But if you really love what you're doing and you work very hard to make it entertaining and enjoyable, you'll do great.
There are various ways to upload a photo to your blog:
1. Blog this on Picasa
I used the [blog this] button to add this photo here.
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photo 1 |

On Picasa there is a [blog this] button. First I select a photo and put that in the tray. Then I press [blog this]. A new window opens, allowing me to select the blog where I want to upload this photo.
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photo 2 |
(click to enlarge)
Every thing is self explanatory. Just follow the prompts and your photo is uploaded to your blog. It will appear in a new post on top of all the other posts. I edited this post later, by adding text and photo 2 which is a screen capture (grab). I saved photo 2 to my desk top and uploaded it from there to this blog to use as an illustration.
2. Direct upload from your desk top
Place the cursor at a suitable spot inside the post editor and click:
the photo icon on the tool bar,
[choose files], select [desktop] and select photo 2,
click [open] and [add selected].
Photo 2 will appear inside your post editor.
Publish post
3. Picasa web album
Upload all your blog photos to Picasa web album in batches of 25, using the [Upload button] on Picasa. It is the first button with the green arrow. I used this to upload large numbers of images to Picasa Web Album. It took about 8 seconds per image. From there, it is a breeze to post them to your blog.
Whenever you require a photo, you just transfer that photo from PWA to your blog: On your post editor, click the photo icon on the tool bar as before.
Select [from Picasa Web Album]
Select album, select photos, [add selected].
The transfer is made instantly, no waiting and no limit on the number of photos selected.
Publish post.