I think the “one post” aspect of One Post Wonder is going to hamper (and is already hampering) its success, and it needs to be done away with.

Users need to be able to post when the whim strikes.

If I understand the reasoning behind “one post”, it is the thought is that having just one post per person per day will reduce the amount of clutter in a news feed, making it manageable. 

I think there are many things to challenge about the above, not only about the desired outcome, but about the means by which one may achieve it. 

What is “too much”, when it comes to a social media feed? 

One person’s firehose is another person’s dripping kitchen sink. 

If you restrict post frequency so that the only available output rate is a drip, then you will lose two kinds of people — the people who want a firehose, and people who would otherwise help create a firehose.  Both of these kinds of people are high engagers. They, jokes aside, make a site sticky -- with long, frequent visits. They enliven a site and tend to produce the content that first-timers, lurkers and casuls eat up.

But if you chase high frequency posters and eager readers away, all you are left with people who are okay with not posting much, and people who don’t read much because there isn’t much there. These are low engagers. And because their engagement is low, they tend to drift away if something better comes along. There's nothing to keep them around absent some external force (like knowing Tom personally).

I've certainly seen people come, and then go. Even people who know Tom. 

And I've certainly been basically laughed at on Facebook for suggesting a site where you can only post once a day. "Be serious," my friends might say, "the only way we can really stay in touch with each other is through posting online, why the hell would I get anything out of an internet site that intentionally discourages me from interacting with my friends?" 

Don't restrict writing; Instead, empower reading

The internet thrives on original content. There are enormously successful sites out there that do nothing other than repost other people’s content.

Social media sites are even more hungry for content, because humans thrive on social contact. Thrive, hell, we require it if we're not to fade into darkness.

If the problem that OPW was created to face down is “there is too much crap posted on sites like Facebook, so much so that the site is forced to filter it for us -- in an opaque fashion that only suits their needs and we can never really see what our friends are doing” then I think there is another way to solve the problem.

Don’t restrict the amount of posts -- posts are content. Content is the fuel that drives the internet, and social contact is the fuel that makes humanity go.

Without a deep, self-reinforcing wellspring of fuel that can only be produced by hungry readers driven by engaged writers, One Post Wonder is likely going to be forever just running on fumes, doomed to the dusty back-roads of the Internet, never really getting above walking speed.

So, instead of restricting the content for everyone based on one person's idea of the right amount of posting, allow each user to decide for themselves how much content is enough by giving them tools to manage and filter their own feeds.  And let everyone post as much as they want.

In other words, getting all Kurzweil on you, instead of using technology in a negative way, saying "you can't do that, it's not allowed", use it in a positive way to giving users control over their lives.

Initial OPW changes

I am proposing several changes, most of which are fairly lightweight to implement.

First, allow people to post as often as they wish.

Second, encourage social connection-reinforcing short posts like FB check-in updates or tweets or whatever you want to call them. These little “blurbs” (<200 characters or so) don’t get a title, and are shown in a compact form with just the text, icon, and dateline.  They won't take up much space on the screen but they'll help bond people together just the same. (Note that we keep the beautiful formatting for long posts, which will continue to encourage long-form quality content. I don't want to take that away.)

Third, on a user’s profile page, show an average post frequency of how many short/long posts per day/week that person makes, based perhaps on the past month. This will give you some idea of what kind of commitment following a particular user might engender.

And fourth, when you follow a user, you can choose the level of engagement you want with that user. We can call that level of engagement the user “rating”. You can change the rating at any time. And no one can see what rating you’ve given to someone else.  I freely admit this idea was in part inspired by ello.

The rating works altering how posts from that user are shown on your read page.

Level 1 is “bestie.”  All posts are shown, fully expanded, automatically.

Level 2 is “buddy.” Long posts are shown in compact form (300-400px tall) with the expander thumb-tab to reveal the rest. 

Level 3 is “bozo.” All posts from this user are shown in abbreviated blurb form with an expander. 

On someone’s own profile page, their posts are always shown at level 2 so that it’s easier to scroll through them.

Later Changes

Favourites. I would also like to add an opaque “favourite/like” system where you can mark any post as a favourite. You should be able to access your list of favourite posts separately.

Perhaps more interestingly, the number of favourites a post has vs. number of followers that user has might convey a sort of “warm/cool” rating about the post that could be shown in a small indicator on the post, letting them know there's something worthwhile to see even if the post is minimized in the "bozo" presentation.

Repost. I think the ability to say “hey look at this great post/user” is a vital part of social media and sharing. You should be able to echo a post to your own feed, but only if the post is public.

Sharing / reposting is huge on Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr. It's an enormously successful way of expanding networks, and is particularly effective at enhancing discovery. I think it's essential on social media sites.  

How I think about it

Here's the super simple "thought experiment" I contrived which ultimately convinced me that OPW needs to change.

Imagine a clone of OPW, alike in every way, except without the one post per day limit. Put both sites on the internet at the same time. Which site is going to have more writer engagement, more content, higher reader engagement, higher overall user retention, and that much more sticky browsing experience that is so beloved by people who might wish to pay for eyeballs?

I just don't see how a "one post a day" version of the site, as opposed to a "post when you want" version, is in any way better for the users or for the developers. I've been bashing at this a month, and posting frequency is lower now than it was when I started. Either my changes really suck or some other factor is causing essentially negative uptake.

That's why I think it's time to "pivot".  Especially if One Post Wonder is to become a profitable undertaking. I think the elevator pitch goes something like "let's make a social media site that discourages everyone who wants to be highly engaged with it." ... at which point the person in the elevator pushes the Emergency Stop button and runs away.

Discussion is good

I posted this publicly because I think everyone reading this is likely invested in OPW to some degree and would like to see it succeed.

If some other change/idea/approach will have as dramatic a positive impact as I think removing the post limit would, then I think it's time to explore it earnestly.

Looking forward to thoughtful comments on all sides of the matter. 

MORE
10/3 '14 75 Comments
As an intermediate observation, perhaps, very early on -- before there was actually code, I think -- one floated notion was "credits" for, I think, days you didn't post at all, so that it was one post per day _on average_. Was that thrown out as needlessly complicated or something?
I particularly recall hearing it but I do recall thinking it. Perhaps with a max banked value of 2 or 3 posts.
s/i p/i don't p/
> s/i p/i don't p/

(side note: I don't know what this means, but because I'm 12 I'm giggling because you typed "i don't p." huhhuhuhuhuhuhh)
Yeah, Beavis.
It means you should substitute "i don't p" for "i p" textually in Sean's comment to get what he meant to say. I'm sure he meant case insensitive, so thus: "I don't particularly recall..."
The most recent permutation was to allow a small number of "indulgences" to build up, at a rate of about one every seven days, to a limit of probably three indulgences total. Because otherwise it wouldn't feel like folks were posting once a day, ish, and you'd long for filters. (At the time, chucking the "mostly one post per day" rule wasn't under discussion.)
The truth is that I'm not wild about the idea, but it would in fact suit me okay in practice -- I'm unlikely to post every day, but on the other hand on days I do feel gregarious I'm inclined to post more than once. Sometimes, anyway. At the very least, having a couple of posts "banked" would alleviate the feeling of "can't post this, it's not important enough to burn my only post," I think.
To clarify, when I say "I'm not wild about the idea" I mean I'm still on board with "I wish the site would stop telling me to stop talking now."
Also, I think we need to do a better job of helping people find the content that is there. Tags? Shared interest discovery? We haven't put any time into helping people connect.
Discovery is really important and I think in future we might be able to algorithmically derive a "top accounts to follow" list by looking at favourites (when we have them) and followers.
We'd want to be able to manually curate the list, too, and there should be at least one "official OPW" account that everyone gets for news updates and so on.
And maybe there's a "person of the week" post in that account, or another account that's like "OPW community" or something.
Part of my thinking here comes from an experience I just had spiffing up the beta signup form.

I added a name field, to make it more practical for me to send invites to people I do know if they go that route. And then I thought, "and what about everybody else? What am I going to do with them? They won't be following anybody when they sign up, and there is no way to find anybody if you're not already following somebody."
Back in LJ's heyday (and before tags), the only way I found people to follow/friend was if they were a FOAF. I might have picked up one person through a common community, but that's it.

It might be neat that if we had a way to track people's interests (like LJ did) then when new joiners join, the site can offer the option to set them up with an OPW buddy whose interests overlap so they can have a seasoned pal on the site to show them around and answer questions. These 'buddies' would have to volunteer to be paired up with a newbie though.

Again, just thinking out loud here.
Have you considered and rejected just having a feed that displays all the public content, as if you were following everyone?
Indeed...

Right now that makes a ton of sense.

Pretty soon, it will be wacky, with the amount of content that will be pouring in.

Some time after that, it will be unsustainable. (;

Back to the original issue:

I have had some time to question my assumptions here... as a newcomer I am more likely to be interested in inviting my own actual friends than in talking to complete strangers. Um... right?

As Jill says, even on LJ (which had communities) she mostly did the FOAF thing. And maybe that's fine.
I think it is mostly fine. I actually met a few people through LJ's random feature, and one person through LJ's "last 50 images" not-a-feature, which an "all the things" feed would basically give me.

I feel like tools for discovery based on popularity basically just enable you to find George Takei, ursulav, and theferrett, who you're going to find eventually anyway.
I like the idea of random sampling. There are sustainable ways to provide that.
Sure, some kind of simple heuristic which looks for people who regularly make public posts, then picks maybe thirty at random, then runs the network tree for connection distance to you, and then shows them kinda sorted in that order.
Hmm, we could do that, but it might reveal things it shouldn't, privacywise, about who's a FOAFOAFOAF...?

I was thinking more like "random according to whatever's reasonably random plus convenient for our database sharding strategy," but I would think that.
My intuition says that third degree connections are probably iffy but fourth degree are reasonably safe. I don't know for sure.
A better strategy is probably some combination of frequency of posting, number of connections, frequency of receiving comments, and lots of random numbers.
But also re-posting/sharing, because that's how I find most people on Twitter and Tumbler etc.
It's in my queue to do something about pasting links in a post - it can automagically do what it does on Facebook and other social networks, presenting a nice little blurb-n'-link.
The "friends of friends" thing is quite nice, but yes, not useful if you don't already have some friends on the site. I agree that discovery is important... This is another area ello is currently frustrating.

How about the ability to search on bio contents? Simple enough for a start...
Some of the enhancements I am talking about are useful on any site whether or not it's got a post limit. Others are just trivial matters of how to display a post based on a flag. Small stuff technically even compared to locks.

So those can be done while the discussion rambles onward.

Meantime we can bend minds on figuring out how to raise engagement.

Something that would ALSO be useful on an unrestricted site.
R. Francis suggested I drop by. Interesting discussion.

What I like about OPW is that it seems much better suited to long-form compositions than Facebook. Facebook really is geared toward quick updates and link posts, with occasional discussion in comment threads, but it's not too friendly to longer musings. LiveJournal, though, was/is good for both. (It's hard to tell with Ello... primarily because Ello is so busted that I can't tell what people are using it for.)

But I've felt the same pressure of "Oh, better not post, 'cause that's my one for the day." And while the idea of saving up a handful is better than a hard limit, I find "average one per day" constraining. Concrete example: I wanted to post an anime review, but I waited until I had finished some series, because I felt I had to make a single post "worth it."

LJ and OPW share the highly desirable trait of knowing that I *can* see all my friends' writings. I know I'm missing stuff on Facebook, which is frustrating. (Even showing 'most recent', since Fb has that annoying habit of considering a post fresh when it is liked or commented on, even if it was written two days ago.) I have no idea whether I'm missing stuff on Ello, because I have no confidence that the engine is capable of showing me everything people are writing. Or maybe people really *are* that quiet, who knows.

But what's the deal maker-or-breaker for me? The *people*. Why did I get started on LiveJournal in the first place, lo these many years ago? All my mudder friends were getting into it. Why did I start on MySpace, hideous though it was? That's where the roller derby crowd was. Why did I migrate from both of those to Facebook (despite LiveJournal really having pretty much all the features I would look for)? That's where both of those groups migrated as well, and where I picked up family and friends-from-high-school and the con crew and so forth -- indeed, it's the first online venue I've ever been where all of my circles intersected. (And speaking of "circles", it's why I never went full-bore on Google+ -- a number of my friends started up there, but they fizzled quickly, and the action remained on the Fezbooks.)

So, yeah, OPW looks awesome, and I really like the topic prompts (though I usually already have something in mind when I come to post), and I like the feeling that I'm seeing everything my friends say. But to get beyond beta and conquer the world, it's gotta be ready for the onslaught of hordes, because nobody will want to stick with it unless they can bring ALL their friends.
Thanks for your thoughtful and insightful reply. I completely agree that it's people that make things work.
I am finding the observation that comments are more the place whereby one engages, rather than posts, to be interesting. If one has >1 unit of desire for social interaction per day on OPW, it will have to be through engaging with others rather than making a post.
I haven't changed my position re the above, but I think one of the things we can do to help with engagement is make the commenting system more engaging. I'm doing some design work on that today.
Yes yes yes. I'd love to pull more people in via commenting than via more posting. I honestly really like the one post limit, because it encourages me to post daily. I'm more engaged because of it, rather than less.
This. Yes. Commenting more than posting seems... Like a good thing.
I like this comment. I don't need a "like" button, though, I'm good.
I fourth this concept.
And now that I'm observing this (the one substantial comment thread I've seen on OPW so far), I'm missing some indication of when comments were posted so I can have a feel for what's newest...
Agreed. I really miss not having anything date/timestamped. I feel like I'm floating (uncomfortably) in space.
Fixed! Bahaha
Really giving the comment system a beating here. We should keep going and then after a while do a post-mortem on what's working and what isn't working with huge ass threads like this.
Heh, I was thinking that when I posted a few hours ago: this is probably the first test of a runaway comment thread. :)
I can already say that I'm wishing I could easily see all the comments I haven't read yet.
... Which would be easier if threads were nonhierarchical, but knowing who's talking about what would be harder.
As a veteran of the Metafilter wars, I prefer non-hierarchical threading. It scales better both for reading and rendering and makes checking for new content easier. The downside is having the potential for loudmouths to dominate swathes of screen real-estate but I don't see that *not* happening e.g. on livejournal or reddit.
If we went linear, but kept the "reply" button and made it embed an "in-reply-to" link with a tiny icon and excerpt (captured by highlighting text maybe).
An alternative I would also like would be tracking "new" comments with a timestamp method by session or by post, and when comments are expanded collapse "old" comment text into a single-line with an expander and dim or fade them slightly.
Ideas!
Hierarchical threading was rather passionately voted for in our original UX survey. Of course we who are actually livin' the life need not feel bound by that, but it is interesting.
It's one of those issues about which people have convictions of the One True Way -- the way I used to feel about Python's syntax-significant whitespace before I got over it and just had to get my job done.

Observation while posting this particular comment, which is at the bottom of the thread: I clicked Reply, and OPW opened the comment box but then scrolled up to somewhere in the middle of the page and I had to scroll back down. Buh?
Interesting. That's not happening for me in Firefox. What browser, OS and browser version? Thanks!
OS X 10.9.5, Google Chrome 37.0.2062.124. (I always keep on top of versions.)

Didn't happen with this comment. Hypothesis: I had clicked a notification to read a comment higher in the thread, then scrolled manually to the bottom, then when I clicked 'Reply' it took me back up to the comment whose notification I had clicked.
There is indeed some confusion with autoscroll and clicking reply in Chrome. I haven't mentioned it because distracted. Getting closer on the drafts/queue design!
We don't have to see all comments at the same time. Why not implement a feature like trn's thread display window? http://ennui.org/pics/trn-thread-window.png
Some sort of background highlighting on the comments that are new since the last time you viewed the thread could do the trick -- you could scan up and down to see what's new. For now I've been using the Notifications to find the new comments, but that involves a lot of clickin'.
Yeah, the notifications are helping, certainly, although since I'm not seeing any way to distinguish between a notification I've clicked on and one I haven't, I've ended up clicking the same notification three times now.

I definitely prefer hierarchical threads. I'd be happy with a different visual treatment of new-to-me comments, or some way to collapse comments I've seen before.
Timestamp based collapsing of threaded comments to a single line (with expander) if you've read them already is probably the thing we'll be able to do easiest/soonest. At least if we can get session timestamping to work intuitively.
On the other hand: I'm comfortable with an elision mechanism, like your "bestie/buddy/bozo" classification, as long as I'm guaranteed to see *some* marker of a post in my timeline. I mean, go ahead and invent smart filtering mechanisms that guess how much I'd want a given post to be shortened, *except* that you're not allowed to remove it entirely.
I wasn't suggesting hiding any content. If you follow someone, you'd see everything, though it might be smaller or abbreviated.
Should clarify, I guess. All posts from those you follow would be represented in some fashion but never fully hidden.
Another content generation idea: themes for the days of the week. This has been a popular meme on other services and we could bake it in. If there's a Dumb Post Day and a Cool Picture Day, nobody feels bad about writing a silly post or posting a cool picture.
I thought about posting a picture a day ... but then that's my post.
Right, but one thing I like about this site is that I know I'm seeing every post written by the people I'm following, in the order in which they were written. (That's comparable, for the most part, to Twitter, and definitely unlike FB.) No filtering mechanism is 100% reliable, and so as soon as I start classifying my social circle and their content I'll start getting that nagging feeling that I've missed something. OPW filters at the source, by forcing you to consider whether you've got something worth saying.

A small counter-proposal: what if you could write as many posts as you wanted, but the system only *published* one a day? That would limit my bandwidth to a predictable maximum, and load-balance authors across dry spells. The obvious downside: I might write something timely that's a few days stale by the time it's read.
>> The obvious downside: I might write something timely that's a few days stale by the time it's read.

I was thinking about the 'write as many posts as you want but only publish them daily' solution as well, and your quote above summarized why it wouldn't be so hot. Thanks for articulating it! :)
[aside: 'x' on a comment causing immediate unconfirmed deletion, or unconfirmed irretrievable deletion anywhere, is not particularly friendly]
I'm favourably impressed the discussion in this particular comment thread isn't devolving into either of the two common non-corrosive modes of social media comment:<ul><li>groupthink</li><li>a debate with two immovable positions, usually with at least one side dominated by an individual</li></ul>
Lots of us have known each other for a bit, and I think that helps.

And yes -- actually, one of the things I've publicly raged at on ello is the killer delete X no takebacks. Let's not keep that. :)
Another question:

Who even knows about One Post Wonder at this point?

Most of the invitations have gone to folks at least forty who have already been through the wars, social media wise.

Might the site, with its own retro set of rules, be an interesting set of creative constraints to younger folks who don't yet know it's here? Really only one way to know.
I'm quite happy with the idea of one post per day. Chafing at that constriction... I am not quite sure how to say what I want to say without being mean. We learn as children (hopefully) not to run off at the mouth every time we have a cool thought, but somehow typing to the world that way is seen as an aching need. As others have pointed out, we can always go back and add to a post, and there could be some kind of notification to followers that a post has been edited, perhaps? Also, you could always say: one post per day, but if you don't use that day then you can accrue credit days (up to some limit, after which days begin to expire) and use those credits to post more than once on any given day.
I share this sentiment, but I'm hoping the queue feature will address the concerns of those who don't.
I'm still a fan of the one-a-day concept, as well. Let's hope it works!
Thanks for putting this out there. It's a conversation that needs havin'.

I've talked about creating alternatives to Facebook many, many times.

But the one and only time I got any traction from friends on that idea was when I said, "how about a social network where you can only post once a day and it doesn't filter everything for you?"

People responded to that in a way they never had before.

Everything else I added to that proposal, I've suggested a half dozen times before. This was the new element.

Unless, and this is key, the new element was simply my timing. Maybe I chose a year when people are particularly sick of Facebook.

But I dunno about that. Because pretty much every year has had its Facebook privacy dustup, etc.

Here's a question: if One Post Wonder isn't about limiting posts to one a day, encouraging quality, and mellowing out to one good readin' session a day, what is it about? Should we all just go use Ello?

That's not a sarcastic question. Much as my heart says "of course not!", it's sensible to ask how more objective people (who didn't build this website) might answer.
Here's my handful of change:

First, I agree that the one post per day limit is stifling. I know this because it has stifled the hell out of me; I think "I should write a brief post about this" and then I think "but then that's it for the day" and then I don't do it. And that keeps happening and then I never post at all. So despite the domain name, I agree with Sean about the one post a day limit.

Secondly, some answers to "should we all just go use ello" and bear in mind that I have been trying to use ello and probably have posted as much as anyone I know on it: ello is nightmarish in many ways. Its UI is frankly horrible -- it may be artistically neat (although if so, I lack the aesthetic) but it is simply bad to use. OPW is not bad and it gets better all the time in this regard. Many people are simply appalled at the idea of another everything-is-public place, which ello is. OPW is not. And of course, there's the whole VC thing, which I shrug at a bit, but boy does it disturb others.

Truthfully, ello has one thing I find interesting, and that's the Friends/Noise thing. And here's where we get back to Sean's suggestions -- I really really like the idea of turning the firehose back on BUT letting people have a few different ways they engage. I like it so much I've gone back to Twitter and moved all non-personal accounts to a list called "pages" and unfollowed them all -- now they don't crowd my stream and I can go look at the "pages" list when I care to. But of course, Twitter has made that a huge hassle and it also gives the illusion that I'm not following those accounts at all. Fortunately, those non-personal accounts don't care, but my noisy friends might.

I'm not entirely sure about all of Sean's details; I need to read them again when my head isn't full and achy. But I think the gist is definitely worth a lot of consideration: don't turn off the spigot at the creative end; but rather let the (sorry about this word) consumer manage his or her consumption.
I agree that the spirit and intent behind OPW, to be a sustainable and transparent business, is a large part why I am interested in it, and why I have a base dubiousness about basically every other social site except perhaps Dreamwidth, which has its own problems.
I think OPW has advantages over other sites that aim for the same sorts of eyeballs in its better design, it's handling of privacy and security, and its stated goal of allowing users to pay to go ad-free. There are other smaller things that are good. It is a nice combination. I don't just arbitrarily sign up for projects on a whim. I think there's something here. And the analyst in me sees what works, and what doesn't -- in my view.
The biggest problems I see are the problem of content and engagement, which directly drive audience and sustainability. But restating those points won't make them more convincing.
Warning: this reply is all over the place and my thumbs are too tired to edit it into something cohesive. (Sorry.)

The LJ-and-internet-famous people Kyle Cassidy and Bart Calendar have been hyping a post by LJ-user "fengi" which says "Why not just try to bring people back to LJ?"
Here's a link I have handy: http://bart-calendar.livejournal.com/2767236.html

So... maybe I missed this already. But if we open OPW to multiple posts per day (which I think is a great idea, BTW), how is it different/better than LJ, other than the fact that it's owned and run by people we know, love, and trust?

I think many people have long-forgotten LJ accounts, and perceive going back to LJ as just that: "going back" to something they believe they left for a reason. It's a perception thing. Boutell posted on FB in early 2014 a thing encouraging people to post weekly to LJ, and it worked for 2 weeks and everyone went back to sharing Buzzfeed lists on FB again.

Then I think, "Well, most of my friends are in their early 40s and have kids and hobbies and stuff, and in their early 30s (LJ's heyday) they had more to talk about and more free time to do it, too. But in our early 40s, kids take up more time, we're slowing down a tad, and the TL,DR/ADD mentality is overtaking everyone. Why read or post long-form when Guy Fieri is on TV?

(And for the record for folks who don't know me: I'm child-free and I hate FB and rarely am on it. I'd rather not have contact with people than only contact them on FB.)
My reason for only very recently dropping my paid LJ account is this: they are advertising highly the pay-to-promote-post thing. Firstly, the world has enough places where money speaks louder, I'd say. Secondly, as someone already paying -- and I have done so for over a decade -- it is outrageous to me to immediately be faced with that pitch when I go to the site. So it's not just that it would be "going back"... It's that clearly there is no going back to the LJ I basically lived on way back when.
i still really like the one post a day; I don't feel... i dunno, so compelled to post. That said, if I feel like I need to add something? I can edit my existing post and add more. I actually like this solution to expanding my content, as it still encourages long form, and diary-style entries. Perhaps an opt-in notification system to alert folks to post edits on people they care about would help?
People should be able to post as often as they like, but the site should stick with the 'One Post' ethos by *publishing* only once a day.

I'm a dinosaur, but i would love to see the "newest first" newsfeed abolished. It has never made sense. There should be a way to set it so that when you visit OPW, it immediately takes you to the last point in your feed where you read, and you work your way forward from there, much like the newsreaders of yore (at the very least, make this an option). I will not buldge on this issue.
I like the idea of queueing up posts. You could remove 'em and rejigger 'em if you wanted. It might free various folks in this thread from the unpleasantness of wondering if your post is the best post you can post.
I like the idea of a notebook where you can work on multiple posts at once, and when you're happy with one, you can toss it into the queue. I'll probably work on some mockups for what that might look like in the next few days so we can think about whether it will help and how much hassle it would be.
Cool. I think the most important feature there is a way of saying "post this later if I don't change my mind" without making people who are indifferent to all this hideously confused. I bet it can be done.
So it occurred to me just now that having multiple saved drafts is a relatively cheap way to get into the queue idea -- that is, you let people decide for themselves when they want to actually post the entries by going to the site, selecting a draft and hitting post, and that's it for the day but they still have their other drafts. So: Write Anytime (and Any Number), Post Once Per Day.
We've got the design done, all that's left is implementation. We're quite excited about it.
By the way, this is how I post to Tumblr, and it's a great feature: I have it scheduled to post once every X hours (where X=6, I think, but it's not really important for this conversation) and I just queue up posts; I do this because I link to most of them on Twitter automatically and I don't want to spam Twitter with those link posts. I know lots of folks who like to collect stuff to post use the feature.

So yeah, queueing posts could be good; people will need to be reminded that saying "today I..." and the like might be misleading.
Though it's not perfect given the firehose I ask it to present when I'm offline for about a full day, I appreciate my Twitter client (Echofon Pro) letting me have a default of "where I left off" that it usually gets close enough to right for that medium.
Huh. My own experience has been that Twitter is such a firehose I am liberated from even trying to keep up in any way shape or form. But that no doubt has to do with how many people I'm following.