tenna

A critter on the internet

Avatar by Sol


A techie critter and casual streamer in their mid-twenties with interests in webhosting. Known for running web servers on things that shouldn't run web servers, turning others into similar looking blue raccoons, and being a little bit bigger than average.


Disclaimer: All content posted here are my own, and don’t necessarily represent my employer’s positions, strategies, or options.


I post non-lewd kink, but make best efforts to tag it 18+. This might not always happen, however (especially if it's only adjacent to it.) Please only follow if you are 18+.

Additionally, please put something in your profile before following me. I probably won’t block over it or anything, but I get a little anxious when I’m followed by an empty account.



outer fediverse, public
@tenna@blimps.xyz
atproto (bluesky)
@tenna.zip
website league
@tenna@pleasetf.me

posts from @tenna tagged #if you type your lengthy sentence tag somewhere else, then copy-paste it into the tag field, it'll also show up as one single tag including your commas

also:

wobblegong
@wobblegong

Tumblr tags have always relied on the humble comma to separate them and cohost uses this functionality as well. Well, at some point someone discovered there's a secret magical comma that will appear as a comma in tumblr tags, without separating them. tumblr user ceescedasticity's sleuthing suggests it's Single Low-9 Quotation Mark, Unicode U+201A but whether that's right or not you can copy it right here:

and stick it in all the tags you want. Make your run-on sentence tags even more insufferable! I know I will.


More hot tips straight from the rechost press:
  • per xkeeper copy-pasting to drop a regular comma in works too!
  • per tati copy-pasting to drop the whole tag in is also an option!
  • per lexyeevee mobile doesn't even need to think about it because commas don't automatically end tags there!
  • and per VampireExpert in the comments screenreaders can't be expected to think this tomfoolery is a normal comma, so if any of the above allow you to use a normal comma, it's a good choice for accessibility purposes!