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文章列表

Compulsive curiosity, or, how I built an infinite idea machine Gift details on the subscriber portal Portal link in the archive nav The physicists who convinced Fermilab to send Brazil's emails First, add no friction: How micropayments lost and subscriptions won Filter subscribers and automations by source Automations, rebuilt What email will look like in the future Filter subscribers by bounce date and reason Email could have been X.400 times better Three features are moving behind the paywall Firewall changes and improvements Put your name and voice into your company newsletter Simplified email address settings Subscription wall Inboxes were overwhelming before we'd even named them The US government tried really hard to screw up email Public postmortem: database connection exhaustion Ask a nerd: what is the best way to unsubscribe from newsletters? Bookshop.org embeds Email was into agents before they were cool Passwordless login Rename metadata keys in bulk A spring cleaning for our legal docs Ask a nerd: what happens when you click the spam button? Passkey support for two-factor authentication How Buttondown's API versioning works Safer defaults for the email creation API How to send email to space How we enabled Content Security Policy for everyone Recovery codes for two-factor authentication Filter sent emails by engagement rate How we migrated to TypeIDs without breaking clients How we check every link in your email Use newsletter metadata in your emails Should we bring back email exploders? Sort and filter by open and click rates Custom click tracking domains More newsletter settings in the API Revamped replies Custom email templates for everyone Simplified cancellation Ask a Nerd: Does email length affect deliverability? The changelog, reborn Swedish localization Forwarding an email is not always straightforward Public descriptions for tags OpenAPI spec for archives How Rodrigo brings a humanistic view to consumer technology Subscribers can come from anywhere. Even another newsletter platform's form. Survey responses on the web How Brandon Lucas Green shares his music and supports artists Your newsletter's archives are more valuable than your list Better tag self-management Smarter automation filters Granular API keys Snippets New design settings pages Ask A Nerd: How does newsletter cadence affect deliverability? Starred views More ways to customize your archives Inbox filtering Mastodon follower analytics Ask a Nerd: What are good open, click, and response rates for an email newsletter? How we migrated our database to PlanetScale Two new archive themes Custom buttons now work in Markdown mode Ask a Nerd: Does attaching files to your newsletter hurt deliverability? Seline and Tinylytics support Unban subscribers Announcement bars for your archives Bang paths, source routing, and how email trips were planned Public postmortem: archive downtime 2025 disposables.app Russian localization Ask a Nerd: Can you improve email deliverability with a personal domain? More locale options How we interview customers at Buttondown Bluesky analytics Reply to conversations Minimum viable complexity How Jeffery Hicks goes behind-the-scenes in his newsletter Changes to our stack in 2025 2026: Emails TK reminders in the editor What the hell is a UTM? Randomize survey answer order Why we insourced analytics Scroll sync in the editor 2026: Archives How Jamie Thingelstad uses Buttondown to explore tech topics How Kelly Jensen uses Buttondown to discuss key library issues Keeping feature creep at bay Improved filters Content Security Policy in archives Open source Sniperl.ink Auto-activating RSS reader subscriptions What the hell is ActivityPub? How Igor Ranc built Berlin's largest expat tech newsletter
How Randall P. Girdner shares comics and maintains creative control
Asharee Peters · 2025-07-31 · via

Tell us a bit about yourself and your background.

My name is Randall P. Girdner. I am a teacher, writer, and artist, originally from Oklahoma but now proudly Canadian, who writes novels, makes films, and draws cartoons. You can find most of my things at www.gracelandwest.com.

What do you write about in your newsletter?

I am involved with two newsletters. My personal newsletter is Ridiculous Opinions. I started Ridiculous Opinions waaaaaay back in 2014 as a way to stay in touch with my students who would graduate from high school and then ABANDON ME. I wanted my kids to be able to still hear my lectures and ramblings and it seemed like a newsletter was the best place to do that. So, Ridiculous Opinions is more of a personal newsletter from a teacher with an odd point of view and a very specific audience.

But what is most exciting is the newsletter that I recently created called Sunday Comix. I have been putting comics on the web since 2010 (Maurice the Beaver), and I have been friends with webcomics artists online for a little while, and we are constantly lamenting the sad state of affairs for comics artists on the web. We put our work up for free and then are constantly subject to the whims of big tech. Whether it's a platform that changes trajectory entirely and becomes an unsafe place for us to add our work, or whether it's simply changing the granular aspects of how our work is seen on the web, we have a tendency to be blown around like the wind when it comes to our work. We have no control over things. 

One of our artists even made a video about it, which we included in the first newsletter.

So, we got together and created Sunday Comix, which is a way for us to send our work out to people who are interested in reading it. We retain control over how our work is presented, who our work is sent to, and how people can engage with the work, all in a way that avoids the dreaded algorithm and ensures that the people who want to see our work actually get to see it! 

So, just like the beloved Sunday Comic Strips from those long ago days in newspapers, we send out a newsletter every two weeks that enables readers to have a chuckle in a way that gives us ultimate control over our comics. So far, it's been very successful and we look forward to continuing to grow both our audience and our artists over time. Hopefully someday our Sunday Comix newsletter will be as popular as Sunday Comics were in original newspapers! A boy can dream...

Sunday Comix newsletter header

I've been using Buttondown for a couple of years now and have been extraordinarily happy with the results. 

Where did you first learn of Buttondown, and what made you decide to give it a try?

I've tried several newsletters over the years and after being subject to the continued whims of Big Tech, with their changing priorities and odd platform audiences, it seemed like Buttondown was the way to go. I did quite a bit of research and after some experiments, I realized that Buttondown had the things that I needed, while simultaneously being a down-to-earth company that was more interested in their customers than exponential growth. I've been using Buttondown for a couple of years now and have been extraordinarily happy with the results. 

I know what to expect when I type up a newsletter with Buttondown. I know what my audience needs, and I know that everything is reliable in terms of what I am looking for.

What are some ways Buttondown has helped you run your email?

Running a newsletter and producing it regularly is all about systems and processes. The more organized one is, the more likely they are able to maintain a schedule and keep their audience happy. Buttondown's success, for me, is their ability to NOT interfere with that schedule or those processes. I know what to expect when I type up a newsletter with Buttondown. I know what my audience needs, and I know that everything is reliable in terms of what I am looking for.

With that simplicity and ease of use, I don't have to think about anything other than the content that I am producing, and for that, I am happy as a clam!

What are some things you’d be excited to see Buttondown build in the next few months?

I'd love to see a bit more granular control over our newsletters. Because we produce an image-based newsletter, I would like to have a bit more control over how those images are presented. 

Anything else you’d like to add?

Nope! Happy with the service! Happy with future potential!