Christina Hartmann, who was born deaf, writes beautifully about her experience of silence in the years after getting a cochlear implant:
Whenever the noise becomes too much, I can turn it off. All it takes is a press of a button. Or, even better, I remove my earpiece entirely. Sound is now off.
This silence is the most absolute that any human can experience, one beyond the best noise-canceling headphones or earplugs. It’s a tranquil state of being, as if I were at a deserted lake on a windless day: still and serene. I do my best thinking here, shielded from the noisy world.
At 13:20 in IndieWeb with Wordpress Tutorial: Themes and Microformats, the indieweb wordpress themes wiki page is referenced and a fork of the twentysixteen wordpress theme is mentioned. Is that theme the same as this 2016-child-theme-for-indieweb github repo and is it meant to be used with the mf2 wordpress plugin?
I think Twitter should reverse course on this whole thing. Replace the now-deprecated third-party client APIs with new ones, let third-party clients flourish, and figure out a way to make money from them.
Sadly, we all know that won’t happen. I’m not even sure it’s the right path forward. If we want an ecosystem of third-party microbloggers, I think Manton has found the better path. His micro.blog clients are the first “indie web” apps I’ve run across with a great user experience. The open nature of the service makes it possible and desirable for other great apps, like Icro, to flourish.
Julia Evans, a talented engineer and illustrator, made a series of programmer ’zines that I’ve happily collected:
I’m reminded a bit of Forrest Mims’ Getting Started in Electronics and a bit of countercultural artifacts from the early PC era.
Apparently Julia just started a company to manage sales. I look forward to reading more of her ’zines in the future.
Marco Arment seems to have a knack for doing little things that are, upon reflection, actually quite big.
This week, Marco suggested a strategy for designating payment links in podcast show notes; the next version of his Overcast podcast app will have built-in support.
This is a small increment that, if widely adopted, will make the open web meaningfully better. Better still: there’s no reason adoption should be limited to podcasts; that just happens to be the corner of the open web that Marco is most invested in (and that, at least today, has the most traction).
Revisiting Mastodon three months (and many angry @jack tweets) later:
It’s not clear to me what’s driving the growth in instances: my assumption was that disaffected Twitter users would flock to well-known servers (like mastodon.social and mastodon.xyz) but it appears that self-hosting is becoming increasingly common. Perhaps this says something about the kind of Twitter user that considers Mastodon a viable alternative?
Sad that I couldn’t make it to #DWebSummit, but I’m enjoying watching the live feeds: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFa_X02QhJnP0FNpFAKyRRg/feed
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