finished the Skyline 21k (half marathon) trail race in 3:39:53!
Went out with the goal to have fun and try for sub-4, finished with smiles and a sub 3:40.
Superbly run event as always by @ScenaPerformance.com (@instagram.com/scenaperformance), race director Adam Ray, and all the great volunteers.
So many things went well. Race write-up to follow.
Previously:
* 2023: DNS Skyline 50k because of a bad fever from a blood bacteria infection caught in Wakefield MA (that’s whole other story, never going back there)
* 2022: 50k race PR at Skyline: https://tantek.com/2022/289/t1/hot-skyline50k-ultra-finish
#Skyline #21k #halfMarathon #trailRace #trailRun
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"text": "finished the Skyline 21k (half marathon) trail race in 3:39:53!\n\nWent out with the goal to have fun and try for sub-4, finished with smiles and a sub 3:40. \n\nSuperbly run event as always by @ScenaPerformance.com (@instagram.com/scenaperformance), race director Adam Ray, and all the great volunteers.\n\nSo many things went well. Race write-up to follow.\n\nPreviously:\n* 2023: DNS Skyline 50k because of a bad fever from a blood bacteria infection caught in Wakefield MA (that\u2019s whole other story, never going back there)\n* 2022: 50k race PR at Skyline: https://tantek.com/2022/289/t1/hot-skyline50k-ultra-finish\n\n#Skyline #21k #halfMarathon #trailRace #trailRun",
"html": "finished the Skyline 21k (half marathon) trail race in 3:39:53!<br /><br />Went out with the goal to have fun and try for sub-4, finished with smiles and a sub 3:40. <br /><br />Superbly run event as always by <a href=\"https://ScenaPerformance.com\">@ScenaPerformance.com</a> (<a href=\"https://instagram.com/scenaperformance\">@instagram.com/scenaperformance</a>), race director Adam Ray, and all the great volunteers.<br /><br />So many things went well. Race write-up to follow.<br /><br />Previously:<br />* 2023: DNS Skyline 50k because of a bad fever from a blood bacteria infection caught in Wakefield MA (that\u2019s whole other story, never going back there)<br />* 2022: 50k race PR at Skyline: <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2022/289/t1/hot-skyline50k-ultra-finish\">https://tantek.com/2022/289/t1/hot-skyline50k-ultra-finish</a><br /><br />#<span class=\"p-category\">Skyline</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">21k</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">halfMarathon</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">trailRace</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">trailRun</span>"
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📕 Finished reading The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix ISBN: 9780593201244
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"summary": "\ud83d\udcd5 Finished reading The Final Girl Support Group by Grady Hendrix ISBN: 9780593201244",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2024-08-03 22:29-0700",
"url": "https://tantek.com/2024/216/t1/socialcg-telcon",
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"text": "Good W3C SocialCG telcon yesterday morning.\n\nMinutes: https://www.w3.org/wiki/SocialCG/2024-08-02\n\nAppreciate working with @evan@cosocial.ca @dmitriz@mastodon.mit.edu @TallTed@mastodon.social @snarfed.org Lisa a @AaronNGray@fosstodon.org @bobwyman@mastodon.social @by_caballero@mastodon.social @j12t@j12t.social @steve@social.technoetic.com @thisismissem@hachyderm.io\n\n#W3C #SocialCG #20240802 #2024_215 #ActivityPub #ActivityStreams #relAuthor",
"html": "Good W3C SocialCG telcon yesterday morning.<br /><br />Minutes: <a href=\"https://www.w3.org/wiki/SocialCG/2024-08-02\">https://www.w3.org/wiki/SocialCG/2024-08-02</a><br /><br />Appreciate working with <a href=\"https://cosocial.ca/@evan\">@evan@cosocial.ca</a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.mit.edu/@dmitriz\">@dmitriz@mastodon.mit.edu</a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/@TallTed\">@TallTed@mastodon.social</a> <a href=\"https://snarfed.org\">@snarfed.org</a> Lisa a <a href=\"https://fosstodon.org/@AaronNGray\">@AaronNGray@fosstodon.org</a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/@bobwyman\">@bobwyman@mastodon.social</a> <a href=\"https://mastodon.social/@by_caballero\">@by_caballero@mastodon.social</a> <a href=\"https://j12t.social/@j12t\">@j12t@j12t.social</a> <a href=\"https://social.technoetic.com/@steve\">@steve@social.technoetic.com</a> <a href=\"https://hachyderm.io/@thisismissem\">@thisismissem@hachyderm.io</a><br /><br />#<span class=\"p-category\">W3C</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">SocialCG</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">20240802</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">2024_215</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">ActivityPub</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">ActivityStreams</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">relAuthor</span>"
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"text": "One of the biggest challenges with tools for making things, even just for the web, is there are so many to choose from. Nearly every tool has a learning curve to overcome before being able to use it efficiently. With proficiency, comes the ability to pursue more efficient use of tools, and find limitations, papercuts, or outright bugs in the tools. If it\u2019s an open source tool or you know its creator you can file or submit a bug report or feature request accordingly, which might result in an improved tool, eventually, or not. You have to decide whether any such tool is good enough, with tolerable faults, or if they\u2019re bad enough to consider switching tools, or so bad that you are compelled to make your own.\n\n\nThis post is my entry for the \n \n 2024 July IndieWeb Carnival theme of tools, \nhosted by James G., \nand also syndicated to IndieNews.\n\nCriteria\n\nI have many criteria for how I choose the tools I use, but nearly all of them come down to maximizing trust, efficiency, and focus, while minimizing frustration, overhead, and distraction. Some of these are baseline criteria for whether I will use a tool or not, and some are comparative criteria which help me decide which tool I choose from several options.\n\nTrustworthy tools should be:\nPredictable \u2014 it should be clear what the tool will do\nDependable \u2014 the tool should \u201cjust work\u201d as close to 100% of the time as possible\nActing as you direct it \u2014 the tool should do exactly what you direct it to do, and not what other parties, such as its creator or service provider, direct it to do\nForgiving \u2014 if you make a mistake, you should be able to undo or otherwise correct your mistake\nRobust enough to keep working even when not used for a while\nEfficient tools should:\nBe quick and easy to start using\nBe responsive, with as low a latency as possible, ideally zero perceptible latency\nReduce the work necessary to complete a task, or complete multiple tasks with same amount of work otherwise\nReduce the time necessary to complete a task, or complete multiple tasks in the same amount of time otherwise\nBe quick and easy to shut down, or otherwise put away\nUse little or no energy when not in use\nFocused and focusing tools should\nProvide clear features for accomplishing your goals\nEncourage or reinforce focusing on your tasks and goals\nNever interrupt you when you are using the tool to accomplish a task\nBad tools can have many sources of frustration, and nearly all of these involve inversions of the desirable qualities noted above. Frustrating tools are less predictable, work only some of the time, randomly do things because some other party directed them to (like auto-upgrade), ask you to confirm before doing actions because they have no capability to undo, or stop working for no particular reason.\n\n\nInefficient tools take too long to be \u201cready\u201d to use, are unresponsive of otherwise have a delay when you provide input before they respond, cause you more work to complete a task, or make you take more time than simpler older tools would, require waiting for them to shut down, or use energy even when you are not doing anything with them.\n\nUnfocused tools have many (nearly) useless features that have nothing to do with your goals, encourage or distract you with actions irrelevant to your tasks or goals, or interrupt you when you are working on a task.\n\nBaseline Writing Tools\n\nExamples of tools that satisfy all the above:\n\nPencil (with eraser) and paper\nA typewriter (ideally with a whiteout band) and paper\n\nThat\u2019s it, those are the baseline. When considering an alternative tool for similar tasks, such as writing, see if it measures up to those.\n\nTools I Like Using\n\nFor myself, I prefer to use: \n\n\nBBEdit \nfor writing, which requires near zero maintenance for years of reliable use, for both prose (and markup) for my posts, and code for my personal website\n\nMediaWiki based wikis for collaborative text authoring like on:\nindieweb.org\nwiki.mozilla.org\nwww.w3.org/wiki/\nand of course Wikipedia\n\n\nTools I Tolerate Using\n\nI do also use the iOS and MacOS \u201cNotes\u201d app notes to sometimes write parts of posts, and sync text notes across devices, both of which have unfortunately become just frustrating enough to be barely tolerable to use.\n \niOS Notes (as of iOS 17.5) are buggy when you scroll them and try to add to or edit the middle of notes. MacOS Notes have a very annoying feature where it tries to autocomplete names of people in your contacts when you type even just the first letter of their name or an @-sign, when you rarely if ever want that. MacOS Notes also forces anything that starts with a # (hash or pound) sign into a weird auto-linked hashtag that is nearly useless and breaks text selection.\n\n\nThere are no options or preferences to turn off or disable these annoying supposedly \u201chelpful\u201d automatic features.\n\n\nThere\u2019s definitely an opportunity for a simple, reliable, easy to sync across devices, plain text notes application to replace iOS and MacOS notes, that doesn\u2019t require signing up to some third-party service that will inevitably shut down or sell your information to advertisers or companies training their LLMs or leak your information due to poor security practices.\n\n\nSimilarly I also frequently use Gmail and Google Docs in my day-to-day work, and I\u2019ve grown relatively used to their lagginess, limitations, and weird user interface quirks. I use them as necessary for work and collaboration and otherwise do my best to minimize time spent in them.\n\nBetter Tools\n\nI have focused primarily on writing tools, however I have made many distinct choices for personal web development tools as well, from writing mostly directly in HTML and CSS, to bits in PHP and JavaScript, rather than frameworks that demand regular updates that I cannot trust to not break my code. I myself try to build tools that aspire to the criteria listed above.\n\n\nAt a high level, new tools should provide at least one of three things:\n\nHigher efficiency and/or quality: tools should help you do what you already could do, but faster, better, cheaper, and more precisely\nDemocratization: tools should help more people do what only a few could do before\nNovelty: tools should help you do new things that were either impossible before or not even imagined\n\nMostly I prefer to focus on the first of those, as there are plenty of \u201cobvious\u201d improvements to be made beyond existing tools, and such improvements have much more predictable effects. While democratization of tools is nearly always a good thing, I can think of a small handful of examples that demonstrate that sometimes it is not. That\u2019s worth a separate post.\n\nLastly, tools that help accomplish novel tasks that were previously impossible or not even imagined perhaps have the greatest risks and uncertainty, and thus I am ok with postponing exploring them for now. \n\n\nI wrote a few general thoughts on what tools and innovations to pursue and considerations thereof in my prior post: \nResponsible Inventing.",
"html": "<p>\nOne of the biggest challenges with tools for making things, even just for the web, is there are so many to choose from. Nearly every tool has a learning curve to overcome before being able to use it efficiently. With proficiency, comes the ability to pursue more efficient use of tools, and find limitations, papercuts, or outright bugs in the tools. If it\u2019s an open source tool or you know its creator you can file or submit a bug report or feature request accordingly, which might result in an improved tool, eventually, or not. You have to decide whether any such tool is good enough, with tolerable faults, or if they\u2019re bad enough to consider switching tools, or so bad that you are compelled to make your own.\n</p>\n<p>\nThis post is my entry for the \n<a href=\"https://jamesg.blog/2024/07/01/indieweb-carnival-tools/\"> \n 2024 July IndieWeb Carnival theme of tools</a>, \nhosted by <a href=\"https://jamesg.blog/\" class=\"h-card\">James <abbr>G.</abbr></a>, \nand also <a class=\"u-syndication\" href=\"https://news.indieweb.org/en/tantek.com/2024/213/b1/choosing-tools\">syndicated to IndieNews</a>.\n</p>\n<h2>Criteria</h2>\n<p>\nI have many criteria for how I choose the tools I use, but nearly all of them come down to maximizing trust, efficiency, and focus, while minimizing frustration, overhead, and distraction. Some of these are baseline criteria for whether I will use a tool or not, and some are comparative criteria which help me decide which tool I choose from several options.\n</p>\n<p>Trustworthy tools should be:</p>\n<ul><li>Predictable \u2014 it should be clear what the tool will do</li>\n<li>Dependable \u2014 the tool should \u201cjust work\u201d as close to 100% of the time as possible</li>\n<li>Acting as you direct it \u2014 the tool should do exactly what you direct it to do, and not what other parties, such as its creator or service provider, direct it to do</li>\n<li>Forgiving \u2014 if you make a mistake, you should be able to undo or otherwise correct your mistake</li>\n<li>Robust enough to keep working even when not used for a while</li>\n</ul><p>Efficient tools should:</p>\n<ul><li>Be quick and easy to start using</li>\n<li>Be responsive, with as low a latency as possible, ideally zero perceptible latency</li>\n<li>Reduce the work necessary to complete a task, or complete multiple tasks with same amount of work otherwise</li>\n<li>Reduce the time necessary to complete a task, or complete multiple tasks in the same amount of time otherwise</li>\n<li>Be quick and easy to shut down, or otherwise put away</li>\n<li>Use little or no energy when not in use</li>\n</ul><p>Focused and focusing tools should</p>\n<ul><li>Provide clear features for accomplishing your goals</li>\n<li>Encourage or reinforce focusing on your tasks and goals</li>\n<li>Never interrupt you when you are using the tool to accomplish a task</li>\n</ul><p>Bad tools can have many sources of frustration, and nearly all of these involve inversions of the desirable qualities noted above. Frustrating tools are less predictable, work only some of the time, randomly do things because some other party directed them to (like auto-upgrade), ask you to confirm before doing actions because they have no capability to undo, or stop working for no particular reason.\n</p>\n<p>\nInefficient tools take too long to be \u201cready\u201d to use, are unresponsive of otherwise have a delay when you provide input before they respond, cause you more work to complete a task, or make you take more time than simpler older tools would, require waiting for them to shut down, or use energy even when you are not doing anything with them.\n</p>\n<p>Unfocused tools have many (nearly) useless features that have nothing to do with your goals, encourage or distract you with actions irrelevant to your tasks or goals, or interrupt you when you are working on a task.\n</p>\n<h2>Baseline Writing Tools</h2>\n<p>\nExamples of tools that satisfy all the above:\n</p>\n<ul><li>Pencil (with eraser) and paper</li>\n<li>A typewriter (ideally with a whiteout band) and paper</li>\n</ul><p>\nThat\u2019s it, those are the baseline. When considering an alternative tool for similar tasks, such as writing, see if it measures up to those.\n</p>\n<h2>Tools I Like Using</h2>\n<p>\nFor myself, I prefer to use: \n</p>\n<ul><li>\n<a href=\"http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit/index.html\">BBEdit</a> \nfor writing, which requires near zero maintenance for years of reliable use, for both prose (and markup) for my posts, and code for my personal website</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki\">MediaWiki</a> based wikis for collaborative text authoring like on:\n<ul><li><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/\">indieweb.org</a></li>\n<li><a href=\"https://wiki.mozilla.org/\">wiki.mozilla.org</a></li>\n<li><a href=\"https://www.w3.org/wiki/\">www.w3.org/wiki/</a></li>\n<li>and of course <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/\">Wikipedia</a>\n</li>\n</ul></li>\n</ul><h2>Tools I Tolerate Using</h2>\n<p>\nI do also use the iOS and MacOS \u201cNotes\u201d app notes to sometimes write parts of posts, and sync text notes across devices, both of which have unfortunately become just frustrating enough to be barely tolerable to use.\n</p> \n<p>iOS Notes (as of iOS 17.5) are buggy when you scroll them and try to add to or edit the middle of notes. MacOS Notes have a very annoying feature where it tries to autocomplete names of people in your contacts when you type even just the first letter of their name or an @-sign, when you rarely if ever want that. MacOS Notes also forces anything that starts with a # (hash or pound) sign into a weird auto-linked hashtag that is nearly useless and breaks text selection.\n</p>\n<p>\nThere are no options or preferences to turn off or disable these annoying supposedly \u201chelpful\u201d automatic features.\n</p>\n<p>\nThere\u2019s definitely an opportunity for a simple, reliable, easy to sync across devices, plain text notes application to replace iOS and MacOS notes, that doesn\u2019t require signing up to some third-party service that will inevitably shut down or sell your information to advertisers or companies training their LLMs or leak your information due to poor security practices.\n</p>\n<p>\nSimilarly I also frequently use Gmail and Google Docs in my day-to-day work, and I\u2019ve grown relatively used to their lagginess, limitations, and weird user interface quirks. I use them as necessary for work and collaboration and otherwise do my best to minimize time spent in them.\n</p>\n<h2>Better Tools</h2>\n<p>\nI have focused primarily on writing tools, however I have made many distinct choices for personal web development tools as well, from writing mostly directly in HTML and CSS, to bits in PHP and JavaScript, rather than frameworks that demand regular updates that I cannot trust to not break my code. I myself try to build tools that aspire to the criteria listed above.\n</p>\n<p>\nAt a high level, new tools should provide at least one of three things:\n</p>\n<ol><li>Higher efficiency and/or quality: tools should help you do what you already could do, but faster, better, cheaper, and more precisely</li>\n<li>Democratization: tools should help more people do what only a few could do before</li>\n<li>Novelty: tools should help you do new things that were either impossible before or not even imagined</li>\n</ol><p>\nMostly I prefer to focus on the first of those, as there are plenty of \u201cobvious\u201d improvements to be made beyond existing tools, and such improvements have much more predictable effects. While democratization of tools is nearly always a good thing, I can think of a small handful of examples that demonstrate that sometimes it is not. That\u2019s worth a separate post.\n</p>\n<p>Lastly, tools that help accomplish novel tasks that were previously impossible or not even imagined perhaps have the greatest risks and uncertainty, and thus I am ok with postponing exploring them for now. \n</p>\n<p>\nI wrote a few general thoughts on what tools and innovations to pursue and considerations thereof in my prior post: \n<a href=\"https://tantek.com/2024/180/b1/responsible-inventing\">Responsible Inventing</a>.\n</p>"
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Oh! Dang! Many thanks to Kristof for pointing out a glaring oversight in my recent updates to make the IndieWeb Webring 🕸️💍 more deterministic:
https://kiko.io/notes/2024/The-fun-of-randomness-in-a-Webring/
I forgot to give the “random site” feature its own link!
It’s back! You can now visit 🕸️💍.ws/random to go to a random active site on the ring.
It’s also linked on the landing page of the webring.
For best results, add it to your bookmarks! 🔖🕸️💍🎲
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"text": "Oh! Dang! Many thanks to Kristof for pointing out a glaring oversight in my recent updates to make the IndieWeb Webring \ud83d\udd78\ufe0f\ud83d\udc8d more deterministic:\nhttps://kiko.io/notes/2024/The-fun-of-randomness-in-a-Webring/\nI forgot to give the \u201crandom site\u201d feature its own link!\nIt\u2019s back! You can now visit \ud83d\udd78\ufe0f\ud83d\udc8d.ws/random to go to a random active site on the ring.\nIt\u2019s also linked on the landing page of the webring.\nFor best results, add it to your bookmarks! \ud83d\udd16\ud83d\udd78\ufe0f\ud83d\udc8d\ud83c\udfb2",
"html": "<p>Oh! Dang! Many thanks to <a href=\"https://kiko.io/\">Kristof</a> for pointing out a glaring oversight in my <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2024/06/23/ordering-an-indieweb-webring/\">recent updates to make the IndieWeb Webring \ud83d\udd78\ufe0f\ud83d\udc8d more deterministic</a>:</p>\n<p><a href=\"https://kiko.io/notes/2024/The-fun-of-randomness-in-a-Webring/\">https://kiko.io/notes/2024/The-fun-of-randomness-in-a-Webring/</a></p>\n<p>I forgot to give the \u201crandom site\u201d feature its own link!</p>\n<p>It\u2019s back! You can now visit <a href=\"https://xn--sr8hvo.ws/random\">\ud83d\udd78\ufe0f\ud83d\udc8d.ws/random</a> to go to a random active site on the ring.</p>\n<p>It\u2019s also linked on the landing page of the webring.</p>\n<p>For best results, add it to your bookmarks! \ud83d\udd16\ud83d\udd78\ufe0f\ud83d\udc8d\ud83c\udfb2</p>"
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I've been finishing my 100 short 30-60-second songs by uploading them to an AI tool and having it extend them. So far I'm done with 60/100 songs! I also started making videos to document the process, and the first video is up!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88aDTntYMmM
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"text": "I've been finishing my 100 short 30-60-second songs by uploading them to an AI tool and having it extend them. So far I'm done with 60/100 songs! I also started making videos to document the process, and the first video is up! \n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88aDTntYMmM",
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{
"type": "event",
"name": "\ud83d\uddd3\ufe0f The Level Up with XP",
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"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2024/07/27/the-level-up-with-xp/",
"featured": "https://res.cloudinary.com/schmarty/image/fetch/w_960,c_fill/https://media.martymcgui.re/6d/c0/7e/5e/312a71110e29276f111559c4c1df853c524569fc963ca2846d259cc4.png",
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"content": {
"text": "The Level Up is a LOOSELY video game-themed indie improv showcase! Come and see some of the freshest talent in the New York indie improv scene!\n\nI\u2019ll be playing in with Philip and the rest of the Level Up!\nLooking forward to it! And to seeing you there!!\nMagnet Theater\n\n254 West 29th St (btwn 7th and 8th Ave.)\n\nNew York City, NY 10001\n\nTickets $10: https://magnettheater.com/show/58638/",
"html": "<blockquote>\n<p>The Level Up is a LOOSELY video game-themed indie improv showcase! Come and see some of the freshest talent in the New York indie improv scene!</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>I\u2019ll be playing in with Philip and the rest of the Level Up!</p>\n<p>Looking forward to it! And to seeing you there!!</p>\n<p>Magnet Theater<br />\n254 West 29th St (btwn 7th and 8th Ave.)<br />\nNew York City, NY 10001<br />\nTickets $10: <a href=\"https://magnettheater.com/show/58638/\">https://magnettheater.com/show/58638/</a></p>"
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"text": "The Level Up is a LOOSELY video game-themed indie improv showcase! Come and see some of the freshest talent in the New York indie improv scene!\n\nI\u2019ll be playing in with Philip and the rest of the Level Up!\nLooking forward to it! And to seeing you there!!\nMagnet Theater\n\n254 West 29th St (btwn 7th and 8th Ave.)\n\nNew York City, NY 10001\n\nTickets $10: https://magnettheater.com/show/58568",
"html": "<blockquote>\n<p>The Level Up is a LOOSELY video game-themed indie improv showcase! Come and see some of the freshest talent in the New York indie improv scene!</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>I\u2019ll be playing in with Philip and the rest of the Level Up!</p>\n<p>Looking forward to it! And to seeing you there!!</p>\n<p>Magnet Theater<br />\n254 West 29th St (btwn 7th and 8th Ave.)<br />\nNew York City, NY 10001<br />\nTickets $10: <a href=\"https://magnettheater.com/show/58568\">https://magnettheater.com/show/58568</a></p>"
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I’ve been using Insomnia for testing API calls for a while and have been mostly pleased with it. Today I noticed I was several versions behind and the app no longer seemed to have a Check for Updates option. I went to their site and found new versions.
I made the mistake of just installing the latest version, thinking the upgrade would go smoothly. The new version opened without any of my API request collections. It looked like it found some older collections, but I had to login in order to migrate them. That was frustrating, especially since I’m not using any of their cloud or paid features, but sure, I’ll sign up for an account since you’re holding it hostage.
After entering my email, it told me to enter the verification code they sent me. No email came from them, though. I tried to re-send it and still no dice after waiting for half an hour. I get that this is a nice way to verify the authenticity of an email address, but it’s very frustrating that it prevents me from even using the app. They should at least let people sign in and then prompt to verify the email address as a separate step.
At that point I did what I should have done first 🤣 and searched for issues with upgrading. I was very much not alone. From that thread, I found that several people had downgraded to version 2023.5.8
, the last version before version 8, and their collections were restored. I did that and voila, my collections are back! I immediately turned off the preference to automatically download software updates.
I should probably switch to Postman, but also found Hoppscotch.io and httpie recommended as open source options, so I’ll check into those too.
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"text": "I\u2019ve been using Insomnia for testing API calls for a while and have been mostly pleased with it. Today I noticed I was several versions behind and the app no longer seemed to have a Check for Updates option. I went to their site and found new versions.\n\nI made the mistake of just installing the latest version, thinking the upgrade would go smoothly. The new version opened without any of my API request collections. It looked like it found some older collections, but I had to login in order to migrate them. That was frustrating, especially since I\u2019m not using any of their cloud or paid features, but sure, I\u2019ll sign up for an account since you\u2019re holding it hostage.\n\nAfter entering my email, it told me to enter the verification code they sent me. No email came from them, though. I tried to re-send it and still no dice after waiting for half an hour. I get that this is a nice way to verify the authenticity of an email address, but it\u2019s very frustrating that it prevents me from even using the app. They should at least let people sign in and then prompt to verify the email address as a separate step.\n\nAt that point I did what I should have done first \ud83e\udd23 and searched for issues with upgrading. I was very much not alone. From that thread, I found that several people had downgraded to version 2023.5.8, the last version before version 8, and their collections were restored. I did that and voila, my collections are back! I immediately turned off the preference to automatically download software updates.\n\nI should probably switch to Postman, but also found Hoppscotch.io and httpie recommended as open source options, so I\u2019ll check into those too.",
"html": "<p>I\u2019ve been using <a href=\"https://insomnia.rest/\">Insomnia</a> for testing API calls for a while and have been mostly pleased with it. Today I noticed I was several versions behind and the app no longer seemed to have a Check for Updates option. I went to their site and found new versions.</p>\n\n<p>I made the mistake of just installing the latest version, thinking the upgrade would go smoothly. The new version opened without any of my API request collections. It looked like it found some older collections, but I had to login in order to migrate them. That was frustrating, especially since I\u2019m not using any of their cloud or paid features, but sure, I\u2019ll sign up for an account since you\u2019re holding it hostage.</p>\n\n<p>After entering my email, it told me to enter the verification code they sent me. No email came from them, though. I tried to re-send it and still no dice after waiting for half an hour. I get that this is a nice way to verify the authenticity of an email address, but it\u2019s very frustrating that it prevents me from even using the app. They should at least let people sign in and then prompt to verify the email address as a separate step.</p>\n\n<p>At that point I did what I should have done <em>first</em> \ud83e\udd23 and searched for issues with upgrading. <a href=\"https://github.com/Kong/insomnia/issues/5167#issuecomment-1370014676\">I was very much not alone</a>. From that thread, I found that several people had downgraded to version <code><a href=\"https://github.com/Kong/insomnia/releases/tag/core%402023.5.8\">2023.5.8</a></code>, the last version before version 8, and their collections were restored. I did that and voila, my collections are back! I immediately turned off the preference to automatically download software updates.</p>\n\n<p>I should probably switch to <a href=\"https://www.postman.com/\">Postman</a>, but also found <a href=\"https://docs.hoppscotch.io/\">Hoppscotch.io</a> and <a href=\"https://httpie.io/\">httpie</a> recommended as open source options, so I\u2019ll check into those too.</p>"
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"type": "card",
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Periodic reminder to myself as much as anyone else: foster an environment of delight around learning new things rather than shock that someone doesn’t know something, no matter how “common” it is. Evergreen xkcd: xkcd.com/1053/
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"text": "Periodic reminder to myself as much as anyone else: foster an environment of delight around learning new things rather than shock that someone doesn\u2019t know something, no matter how \u201ccommon\u201d it is. Evergreen xkcd: xkcd.com/1053/",
"html": "<p>Periodic reminder to myself as much as anyone else: foster an environment of delight around learning new things rather than shock that someone doesn\u2019t know something, no matter how \u201ccommon\u201d it is. Evergreen xkcd: <a href=\"https://xkcd.com/1053/\">xkcd.com/1053/</a></p>"
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"type": "card",
"name": "gRegor Morrill",
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Authoritarian court says, “Sure, criminalize unhoused people” and “progressive” governor jumps right on the bandwagon. Cool cool cool.
It is increasingly important to connect with our communities and mutual aid groups. There are plenty of needs to meet. We are all we got.
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"text": "Authoritarian court says, \u201cSure, criminalize unhoused people\u201d and \u201cprogressive\u201d governor jumps right on the bandwagon. Cool cool cool.\n\nIt is increasingly important to connect with our communities and mutual aid groups. There are plenty of needs to meet. We are all we got.",
"html": "<p>Authoritarian court says, \u201cSure, criminalize unhoused people\u201d and \u201cprogressive\u201d governor <a href=\"https://www.cnn.com/2024/07/25/us/gavin-newsom-executive-order-homeless-encampments/index.html\">jumps right on the bandwagon</a>. Cool cool cool.</p>\n\n<p>It is increasingly important to connect with our communities and mutual aid groups. There are plenty of needs to meet. We are all we got.</p>"
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"type": "card",
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{
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{
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"published": "2024-07-24T22:27:23-07:00",
"url": "https://beesbuzz.biz/blog/9945-Updates",
"name": "Updates",
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "fluffy",
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{
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