did you know you can just buy cup rinsers for your house??
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"text": "did you know you can just buy cup rinsers for your house??"
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we also moved the couch in today!
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It's kitchen organizing day!
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I got the Frame TV hung on the wall, next up is to hide the box behind the TV.
If I had really planned ahead I would have put a panel in the wall so the box could live inside the wall and the TV would be flush, but I wasn't actually sure about the Frame TV when we had to make that call.
Normally it wouldn't be a huge deal to retrofit it, but this is a shear wall so there's actually plywood behind the drywall which makes the whole thing a lot more complicated. Plus there's also a million power and network cables inside the wall already so I'm not even sure there is room for a panel anyway.
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Lily insisted on getting a fancy doorknob for her office, but couldn't pick one out on her own, so I finally found this and put it in today!
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"text": "Lily insisted on getting a fancy doorknob for her office, but couldn't pick one out on her own, so I finally found this and put it in today!"
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I had to swap the outlet for a recessed outlet because the printer is almost exactly the full depth of the cabinet 😅 I don't know how we cut it that close after building the cabinet specifically for this printer! Either that or the outlet could have been 3 inches higher and it would have been fine. Works fine now tho.
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"text": "I had to swap the outlet for a recessed outlet because the printer is almost exactly the full depth of the cabinet \ud83d\ude05 I don't know how we cut it that close after building the cabinet specifically for this printer! Either that or the outlet could have been 3 inches higher and it would have been fine. Works fine now tho.",
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I mounted this tiny Yololiv webcam on the back wall of Lily's office so she has a way to show off her wallpaper and desk on her livestreams!
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Best dish rack ever! I finished mounting the tray and built the rack above it. I think I'm still going to add a peg board to the left of the rack in order to be able to hang things from hooks.
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My Year in Sport, using data from my Strava, Swarm, and personal notes & recollections, assembled into a simpler summary on my personal site.
2025 activities according to Strava:
🏃🏻♂️1354mi + 160,077' hiking+running
👟 823mi + 119,453' running
⛰ 485mi trail running
🛣 337mi road running
🥾 526mi + 40,624' hiking
🧘🏻♂️ 8h27m yoga
💪🏻 some number of weight-lifting sessions (less than one a week)
🚲 4.6mi + 413' bicycling — only one ride all year somehow(?)
🪨 1 bouldering session (at Movement)
Races:
🏁 3 races, finished 2
🌳 12k Bay to Breakers 1:55:31 https://tantek.com/t5c61
⛰ 50k Skyline: 9:34:51 https://tantek.com/t5dQ1
2025 was a more difficult year than expected, in many ways, and it cut both the hours and frequencies of many physical activities.
My hours and frequency of yoga, weight-lifting, bicycling, and bouldering all dropped from 2024 to 2025. My goals for 2026 are to find sustainable regular rhythms for each of those, either by myself or with friends.
Despite that, I made several improvements in 2025 over 2024:
* Overall: 160,077' climbed, +9.4k' over 150,676' in 2024
* Running: 823mi + 119,453', +20mi +8.3k' over 803mi + 111,155' in 2024
* Hiking: 526mi just barely (+6mi) over 520mi in 2024
* Finished a 50k! First since mid-2023.
I have a few running goals for 2026:
* incrementally faster Bay to Breakers over 2025
* Broken Arrow 23k Skyrace, finish and ideally beat my 2024 time (6h52m)
* finish a 50k trail race, my fifth 50k
I don't have specific metrics goals, like total distance, or feet climbed, or any specific race times (other than beating last year’s times). Those are all secondary to my goals.
Based on how the past few years have gone, I believe these are reasonable goals, yet will take focus and hard work to achieve them.
Lastly, this personalized, #indieweb “year in sport”, reflects much more of what matters to me than any summary from an online service. It’s not perfect and doesn’t need to be. It’s a start and I expect to iterate and improve it next year.
This is post 4 of #100PostsOfIndieWeb. #100Posts #yearInReview #yearInSport
← https://tantek.com/2026/003/t1/seek-2025-year-in-review
→ 🔮
Glossary:
Year in Review:
https://indieweb.org/year_in_review
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"text": "My Year in Sport, using data from my Strava, Swarm, and personal notes & recollections, assembled into a simpler summary on my personal site.\n\n2025 activities according to Strava:\n\ud83c\udfc3\ud83c\udffb\u200d\u2642\ufe0f1354mi + 160,077' hiking+running\n\u00a0\ud83d\udc5f 823mi + 119,453' running \n\u00a0 \u26f0 485mi trail running\n\u00a0 \ud83d\udee3 337mi road running\n\u00a0\ud83e\udd7e 526mi + 40,624' hiking\n\ud83e\uddd8\ud83c\udffb\u200d\u2642\ufe0f 8h27m yoga\n\ud83d\udcaa\ud83c\udffb some number of weight-lifting sessions (less than one a week)\n\ud83d\udeb2 4.6mi + 413' bicycling \u2014 only one ride all year somehow(?)\n\ud83e\udea8 1 bouldering session (at Movement)\n\nRaces:\n\ud83c\udfc1 3 races, finished 2\n\ud83c\udf33 12k Bay to Breakers 1:55:31 https://tantek.com/t5c61\n\u26f0 50k Skyline: 9:34:51 https://tantek.com/t5dQ1\n\n2025 was a more difficult year than expected, in many ways, and it cut both the hours and frequencies of many physical activities.\n\nMy hours and frequency of yoga, weight-lifting, bicycling, and bouldering all dropped from 2024 to 2025. My goals for 2026 are to find sustainable regular rhythms for each of those, either by myself or with friends.\n\nDespite that, I made several improvements in 2025 over 2024:\n* Overall: 160,077' climbed, +9.4k' over 150,676' in 2024\n* Running: 823mi + 119,453', +20mi +8.3k' over 803mi + 111,155' in 2024\n* Hiking: 526mi just barely (+6mi) over 520mi in 2024\n* Finished a 50k! First since mid-2023.\n\nI have a few running goals for 2026:\n* incrementally faster Bay to Breakers over 2025\n* Broken Arrow 23k Skyrace, finish and ideally beat my 2024 time (6h52m)\n* finish a 50k trail race, my fifth 50k\n\nI don't have specific metrics goals, like total distance, or feet climbed, or any specific race times (other than beating last year\u2019s times). Those are all secondary to my goals.\n\nBased on how the past few years have gone, I believe these are reasonable goals, yet will take focus and hard work to achieve them.\n\nLastly, this personalized, #indieweb \u201cyear in sport\u201d, reflects much more of what matters to me than any summary from an online service. It\u2019s not perfect and doesn\u2019t need to be. It\u2019s a start and I expect to iterate and improve it next year.\n\nThis is post 4 of #100PostsOfIndieWeb. #100Posts #yearInReview #yearInSport\n\n\u2190 https://tantek.com/2026/003/t1/seek-2025-year-in-review\n\u2192 \ud83d\udd2e\n\n\nGlossary:\n\nYear in Review:\n\u00a0 https://indieweb.org/year_in_review",
"html": "My Year in Sport, using data from my Strava, Swarm, and personal notes & recollections, assembled into a simpler summary on my personal site.<br /><br />2025 activities according to Strava:<br />\ud83c\udfc3\ud83c\udffb\u200d\u2642\ufe0f1354mi + 160,077' hiking+running<br />\u00a0\ud83d\udc5f 823mi + 119,453' running <br />\u00a0 \u26f0 485mi trail running<br />\u00a0 \ud83d\udee3 337mi road running<br />\u00a0\ud83e\udd7e 526mi + 40,624' hiking<br />\ud83e\uddd8\ud83c\udffb\u200d\u2642\ufe0f 8h27m yoga<br />\ud83d\udcaa\ud83c\udffb some number of weight-lifting sessions (less than one a week)<br />\ud83d\udeb2 4.6mi + 413' bicycling \u2014 only one ride all year somehow(?)<br />\ud83e\udea8 1 bouldering session (at Movement)<br /><br />Races:<br />\ud83c\udfc1 3 races, finished 2<br />\ud83c\udf33 12k Bay to Breakers 1:55:31 <a href=\"https://tantek.com/t5c61\">https://tantek.com/t5c61</a><br />\u26f0 50k Skyline: 9:34:51 <a href=\"https://tantek.com/t5dQ1\">https://tantek.com/t5dQ1</a><br /><br />2025 was a more difficult year than expected, in many ways, and it cut both the hours and frequencies of many physical activities.<br /><br />My hours and frequency of yoga, weight-lifting, bicycling, and bouldering all dropped from 2024 to 2025. My goals for 2026 are to find sustainable regular rhythms for each of those, either by myself or with friends.<br /><br />Despite that, I made several improvements in 2025 over 2024:<br />* Overall: 160,077' climbed, +9.4k' over 150,676' in 2024<br />* Running: 823mi + 119,453', +20mi +8.3k' over 803mi + 111,155' in 2024<br />* Hiking: 526mi just barely (+6mi) over 520mi in 2024<br />* Finished a 50k! First since mid-2023.<br /><br />I have a few running goals for 2026:<br />* incrementally faster Bay to Breakers over 2025<br />* Broken Arrow 23k Skyrace, finish and ideally beat my 2024 time (6h52m)<br />* finish a 50k trail race, my fifth 50k<br /><br />I don't have specific metrics goals, like total distance, or feet climbed, or any specific race times (other than beating last year\u2019s times). Those are all secondary to my goals.<br /><br />Based on how the past few years have gone, I believe these are reasonable goals, yet will take focus and hard work to achieve them.<br /><br />Lastly, this personalized, #<span class=\"p-category\">indieweb</span> \u201cyear in sport\u201d, reflects much more of what matters to me than any summary from an online service. It\u2019s not perfect and doesn\u2019t need to be. It\u2019s a start and I expect to iterate and improve it next year.<br /><br />This is post 4 of #<span class=\"p-category\">100PostsOfIndieWeb</span>. #<span class=\"p-category\">100Posts</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">yearInReview</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">yearInSport</span><br /><br />\u2190 <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2026/003/t1/seek-2025-year-in-review\">https://tantek.com/2026/003/t1/seek-2025-year-in-review</a><br />\u2192 \ud83d\udd2e<br /><br /><br />Glossary:<br /><br />Year in Review:<br />\u00a0 <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/year_in_review\">https://indieweb.org/year_in_review</a>"
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{
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"author": {
"name": "Cathie",
"url": "https://cathieleblanc.com/",
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"url": "https://cathieleblanc.com/2026/01/04/turning-in-my-keys/",
"published": "2026-01-04T10:15:41-05:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p>I officially retired on Friday, January 2, 2026. I finished the last tasks of my \u201ctermination\u201d that morning. I took the last load of stuff out of my office. I left my laptop at the tech help center. And I returned my keys to the Facilities office. The woman who took my keys thanked me for all I have done for the university over the years. And she congratulated me for getting out of \u201cthis hellhole.\u201d Her kind words about my many years at PSU made me cry.</p>\n<p><img src=\"https://i0.wp.com/cathieleblanc.com/wp-content/uploads/20260102_1154007E22198868089142040074.jpg?resize=300%2C300&ssl=1\" alt=\"Comic of one woman handing keys to another woman. Text: The woman at Facilities who took my keys as I retire today made me cry with just a few kind words\" /></p>\n<p>Over the past few weeks, there have been several gatherings for the many people who were leaving PSU on January 2. At each of these gatherings, any kind words have made me cry. It was annoying. Although I am retiring several years earlier than I expected to, I am happy to be leaving. I am excited about the future. I have lots of projects I want to work on. And traveling I want to do. And people I want to see and hang out with. Retirement is going to be great. And yet, the tears haven\u2019t felt like tears of joy. I know part of that is the anger I feel that many of my colleagues who left \u201cvoluntarily\u201d on January 2 did so because they were lied to about the alternatives. I worry for my colleagues who are not as close to their desired retirement age as I am. I am sad that so many of PSU\u2019s best teachers and scholars no longer work at the University. These mixed feelings\u2013joy and excitement mixed with anger, worry, and sadness\u2013are partially responsible for my tears. But I began to notice that the tears spring up (present tense because they haven\u2019t stopped with my official retirement date) when people say kind things about my time at PSU.</p>\n<p>I had breakfast with Scott earlier this week and he recommended a podcast that he\u2019s been listening to. <a href=\"https://www.cnn.com/all-there-is-anderson-cooper\">Anderson Cooper\u2019s <em>All There Is</em></a> is an exploration of grief. Scott particularly recommended the second episode \u201cGrateful for Grief\u201d with guest Stephen Colbert. I listened to it yesterday. Colbert is brilliantly insightful as he talks about how his life changed at 10 years old when his father and two older brothers died in a plane crash. A couple of his insights helped me to better understand my own mixed feelings about leaving PSU. Clearly, despite my happiness about leaving PSU, I am grieving. I think I am grieving the loss of an ending to my PSU career that coincides with the warm feelings that I have had about the university for most of my time there. I never imagined this is the way my time at PSU would end. This insight alone was helpful. But Colbert went on to talk about how people often don\u2019t know what to say to someone who is grieving. He said that when he was a kid, he felt alone in his grief because no one would talk to him about it. All he wanted was for someone to acknowledge his experience. That would have made him feel less alone. Humans just want connection to other humans, especially about events that are important to them. I think this is the main thing that makes me cry when someone says something kind about my retirement from PSU. They are acknowledging my long years of experience at the university, which makes me feel \u2026 seen? Less alone? Appreciated? I\u2019m not sure yet but the idea that the very act of acknowledging my experience is what makes me cry resonates. Colbert went on to say that our modern society has lost a lot of its rituals around grief. We no longer expect a surviving spouse to wear public displays of their grief for some set period of time, for example. Those rituals are mechanisms for public acknowledgement of the experiences of those who are grieving. <a href=\"https://lizahl.com/2025/12/24/resigned-no-relief/\">Liz wrote movingly</a> about the challenges of leaving the university at a time when the administration has ditched our traditions of acknowledging the contributions of those who are \u201cretiring.\u201d The lack of those rituals does make the leaving more difficult. Colbert then said that talking about grief, bringing it out into the open so that it isn\u2019t \u201csecret and weird,\u201d is so important in transforming that grief into something we can live with, or even be grateful for. Cooper gave the example of his mother telling the story over and over and over of how his brother died, almost like a litany. This resonates with me as well. For example, at a New Year\u2019s Eve party, my former colleagues and I talked about and dissected and analyzed situations and conversations from the last three years yet again. I remember thinking, even as I participated, that we were wallowing in the misery of what has happened. But Cooper and Colbert have reframed our discussions for me. We were working through our grief. We were connecting. We were acknowledging our shared experience. This will make us all feel less alone and allow us to perhaps get to the point where we are grateful for our grief.</p>\n<p>I have been thinking about this podcast a lot since hearing it yesterday, I am grateful for my experiences at PSU. I\u2019m working on being grateful for even the worst of them. For example, without the worst of them, I would probably not be retiring yet. And I am happy to be retired, looking forward to doing more of the things I love.</p>",
"text": "I officially retired on Friday, January 2, 2026. I finished the last tasks of my \u201ctermination\u201d that morning. I took the last load of stuff out of my office. I left my laptop at the tech help center. And I returned my keys to the Facilities office. The woman who took my keys thanked me for all I have done for the university over the years. And she congratulated me for getting out of \u201cthis hellhole.\u201d Her kind words about my many years at PSU made me cry.\n\nOver the past few weeks, there have been several gatherings for the many people who were leaving PSU on January 2. At each of these gatherings, any kind words have made me cry. It was annoying. Although I am retiring several years earlier than I expected to, I am happy to be leaving. I am excited about the future. I have lots of projects I want to work on. And traveling I want to do. And people I want to see and hang out with. Retirement is going to be great. And yet, the tears haven\u2019t felt like tears of joy. I know part of that is the anger I feel that many of my colleagues who left \u201cvoluntarily\u201d on January 2 did so because they were lied to about the alternatives. I worry for my colleagues who are not as close to their desired retirement age as I am. I am sad that so many of PSU\u2019s best teachers and scholars no longer work at the University. These mixed feelings\u2013joy and excitement mixed with anger, worry, and sadness\u2013are partially responsible for my tears. But I began to notice that the tears spring up (present tense because they haven\u2019t stopped with my official retirement date) when people say kind things about my time at PSU.\nI had breakfast with Scott earlier this week and he recommended a podcast that he\u2019s been listening to. Anderson Cooper\u2019s All There Is is an exploration of grief. Scott particularly recommended the second episode \u201cGrateful for Grief\u201d with guest Stephen Colbert. I listened to it yesterday. Colbert is brilliantly insightful as he talks about how his life changed at 10 years old when his father and two older brothers died in a plane crash. A couple of his insights helped me to better understand my own mixed feelings about leaving PSU. Clearly, despite my happiness about leaving PSU, I am grieving. I think I am grieving the loss of an ending to my PSU career that coincides with the warm feelings that I have had about the university for most of my time there. I never imagined this is the way my time at PSU would end. This insight alone was helpful. But Colbert went on to talk about how people often don\u2019t know what to say to someone who is grieving. He said that when he was a kid, he felt alone in his grief because no one would talk to him about it. All he wanted was for someone to acknowledge his experience. That would have made him feel less alone. Humans just want connection to other humans, especially about events that are important to them. I think this is the main thing that makes me cry when someone says something kind about my retirement from PSU. They are acknowledging my long years of experience at the university, which makes me feel \u2026 seen? Less alone? Appreciated? I\u2019m not sure yet but the idea that the very act of acknowledging my experience is what makes me cry resonates. Colbert went on to say that our modern society has lost a lot of its rituals around grief. We no longer expect a surviving spouse to wear public displays of their grief for some set period of time, for example. Those rituals are mechanisms for public acknowledgement of the experiences of those who are grieving. Liz wrote movingly about the challenges of leaving the university at a time when the administration has ditched our traditions of acknowledging the contributions of those who are \u201cretiring.\u201d The lack of those rituals does make the leaving more difficult. Colbert then said that talking about grief, bringing it out into the open so that it isn\u2019t \u201csecret and weird,\u201d is so important in transforming that grief into something we can live with, or even be grateful for. Cooper gave the example of his mother telling the story over and over and over of how his brother died, almost like a litany. This resonates with me as well. For example, at a New Year\u2019s Eve party, my former colleagues and I talked about and dissected and analyzed situations and conversations from the last three years yet again. I remember thinking, even as I participated, that we were wallowing in the misery of what has happened. But Cooper and Colbert have reframed our discussions for me. We were working through our grief. We were connecting. We were acknowledging our shared experience. This will make us all feel less alone and allow us to perhaps get to the point where we are grateful for our grief.\nI have been thinking about this podcast a lot since hearing it yesterday, I am grateful for my experiences at PSU. I\u2019m working on being grateful for even the worst of them. For example, without the worst of them, I would probably not be retiring yet. And I am happy to be retired, looking forward to doing more of the things I love."
},
"name": "Turning in my Keys",
"post-type": "article",
"_id": "46957457",
"_source": "2782"
}
My Seek 2025 Year in Review:
* 101 new species observed (down from 141 last year)
Top three kinds:
* 64 new plants (down from 79)
* 14 new insects (down from 20)
* 8 new fungi
* 4 new challenge badges earned (down from 56)
July, June, February were the months I observed the most new species.
Last year: June, March, July.
Seek also gave me a graph of observations per month, and also a map of where I made my discoveries.
As noted last year: https://tantek.com/2025/020/t1/seek-2024-year-in-review
Seek is a delightful free (like actually free, free of tracking, free of surveillance) native mobile application for identifying species.
Made by the iNaturalist folks (https://www.inaturalist.org/pages/seek_app), Seek works:
1. works without creating an account
2. works completely offline to identify species
3. adds new species to your local collection on your device
Those first two capabilities (no login wall, offline first) are what we should aspire to when we build #indieweb apps or websites for ourselves and our friends.
This is post 3 of #100PostsOfIndieWeb. #100Posts #yearInReview #iNaturalist #SeekApp
← https://tantek.com/2026/002/t1/find-export-strava-year-in-sport
→ 🔮
Glossary:
login wall
https://indieweb.org/login_wall
offline first
https://indieweb.org/offline_first
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-01-03 23:49-0800",
"url": "https://tantek.com/2026/003/t1/seek-2025-year-in-review",
"category": [
"indieweb",
"100PostsOfIndieWeb",
"100Posts",
"yearInReview",
"iNaturalist",
"SeekApp"
],
"content": {
"text": "My Seek 2025 Year in Review:\n\n* 101 new species observed (down from 141 last year)\n\nTop three kinds:\n\u00a0 * 64 new plants (down from 79)\n\u00a0 * 14 new insects (down from 20)\n\u00a0 * 8 new fungi\n* 4 new challenge badges earned (down from 56)\n\nJuly, June, February were the months I observed the most new species.\nLast year: June, March, July.\n\nSeek also gave me a graph of observations per month, and also a map of where I made my discoveries.\n\nAs noted last year: https://tantek.com/2025/020/t1/seek-2024-year-in-review\n\nSeek is a delightful free (like actually free, free of tracking, free of surveillance) native mobile application for identifying species.\n\nMade by the iNaturalist folks (https://www.inaturalist.org/pages/seek_app), Seek works:\n1. works without creating an account\n2. works completely offline to identify species\n3. adds new species to your local collection on your device\n\nThose first two capabilities (no login wall, offline first) are what we should aspire to when we build #indieweb apps or websites for ourselves and our friends.\n\nThis is post 3 of #100PostsOfIndieWeb. #100Posts #yearInReview #iNaturalist #SeekApp\n\n\u2190 https://tantek.com/2026/002/t1/find-export-strava-year-in-sport\n\u2192 \ud83d\udd2e\n\n\nGlossary:\n\nlogin wall\n\u00a0 https://indieweb.org/login_wall\noffline first\n\u00a0 https://indieweb.org/offline_first",
"html": "My Seek 2025 Year in Review:<br /><br />* 101 new species observed (down from 141 last year)<br /><br />Top three kinds:<br />\u00a0 * 64 new plants (down from 79)<br />\u00a0 * 14 new insects (down from 20)<br />\u00a0 * 8 new fungi<br />* 4 new challenge badges earned (down from 56)<br /><br />July, June, February were the months I observed the most new species.<br />Last year: June, March, July.<br /><br />Seek also gave me a graph of observations per month, and also a map of where I made my discoveries.<br /><br />As noted last year: <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2025/020/t1/seek-2024-year-in-review\">https://tantek.com/2025/020/t1/seek-2024-year-in-review</a><br /><br />Seek is a delightful free (like actually free, free of tracking, free of surveillance) native mobile application for identifying species.<br /><br />Made by the iNaturalist folks (<a href=\"https://www.inaturalist.org/pages/seek_app\">https://www.inaturalist.org/pages/seek_app</a>), Seek works:<br />1. works without creating an account<br />2. works completely offline to identify species<br />3. adds new species to your local collection on your device<br /><br />Those first two capabilities (no login wall, offline first) are what we should aspire to when we build #<span class=\"p-category\">indieweb</span> apps or websites for ourselves and our friends.<br /><br />This is post 3 of #<span class=\"p-category\">100PostsOfIndieWeb</span>. #<span class=\"p-category\">100Posts</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">yearInReview</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">iNaturalist</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">SeekApp</span><br /><br />\u2190 <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2026/002/t1/find-export-strava-year-in-sport\">https://tantek.com/2026/002/t1/find-export-strava-year-in-sport</a><br />\u2192 \ud83d\udd2e<br /><br /><br />Glossary:<br /><br />login wall<br />\u00a0 <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/login_wall\">https://indieweb.org/login_wall</a><br />offline first<br />\u00a0 <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/offline_first\">https://indieweb.org/offline_first</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "https://tantek.com/",
"photo": "https://tantek.com/photo.jpg"
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "46955033",
"_source": "2460"
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2025-12-31T23:49:59-0400",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2025/12/31/2025-in-machine-knits/",
"category": [
"2025",
"machine-knitting"
],
"name": "2025 in machine knits",
"content": {
"text": "This is a retro-post. Jump scare!\nI sure have read a lot of 2025-in-review posts recently! I am impressed by all that you have accomplished.\nHere's my 2025 wrapped (in yarn), in 20 photos about my machine knitting this year!\nDescriptions and links below.1, 2, and 3: my machine and samples from my first workshop at the Brooklyn Textile Arts Center (TAC). Workshop day 1. Workshop day 2.\n 4 and 5: my first hats.\n 6: a Fair Isle patterned hat, made after disassembling and cleaning my machine carriage.\n 7: socks with hems too tight to wear\n\n 8, 9, and 10: three little guys! First little guy, second little guy, third little guy.\n 11: A bag for a power brick I made for a friend.\n 12: (Not-so-) secret first sweater.\n 13: A scarf from my workshop day in Berlin.\n 14 and 15: little green bow, little red bow.\n 16 and 17: my ribbed hand warmers, producer Amy's ribbed hand warmers.\n 18: A swatch for the knitalong sweater.\n 19: Finished knitalong sweater.\n 20: My current machine setup, with added ribber, 3D printed parts for the ribber cover and to cover the new AYAB electronics. Photo from this WIP sweater knitalong post.\nI feel like I should be knitting more and, sure, I should. But this is also a lovely set of accomplishments from August to the end of the year.\nThis is reflected, a bit, in the growth of my knitting setup.\n\nI got a knitting machine stand, so Amy and I don't have to fight over counter space for our fiber arts projects.\n At long last, I replaced the electronics with an AYAB interface board\u00a0and spent an incredible\u00a0 undocumented-on-my-blog amount of time making some badly designed 3D parts to replace the cover. These hold the row counter and AYAB board as well as keeping stuff and cats out of the machine.\n I found a new-ish-in-box KR-850 ribbing attachment on the electronic bay. The box was damaged in shipping, and it was missing its plastic cover, but I was able to 3D print a replacement ribber cover just fine. And now I can do ribbing!\nI'm looking forward to a lot more in 2026! Here are some ideas so far:\nI have acquired, but not yet used, a KRC-830 color changer. I'm excited to tinker with multicolor designs!\n I love Saga's sweater in Alan Wake 2, and there's a pattern for making it. I don't know about making the whole sweater, but I think it'd be fun to make something like a hat using the fair Isle design bits.\n I want to make a cardigan for myself of some kind. I don't yet know what kind! That's hard.\n I want to keep up with the folks in the machineknit.community, who are planning a whole 12-month set of online classes and meetups to skill-up and level-up.\nSee you in 2026. Happy knitting!!",
"html": "<p><i>This is a retro-post. Jump scare!</i></p>\n<p>I sure have read a lot of 2025-in-review posts recently! I am impressed by all that you have accomplished.</p>\n<p>Here's my 2025 wrapped (in yarn), in 20 photos about my machine knitting this year!</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/b8/05/05/16/d3fd3f51a8e5150590135518482f471cb43c862303eedf50c4ea4ace.\" alt=\"\" />Descriptions and links below.<ul><li>1, 2, and 3: my machine and samples from my first workshop at the Brooklyn Textile Arts Center (TAC). <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/08/02/182236/\">Workshop day 1</a>. <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/08/03/201439/\">Workshop day 2</a>.</li>\n <li>4 and 5: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/09/08/machine-knitting-whats-up-with-that/\">my first hats</a>.</li>\n <li>6: a Fair Isle patterned hat, made after <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/09/22/machine-knitting-carriage-return-to-work/\">disassembling and cleaning my machine carriage</a>.</li>\n <li>7: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/09/18/machine-knitting-forbidden-socks/\">socks with hems too tight to wear</a>\n</li>\n <li>8, 9, and 10: three little guys! <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/09/20/134528/\">First little guy</a>, <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/10/12/212748/\">second little guy</a>, <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/11/11/082149/\">third little guy</a>.</li>\n <li>11: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/10/19/machine-knitting-a-bag-for-bricks/\">A bag for a power brick I made for a friend</a>.</li>\n <li>12: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/10/20/machine-knitting-the-secret-sweater/\">(Not-so-) secret first sweater</a>.</li>\n <li>13: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/11/09/143450/\">A scarf from my workshop day in Berlin</a>.</li>\n <li>14 and 15: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/11/27/113507/\">little green bow</a>, <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/12/13/112707/\">little red bow</a>.</li>\n <li>16 and 17: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/12/13/machine-knittin-moar-mittens/\">my ribbed hand warmers</a>, <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/12/02/machine-knittin-some-mittens/\">producer Amy's ribbed hand warmers</a>.</li>\n <li>18: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/10/26/machine-knitting-sleeves/\">A swatch for the knitalong sweater</a>.</li>\n <li>19: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/12/25/machine-knitting-sweater-knitalong-complete/\">Finished knitalong sweater</a>.</li>\n <li>20: My current machine setup, with added ribber, 3D printed parts for the ribber cover and to cover the new AYAB electronics. Photo from <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/11/22/machine-knitting-front-panel--looking-forward/\">this WIP sweater knitalong post</a>.</li>\n</ul><p>I feel like I should be knitting more and, sure, I should. But this is also a lovely set of accomplishments from August to the end of the year.</p>\n<p>This is reflected, a bit, in the growth of my knitting setup.</p>\n<ul><li>\n<a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/09/12/machine-knitting-taking-a-stand/\">I got a knitting machine stand</a>, so Amy and I don't have to fight over counter space for our fiber arts projects.</li>\n <li>At long last, I replaced the electronics with an <a href=\"https://www.ayab-knitting.com/ayab-interface/\">AYAB interface board</a>\u00a0and spent an incredible\u00a0 undocumented-on-my-blog amount of time making some badly designed 3D parts to replace the cover. These hold the row counter and AYAB board as well as keeping stuff and cats out of the machine.</li>\n <li>I found a new-ish-in-box KR-850 ribbing attachment on the electronic bay. The box was damaged in shipping, and it was missing its plastic cover, but I was able to <a href=\"https://www.printables.com/model/860667-brother-kr830kr850-ribber-cover\">3D print a replacement ribber cover</a> just fine. And now I can do ribbing!</li>\n</ul><p>I'm looking forward to a lot more in 2026! Here are some ideas so far:</p>\n<ul><li>I have acquired, but not yet used, a KRC-830 color changer. I'm excited to tinker with <a href=\"https://manual.ayab-knitting.com/1.0/how_to_knit/dbj_middle-color-twice/\">multicolor designs</a>!</li>\n <li>I love <a href=\"https://www.alanwake.com/story/sagas-sweater-pattern-knitting-guide/\">Saga's sweater in Alan Wake 2, and there's a pattern for making it</a>. I don't know about making the whole sweater, but I think it'd be fun to make something like a hat using the fair Isle design bits.</li>\n <li>I want to make a cardigan for myself of some kind. I don't yet know what kind! That's hard.</li>\n <li>I want to keep up with the folks in the <a href=\"https://www.machineknit.community/spaces/17045915/content\">machineknit.community</a>, who are planning a whole 12-month set of online classes and meetups to skill-up and level-up.</li>\n</ul><p>See you in 2026. Happy knitting!!</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Marty McGuire",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/",
"photo": "https://martymcgui.re/images/logo.jpg"
},
"post-type": "article",
"_id": "46953906",
"_source": "175"
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2025-12-25T11:00:00-0400",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2025/12/25/machine-knitting-sweater-knitalong-complete/",
"category": [
"machine-knitting",
"sweater",
"KnitFactoryImpl",
"knitalong"
],
"name": "Machine knitting: sweater knitalong complete!",
"content": {
"text": "Yeah, I'm retro-posting. Hello from the future, ding-dongs!\nThis post is part of a series, as I play catch-up on KnitFactoryImpl's knitalong of a set in sleeve crew neck sweater for channel members.\nIn the previous installment, I wrote about failing to get a good neckline for this sweater.\nWell, I decided to try sewing it up as-is, rescuing dropped stitches as I went. After my hand-warmer adventures, I was a little more confident about how to sew up a ribbed edge.\nYes, that's a dropped stitch in the back of the collar. No, I haven't fixed it, yet!The process was slightly harrowing, but resulted in dropping only one stitch! What! Incredible!\nSo, of course, at this point I put in a box because I was afraid to finish it. I had intended this to be a gift for producer Amy upon her return from Berlin in early December. When she came home, we had other stuff going on, I got distracted, and I definitely wasn't constantly thinking about this unfinished sweater every day.\nJust finish the sweater, Marty!\nNo! Well, okay! I mean: sort of!\nWhat I\u00a0did\u00a0do was finish seaming the neck and shoulders before Amy left in mid-December to visit family. I packed it with a length of yarn and a tapestry needle, as well as links to the videos on how to finish the sweater.\nI gifted producer Amy a sew-it-yourself sweater kit. \ud83d\ude05\nIn truth, this was actually her idea. Several times she brought it up and I declined, insisting I would finish it, but eventually I relented.\nSo, the rest of this story is hers!\nOkay, uh, finish the sweater, Amy!\nShe did! After watching Carson's video, and finding another video explainer or two on mattress stitching, this was Amy's on-the-road project for December.\nBeginning to attach a sleeve.A sleeve half-attached.One sleeve fully attached.One sleeve fully attached, one half-done.Two sleeves attached!One sleeve fully seamed.It's done! -ish!She got it finished on December 24th and popped it in the wash.\nFinished and washed.A happy sweater model.On Christmas morning, she found Santa had delivered a perfectly decent sweater! A bit short in the sleeves, and there's that dropped stitch in the back of the collar, but it's recognizably a sweater! And, according to producer Amy, it is quite cozy and I have seen her wear it several times. Amazing!\nThanks for reading\nWhile I'm still somewhat embarrassed that I didn't finish the sewing-up on the sweater, I am really proud of how it turned out. I'm grateful that Amy graciously took it on as a DIY project. I certainly learned a lot, and Amy learned some new techniques, and we have finished a successful collab together.\nAnd it looks like a thing!\nThis feels like a pretty great project to have accomplished at the end of 2025. A year that has been panned by critics, and most everyone, alike.\nUntil next time!",
"html": "<p><i>Yeah, I'm retro-posting. Hello from the future, ding-dongs!</i></p>\n<p>This post is part of a series, as I play catch-up on <a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1kntNWiaZVM\">KnitFactoryImpl's knitalong of a set in sleeve crew neck sweater for channel members</a>.</p>\n<p>In the previous installment, <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/11/24/machine-knitting-neckline--show-and-tell/\">I wrote about failing to get a good neckline for this sweater</a>.</p>\n<p>Well, I decided to try sewing it up as-is, rescuing dropped stitches as I went. After my <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2025/12/13/machine-knittin-moar-mittens/\">hand-warmer adventures</a>, I was a little more confident about how to sew up a ribbed edge.</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/31/f2/f3/f6/0485b8c75adaf235df59041276e6e06917dd26d789b8fb2298babf98.\" alt=\"\" />Yes, that's a dropped stitch in the back of the collar. No, I haven't fixed it, yet!<p>The process was slightly harrowing, but resulted in dropping only one stitch! What! Incredible!</p>\n<p>So, of course, at this point I put in a box because I was afraid to finish it. I had intended this to be a gift for producer Amy upon her return from Berlin in early December. When she came home, we had other stuff going on, I got distracted, and I definitely wasn't constantly thinking about this unfinished sweater every day.</p>\n<h2>Just finish the sweater, Marty!</h2>\n<p>No! Well, okay! I mean: sort of!</p>\n<p>What I\u00a0<i>did</i>\u00a0do was finish seaming the neck and shoulders before Amy left in mid-December to visit family. I packed it with a length of yarn and a tapestry needle, as well as links to the videos on how to finish the sweater.</p>\n<p>I gifted producer Amy a sew-it-yourself sweater kit. \ud83d\ude05</p>\n<p>In truth, this was actually her idea. Several times she brought it up and I declined, insisting I would finish it, but eventually I relented.</p>\n<p>So, the rest of this story is hers!</p>\n<h2>Okay, uh, finish the sweater, Amy!</h2>\n<p>She did! After watching Carson's video, and finding another video explainer or two on mattress stitching, this was Amy's on-the-road project for December.</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/e5/37/6c/e5/b592a041e029515f82d387bcae9fefbee69180b6e3de863f72f29802.\" alt=\"\" />Beginning to attach a sleeve.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/dc/03/66/48/844e6302d8e7da4fe17149d9182997071fe46c648aefe3f990261036.\" alt=\"\" />A sleeve half-attached.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/1d/f2/f1/3e/46392ed81fd8f9dcd250a23c4cc8ebb74bb8fa92739898ce3c9135b7.\" alt=\"\" />One sleeve fully attached.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/3c/8f/d4/e4/3141c88eca6c3b948660a0d449e36dd9c41984a1aaf5353b69d7c7ec.\" alt=\"\" />One sleeve fully attached, one half-done.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/80/99/64/24/53e2d0bcdd2559f6bb96a02817a6dd4345856ea2ba7d5461b8b00a58.\" alt=\"\" />Two sleeves attached!<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/22/61/e7/f3/9833a72aa10bf8f5b748ef206e8a5b1bac6d42ec273485f36323f148.\" alt=\"\" />One sleeve fully seamed.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/3c/11/d0/d9/5be6559c997dcfbf46e56d7395656d0540cc9f6cb6228724d67ce42f.\" alt=\"\" />It's done! -ish!<p>She got it finished on December 24th and popped it in the wash.</p>\n<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/e9/d6/55/39/358cde1f2849916039c19239e24d63382a504edf9809de1f648d9623.\" alt=\"\" />Finished and washed.<img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/46/45/5a/9b/06c321c1efe060f7da55eed6540c0c0993abfaa67367c0bb1ae0fb35.\" alt=\"\" />A happy sweater model.<p>On Christmas morning, she found Santa had delivered a perfectly decent sweater! A bit short in the sleeves, and there's that dropped stitch in the back of the collar, but it's recognizably a sweater! And, according to producer Amy, it is quite cozy and I have seen her wear it several times. Amazing!</p>\n<h2>Thanks for reading</h2>\n<p>While I'm still somewhat embarrassed that I didn't finish the sewing-up on the sweater, I am really proud of how it turned out. I'm grateful that Amy graciously took it on as a DIY project. I certainly learned a lot, and Amy learned some new techniques, and we have finished a successful collab together.</p>\n<p>And it looks like a thing!</p>\n<p>This feels like a pretty great project to have accomplished at the end of 2025. A year that has been panned by critics, <i>and most everyone</i>, alike.</p>\n<p>Until next time!</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Marty McGuire",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/",
"photo": "https://martymcgui.re/images/logo.jpg"
},
"post-type": "article",
"_id": "46952330",
"_source": "175"
}
Want to read: The Language of the Night by Ursula K. Le Guin (ISBN 9781668034903)
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-01-02 16:58-0800",
"url": "https://gregorlove.com/2026/01/to-read-the-language-of-the-night/",
"syndication": [
"https://www.goodreads.com/read_statuses/10338658203"
],
"content": {
"text": "Want to read: The Language of the Night by Ursula K. Le Guin (ISBN 9781668034903)",
"html": "<p>Want to read: <span class=\"p-read-of h-cite\"><a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://gregorlove.com/isbn/9781668034903\">The Language of the Night</a> by <span class=\"p-author\">Ursula K. Le Guin</span> (ISBN <span class=\"p-uid\">9781668034903</span>)</span></p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "gRegor Morrill",
"url": "https://gregorlove.com/",
"photo": "https://gregorlove.com/site/assets/files/6268/profile-2021-square.300x0.jpg"
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"_id": "46945298",
"_source": "95"
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I checked my Strava: Year in Sport 2025 after I did my last run on the 31st, and it felt a bit light. When I checked my saved images/videos from last year’s Strava Year in Sport, it was clear they had dropped several things from 2024 to 2025.
First, here’s updated instructions for finding and exporting your Strava Year in Sport 2025:
The Strava Year in Sport 2025 is once again only available on the native mobile app (iOS and presumably Android) and not accessible via the website.
From the mobile app home screen, tap the "📋 You" button in the lower right corner.
Near the top you should see an orange header with white text:
STRAVA
YEAR IN SPORT
and a black triangle play button on a white disc background.
Tap that ▶️ play button.
Saving Summary Segments
You should fairly quickly see an animation start playing, with nine "segments" (like Instagram stories) at the top, gradually filling-in as progress indicators one at a time.
The first "segment" is purely intro animation. You can skip it.
Every subsequent "segment" you can screenshot using the respective button pressing on your mobile (e.g. volume-up + power on iPhone 14). In addition to taking a screenshot it will put you in a "share" screen with one or more videos or still images to share in a carousel format.
For each item in the carousel (if there is more than one)
1. tap the item in the carousel
2. tap the "[↓] Save" button at the bottom to store it locally on your mobile
Then tap "Cancel" in the top right to go back to the "segments".
Either wait for that current "segment" to finish playing or tap the video near the right edge of the screen to skip to the next "segment" and repeat the two steps above.
The ninth "segment" is your overall summary, and shows all your sports combined.
Save it (using the "[↓] Save" button as noted above), then
* tap the "✏️ Customize" button
* choose an individual sport (e.g. "👟 Run")
* tap "Save changes"
* save that image (with the "[↓] Save" button as above)
* tap customize again
* choose the next sport (e.g. "🚲 Ride")
* "Save changes" again
* "[↓] Save" button again
Strava seemingly only reports summaries of (up to?) two of your sports. Those were Run (presumably all running, street and trail) and Ride for me.
Cleanup Your Screenshots
After having saved all the videos/images for each "segment", you can:
* go back to your mobile’s top level Photos app/stream
* delete the screenshots
You should see all the images you've saved (no videos this year). If anything is missing, go back to the previous steps and save them again, then remove any duplicates as necessary.
I have saved all the images from my own Strava Year In Sport, and as I assemble the pieces into my own Year in Sport post, I’ll take more notes, and add to the IndieWeb year in review page accordingly: https://indieweb.org/year_in_review
Previously: https://tantek.com/2025/001/t3/strava-year-in-sport-how-to-get-info-save
#Strava #yearInSport #yearInReview #ownYourYearInReview
This is post 2 of #100PostsOfIndieWeb. #100Posts
← https://tantek.com/2026/001/t1/no-socials-january
→ 🔮
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-01-02 16:20-0800",
"url": "https://tantek.com/2026/002/t1/find-export-strava-year-in-sport",
"category": [
"Strava",
"yearInSport",
"yearInReview",
"ownYourYearInReview",
"100PostsOfIndieWeb",
"100Posts"
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"content": {
"text": "I checked my Strava: Year in Sport 2025 after I did my last run on the 31st, and it felt a bit light. When I checked my saved images/videos from last year\u2019s Strava Year in Sport, it was clear they had dropped several things from 2024 to 2025.\n\n\nFirst, here\u2019s updated instructions for finding and exporting your Strava Year in Sport 2025:\n\nThe Strava Year in Sport 2025 is once again only available on the native mobile app (iOS and presumably Android) and not accessible via the website.\n\nFrom the mobile app home screen, tap the \"\ud83d\udccb You\" button in the lower right corner.\n\nNear the top you should see an orange header with white text:\n\nSTRAVA\nYEAR IN SPORT \n\nand a black triangle play button on a white disc background.\n\n\n\nTap that \u25b6\ufe0f play button.\n\n\nSaving Summary Segments\n\nYou should fairly quickly see an animation start playing, with nine \"segments\" (like Instagram stories) at the top, gradually filling-in as progress indicators one at a time. \n\nThe first \"segment\" is purely intro animation. You can skip it.\n\nEvery subsequent \"segment\" you can screenshot using the respective button pressing on your mobile (e.g. volume-up + power on iPhone 14). In addition to taking a screenshot it will put you in a \"share\" screen with one or more videos or still images to share in a carousel format. \n\nFor each item in the carousel (if there is more than one)\n1. tap the item in the carousel\n2. tap the \"[\u2193] Save\" button at the bottom to store it locally on your mobile\n\nThen tap \"Cancel\" in the top right to go back to the \"segments\".\n\nEither wait for that current \"segment\" to finish playing or tap the video near the right edge of the screen to skip to the next \"segment\" and repeat the two steps above.\n\nThe ninth \"segment\" is your overall summary, and shows all your sports combined.\n\nSave it (using the \"[\u2193] Save\" button as noted above), then\n* tap the \"\u270f\ufe0f \u00a0Customize\" button\n* choose an individual sport (e.g. \"\ud83d\udc5f Run\")\n* tap \"Save changes\"\n* save that image (with the \"[\u2193] Save\" button as above)\n* tap customize again\n* choose the next sport (e.g. \"\ud83d\udeb2 Ride\")\n* \"Save changes\" again\n* \"[\u2193] Save\" button again\n\nStrava seemingly only reports summaries of (up to?) two of your sports. Those were Run (presumably all running, street and trail) and Ride for me.\n\n\nCleanup Your Screenshots\n\nAfter having saved all the videos/images for each \"segment\", you can:\n* go back to your mobile\u2019s top level Photos app/stream\n* delete the screenshots\n\nYou should see all the images you've saved (no videos this year). If anything is missing, go back to the previous steps and save them again, then remove any duplicates as necessary.\n\n\nI have saved all the images from my own Strava Year In Sport, and as I assemble the pieces into my own Year in Sport post, I\u2019ll take more notes, and add to the IndieWeb year in review page accordingly: https://indieweb.org/year_in_review\n\nPreviously: https://tantek.com/2025/001/t3/strava-year-in-sport-how-to-get-info-save\n\n#Strava #yearInSport #yearInReview #ownYourYearInReview\n\nThis is post 2 of #100PostsOfIndieWeb. #100Posts\n\n\u2190 https://tantek.com/2026/001/t1/no-socials-january\n\u2192 \ud83d\udd2e",
"html": "I checked my Strava: Year in Sport 2025 after I did my last run on the 31st, and it felt a bit light. When I checked my saved images/videos from last year\u2019s Strava Year in Sport, it was clear they had dropped several things from 2024 to 2025.<br /><br /><br />First, here\u2019s updated instructions for finding and exporting your Strava Year in Sport 2025:<br /><br />The Strava Year in Sport 2025 is once again only available on the native mobile app (iOS and presumably Android) and not accessible via the website.<br /><br />From the mobile app home screen, tap the \"\ud83d\udccb You\" button in the lower right corner.<br /><br />Near the top you should see an orange header with white text:<br /><br />STRAVA<br />YEAR IN SPORT <br /><br />and a black triangle play button on a white disc background.<br /><br /><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/File:2025-strava-profile-year-in-sport.jpeg\"></a><br /><br />Tap that \u25b6\ufe0f play button.<br /><br /><br />Saving Summary Segments<br /><br />You should fairly quickly see an animation start playing, with nine \"segments\" (like Instagram stories) at the top, gradually filling-in as progress indicators one at a time. <br /><br />The first \"segment\" is purely intro animation. You can skip it.<br /><br />Every subsequent \"segment\" you can screenshot using the respective button pressing on your mobile (e.g. volume-up + power on iPhone 14). In addition to taking a screenshot it will put you in a \"share\" screen with one or more videos or still images to share in a carousel format. <br /><br />For each item in the carousel (if there is more than one)<br />1. tap the item in the carousel<br />2. tap the \"[\u2193] Save\" button at the bottom to store it locally on your mobile<br /><br />Then tap \"Cancel\" in the top right to go back to the \"segments\".<br /><br />Either wait for that current \"segment\" to finish playing or tap the video near the right edge of the screen to skip to the next \"segment\" and repeat the two steps above.<br /><br />The ninth \"segment\" is your overall summary, and shows all your sports combined.<br /><br />Save it (using the \"[\u2193] Save\" button as noted above), then<br />* tap the \"\u270f\ufe0f \u00a0Customize\" button<br />* choose an individual sport (e.g. \"\ud83d\udc5f Run\")<br />* tap \"Save changes\"<br />* save that image (with the \"[\u2193] Save\" button as above)<br />* tap customize again<br />* choose the next sport (e.g. \"\ud83d\udeb2 Ride\")<br />* \"Save changes\" again<br />* \"[\u2193] Save\" button again<br /><br />Strava seemingly only reports summaries of (up to?) two of your sports. Those were Run (presumably all running, street and trail) and Ride for me.<br /><br /><br />Cleanup Your Screenshots<br /><br />After having saved all the videos/images for each \"segment\", you can:<br />* go back to your mobile\u2019s top level Photos app/stream<br />* delete the screenshots<br /><br />You should see all the images you've saved (no videos this year). If anything is missing, go back to the previous steps and save them again, then remove any duplicates as necessary.<br /><br /><br />I have saved all the images from my own Strava Year In Sport, and as I assemble the pieces into my own Year in Sport post, I\u2019ll take more notes, and add to the IndieWeb year in review page accordingly: <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/year_in_review\">https://indieweb.org/year_in_review</a><br /><br />Previously: <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2025/001/t3/strava-year-in-sport-how-to-get-info-save\">https://tantek.com/2025/001/t3/strava-year-in-sport-how-to-get-info-save</a><br /><br />#<span class=\"p-category\">Strava</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">yearInSport</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">yearInReview</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">ownYourYearInReview</span><br /><br />This is post 2 of #<span class=\"p-category\">100PostsOfIndieWeb</span>. #<span class=\"p-category\">100Posts</span><br /><br />\u2190 <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2026/001/t1/no-socials-january\">https://tantek.com/2026/001/t1/no-socials-january</a><br />\u2192 \ud83d\udd2e"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "https://tantek.com/",
"photo": "https://tantek.com/photo.jpg"
},
"post-type": "photo",
"_id": "46944998",
"_source": "2460"
}
2026 goals I’ve heard:
* Dry January — avoid alcohol
* Meatless January — avoid meat
If you have a personal website, how about also:
* No Socials January — avoid #socialMedia silos
No posting on social media, just for a month (not counting DMs).
Instead, since you have your own website, post there, and see how that feels.
If you don’t have a personal website, make it your goal for the month to set one up. The #IndieWeb folks https://indieweb.org/ can help! Join https://chat.indieweb.org/
Once again I am restarting a #100PostsOfIndieWeb #100Posts project for the year.
This is post 1.
Previously:
* https://tantek.com/2025/001/t1/15-years-notes-my-site-first
← ✨
→ 🔮
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-01-01 22:56-0800",
"url": "https://tantek.com/2026/001/t1/no-socials-january",
"category": [
"socialMedia",
"IndieWeb",
"100PostsOfIndieWeb",
"100Posts"
],
"content": {
"text": "2026 goals I\u2019ve heard:\n* Dry January \u2014 avoid alcohol\n* Meatless January \u2014 avoid meat\n\nIf you have a personal website, how about also:\n\n* No Socials January \u2014 avoid #socialMedia silos\n\nNo posting on social media, just for a month (not counting DMs).\n\nInstead, since you have your own website, post there, and see how that feels.\n\nIf you don\u2019t have a personal website, make it your goal for the month to set one up. The #IndieWeb folks https://indieweb.org/ can help! Join https://chat.indieweb.org/\n\nOnce again I am restarting a #100PostsOfIndieWeb #100Posts project for the year.\n\nThis is post 1.\n\nPreviously:\n* https://tantek.com/2025/001/t1/15-years-notes-my-site-first\n\n\u2190 \u2728\n\u2192 \ud83d\udd2e",
"html": "2026 goals I\u2019ve heard:<br />* Dry January \u2014 avoid alcohol<br />* Meatless January \u2014 avoid meat<br /><br />If you have a personal website, how about also:<br /><br />* No Socials January \u2014 avoid #<span class=\"p-category\">socialMedia</span> silos<br /><br />No posting on social media, just for a month (not counting DMs).<br /><br />Instead, since you have your own website, post there, and see how that feels.<br /><br />If you don\u2019t have a personal website, make it your goal for the month to set one up. The #<span class=\"p-category\">IndieWeb</span> folks <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/\">https://indieweb.org/</a> can help! Join <a href=\"https://chat.indieweb.org/\">https://chat.indieweb.org/</a><br /><br />Once again I am restarting a #<span class=\"p-category\">100PostsOfIndieWeb</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">100Posts</span> project for the year.<br /><br />This is post 1.<br /><br />Previously:<br />* <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2025/001/t1/15-years-notes-my-site-first\">https://tantek.com/2025/001/t1/15-years-notes-my-site-first</a><br /><br />\u2190 \u2728<br />\u2192 \ud83d\udd2e"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "https://tantek.com/",
"photo": "https://tantek.com/photo.jpg"
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "46937615",
"_source": "2460"
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2026-01-01T06:03:50+00:00",
"url": "https://cleverdevil.io/2026/just-got-home-did-i-miss-anything",
"photo": [
"https://cleverdevil.io/file/40a3ed8b26ca5ae0fad6c3658304b33a/thumb.jpg"
],
"syndication": [
"https://cleverdevil.club/@jonathan/115818327686606453",
"https://bsky.app/profile/cleverdevil.io/post/3mbdphs36gi2b"
],
"name": "Just got home, did I miss anything? \ud83d\ude4c\ud83c\udffb \ud83c\udfc8",
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jonathan LaCour",
"url": "https://cleverdevil.io/profile/cleverdevil",
"photo": "https://cleverdevil.io/file/e37c3982acf4f0a8421d085b9971cd71/thumb.jpg"
},
"post-type": "photo",
"_id": "46928550",
"_source": "10"
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2025-12-31 11:38-0800",
"url": "https://tantek.com/2025/365/t1/donation-suggestions-donate-resonate",
"category": [
"donation",
"donated",
"donate",
"Mozilla",
"W3C"
],
"content": {
"text": "2025 #donation suggestions. I #donated to these, #donate to those that resonate:\n\n@ACLU\n@CalAcademy\n@NAACP\n@deYoungMuseum\n@ExperienceCamps\n@Exploratorium\n@EFF\n@Wikipedia\n@InternetArchive\n@SFMOMA\n@KQED\n@MontereyAq\n@SPLCenter\n@LongNow\n@RPF_EB\n@GardensofGGP\n@PPact\n@Mozilla**\n\n**Disclosure: I work for #Mozilla, on & with open web standards & communities @IndieWebCamp @microformats @WHATWG #W3C supported by @Firefox to provide a more human-centric, private, and secure web for all users.\n\nPreviously: https://tantek.com/2024/366/t2/last-donation-please-donate-tonight",
"html": "2025 #<span class=\"p-category\">donation</span> suggestions. I #<span class=\"p-category\">donated</span> to these, #<span class=\"p-category\">donate</span> to those that resonate:<br /><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/ACLU\">@ACLU</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/CalAcademy\">@CalAcademy</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/NAACP\">@NAACP</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/deYoungMuseum\">@deYoungMuseum</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/ExperienceCamps\">@ExperienceCamps</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/Exploratorium\">@Exploratorium</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/EFF\">@EFF</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/Wikipedia\">@Wikipedia</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/InternetArchive\">@InternetArchive</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/SFMOMA\">@SFMOMA</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/KQED\">@KQED</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/MontereyAq\">@MontereyAq</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/SPLCenter\">@SPLCenter</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/LongNow\">@LongNow</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/RPF_EB\">@RPF_EB</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/GardensofGGP\">@GardensofGGP</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/PPact\">@PPact</a><br /><a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/Mozilla\">@Mozilla</a>**<br /><br />**Disclosure: I work for #<span class=\"p-category\">Mozilla</span>, on & with open web standards & communities <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/IndieWebCamp\">@IndieWebCamp</a> <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/microformats\">@microformats</a> <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/WHATWG\">@WHATWG</a> #<span class=\"p-category\">W3C</span> supported by <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/Firefox\">@Firefox</a> to provide a more human-centric, private, and secure web for all users.<br /><br />Previously: <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2024/366/t2/last-donation-please-donate-tonight\">https://tantek.com/2024/366/t2/last-donation-please-donate-tonight</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "https://tantek.com/",
"photo": "https://tantek.com/photo.jpg"
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "46925286",
"_source": "2460"
}