In the name of holy engagement, the native experience of products like Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram are moving away from giving people the ability to curate. They do this by taking control away from you, the user. By showing what other people liked, or by showing recommendations, without any way to turn it off, they prevent people from creating a better experience for themselves.
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"published": "2017-12-14T19:50:36Z",
"url": "https://adactio.com/links/13199",
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"text": "Curation - Snook.ca\n\n \n\n\n In the name of holy engagement, the native experience of products like Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram are moving away from giving people the ability to curate. They do this by taking control away from you, the user. By showing what other people liked, or by showing recommendations, without any way to turn it off, they prevent people from creating a better experience for themselves.",
"html": "<h3>\n<a class=\"p-name u-bookmark-of\" href=\"https://snook.ca/archives/opinion/curation\">\nCuration - Snook.ca\n</a>\n</h3>\n\n<blockquote>\n <p>In the name of holy engagement, the native experience of products like Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram are moving away from giving people the ability to curate. They do this by taking control away from you, the user. By showing what other people liked, or by showing recommendations, without any way to turn it off, they prevent people from creating a better experience for themselves.</p>\n</blockquote>"
},
"_id": "4919",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2017-12-13T20:53:43-05:00",
"url": "https://david.shanske.com/2017/12/13/update-read-posts-physical-books/",
"in-reply-to": [
"http://boffosocko.com/2017/12/11/an-update-to-read-posts-for-physical-books/#comment-40049"
],
"name": "An update to read posts for physical books by Chris AldrichChris Aldrich (Chris Aldrich | BoffoSocko) Inspired by gRegor Morrill\u2019s IndieWebCamp Austin project, I went back and took a look at some of my read posts, and particularly for books. \r\nFor online material, I use the Post Kinds Plugin which does a good job of adding h-cite and p-read-of (experimental) microformats classes to the data for the... This just gave me an idea\u2026\nhttps://github.com/dshanske/indieweb-post-kinds/issues/134 \n \n\t \n\n\tPosted on 8:53PM EST\nDecember 13, 2017Kind Reply5 Comments on An update to read posts for physical books",
"content": {
"text": "This just gave me an idea\u2026\nhttps://github.com/dshanske/indieweb-post-kinds/issues/134",
"html": "This just gave me an idea\u2026\n<p>https://github.com/dshanske/indieweb-post-kinds/issues/134</p>\n<p>\u00a0</p>"
},
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"type": "card",
"name": "David Shanske",
"url": "https://david.shanske.com",
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Since Tantek is still in Austin, we’re having a last-minute Homebrew Website Club meetup tonight! 6:30pm at Halcyon on 4th street. Join us to chat about the IndieWeb or work on your own site.
{
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"author": {
"name": "manton",
"url": "http://www.manton.org",
"photo": null
},
"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/6183.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Since Tantek is still in Austin, we\u2019re having a last-minute Homebrew Website Club meetup tonight! 6:30pm at Halcyon on 4th street. Join us to chat about the IndieWeb or work on your own site.</p>",
"text": "Since Tantek is still in Austin, we’re having a last-minute Homebrew Website Club meetup tonight! 6:30pm at Halcyon on 4th street. Join us to chat about the IndieWeb or work on your own site."
},
"published": "2017-12-13T14:01:01+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-13T14:01:01+00:00",
"_id": "4569",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
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"name": "manton",
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"photo": null
},
"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/indiewebcamp-austin-wrap-up.html",
"name": "IndieWebCamp Austin wrap-up",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Over the weekend we hosted the first IndieWebCamp in Austin. I\u2019m really happy with the way the event came together. I learned a lot in helping plan it, made a few mistakes that we can improve next time, but overall came away as inspired as ever to keep improving Micro.blog so that it\u2019s a standout platform of the IndieWeb movement.</p>\n<p>There\u2019s nothing like meeting in person with other members of the community. I know this from attending Apple developer conferences, but the weekend in Austin only underscored that I should be more active in the larger web community as well.</p>\n<p><img src=\"https://manton.org/images/2017/indiewebcamp_group_photo.png\" width=\"600\" height=\"400\" alt=\"IndieWebCamp group photo\" /></p>\n<p>The first day of IndieWebCamp started with introductions, a chance for attendees to demo their web sites, an overview of IndieWeb building blocks by Aaron Parecki, and then brainstorming <a href=\"http://www.manton.org/2017/12/6164.html\">what topics</a> the afternoon sessions should cover. After lunch, we held sessions on WordPress, static sites, Micropub posts, Webmentions, payment APIs, audio, decentralized aggregation, and post kinds.</p>\n<p>The second day was a hack day, with a chance to work on our own web sites. This was a very valuable day for me \u2014\u00a0being able to bounce ideas or questions off other attendees. I chose to make an improvement to Micro.blog\u2019s Micropub API endpoint to accept \u201cbookmark-of\u201d POSTs, mapping them to favorites. This evolved into opening up Micro.blog to allow favoriting any URL, even if the post doesn\u2019t exist in any feed that Micro.blog knows about yet.</p>\n<p>At the end of the day I was happy enough with the feature that I deployed my code and database changes. I demoed it using <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/Indigenous\">Indigenous</a> for iPhone and Micro.blog for Mac, favoriting an indiewebcat.com post on the web and watching it show up in the app under the post\u2019s domain name. Micro.blog got better support for Microformats with this change, pulling the author info, post text, and photo when you favorite a post via Micropub.</p>\n<p><img src=\"https://manton.org/images/2017/microblog_bookmark_of.png\" width=\"550\" height=\"590\" alt=\"Mac screenshot\" /></p>\n<p>For the last few years I\u2019ve attended WWDC and Release Notes each year, and I\u2019d usually give a talk at CocoaConf. This year I added WordCamp and IndieWebCamp, and gave a talk about indie microblogging at Refresh Austin. I hope that it works out to attend another IndieWebCamp or IndieWebSummit in 2018.</p>\n<p>Special thanks again to Tom Brown for helping out with planning IndieWebCamp Austin, EFF-Austin for hosting their holiday party after our event, and our sponsors DreamHost, Polycot Associates, and SuperBorrowNet. We should do this again next year.</p>",
"text": "Over the weekend we hosted the first IndieWebCamp in Austin. I’m really happy with the way the event came together. I learned a lot in helping plan it, made a few mistakes that we can improve next time, but overall came away as inspired as ever to keep improving Micro.blog so that it’s a standout platform of the IndieWeb movement.\nThere’s nothing like meeting in person with other members of the community. I know this from attending Apple developer conferences, but the weekend in Austin only underscored that I should be more active in the larger web community as well.\n\nThe first day of IndieWebCamp started with introductions, a chance for attendees to demo their web sites, an overview of IndieWeb building blocks by Aaron Parecki, and then brainstorming what topics the afternoon sessions should cover. After lunch, we held sessions on WordPress, static sites, Micropub posts, Webmentions, payment APIs, audio, decentralized aggregation, and post kinds.\nThe second day was a hack day, with a chance to work on our own web sites. This was a very valuable day for me \u2014\u00a0being able to bounce ideas or questions off other attendees. I chose to make an improvement to Micro.blog’s Micropub API endpoint to accept “bookmark-of” POSTs, mapping them to favorites. This evolved into opening up Micro.blog to allow favoriting any URL, even if the post doesn’t exist in any feed that Micro.blog knows about yet.\nAt the end of the day I was happy enough with the feature that I deployed my code and database changes. I demoed it using Indigenous for iPhone and Micro.blog for Mac, favoriting an indiewebcat.com post on the web and watching it show up in the app under the post’s domain name. Micro.blog got better support for Microformats with this change, pulling the author info, post text, and photo when you favorite a post via Micropub.\n\nFor the last few years I’ve attended WWDC and Release Notes each year, and I’d usually give a talk at CocoaConf. This year I added WordCamp and IndieWebCamp, and gave a talk about indie microblogging at Refresh Austin. I hope that it works out to attend another IndieWebCamp or IndieWebSummit in 2018.\nSpecial thanks again to Tom Brown for helping out with planning IndieWebCamp Austin, EFF-Austin for hosting their holiday party after our event, and our sponsors DreamHost, Polycot Associates, and SuperBorrowNet. We should do this again next year."
},
"published": "2017-12-12T17:39:26+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-12T17:54:02+00:00",
"_id": "4449",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}
One of my goals in 2018 is to own my reading data rather than using Goodreads for all of that information. This will allow me to track information the way I want rather than have to do it like Goodreads wants me to.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2017-12-12T09:39:33-05:00",
"summary": "One of my goals in 2018 is to own my reading data rather than using Goodreads for all of that information. This will allow me to track information the way I want rather than have to do it like Goodreads wants me to.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2017/12/12/2/article/",
"category": [
"100chapters",
"indieweb",
"indieweb-goals"
],
"name": "Owning my Reading and 100 Days of Reading Chapters",
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com",
"photo": null
},
"_id": "9545",
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Following the IndieWeb mantra of “manual until it hurts”, all of my RSVP posts have been manually posted by hand to my website because it’s not something I did often and I hadn’t had the time to sit down and fix that.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2017-12-11T17:05:10-05:00",
"summary": "Following the IndieWeb mantra of \u201cmanual until it hurts\u201d, all of my RSVP posts have been manually posted by hand to my website because it\u2019s not something I did often and I hadn\u2019t had the time to sit down and fix that.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2017/12/11/13/article/",
"category": [
"indieweb",
"web-dev"
],
"name": "Making RSVP posts less painful",
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com",
"photo": null
},
"_id": "9546",
"_source": "39",
"_is_read": true
}
Worked on expanding Micro.blog’s Micropub endpoint with support for bookmark-of today during IndieWebCamp Austin. The weekend really helped clarify how I want to approach replies, favorites/bookmarks, and other reactions.
{
"type": "entry",
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"name": "manton",
"url": "http://www.manton.org",
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},
"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/6166.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Worked on expanding Micro.blog\u2019s Micropub endpoint with support for <code>bookmark-of</code> today during IndieWebCamp Austin. The weekend really helped clarify how I want to approach replies, favorites/bookmarks, and other reactions.</p>",
"text": "Worked on expanding Micro.blog’s Micropub endpoint with support for bookmark-of today during IndieWebCamp Austin. The weekend really helped clarify how I want to approach replies, favorites/bookmarks, and other reactions."
},
"published": "2017-12-11T03:40:38+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-11T03:40:38+00:00",
"_id": "3997",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": null,
"url": "https://herestomwiththeweather.com/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://herestomwiththeweather.com/2017/12/10/simple-indieauth-project-for-indiewebcamp-austin/",
"published": "2017-12-10T15:59:09+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p><img src=\"https://s3.amazonaws.com/coffeebucks/800px-IndieWebCamp_Austin_2017.jpg\" alt=\"indiewebcamp group picture\" /></p>\n\n<p>Photo credit: <a href=\"https://noahread.net/\">Noah Read</a></p>\n\n<p>As expected, <a href=\"https://2017.indieweb.org/austin\">IndieWebCamp Austin</a> was great! Demo time begins in a few minutes and I decided to add <a href=\"https://indieauth.net/\">IndieAuth</a> authentication to a test project I already had on Github named <a href=\"https://github.com/herestomwiththeweather/example_rails51_vuejs\">example_rails51_vuejs</a>. I followed the <a href=\"https://indieauth.com/developers\">Indieauth for Developers</a> instructions and deployed the updated project to <a href=\"https://austin-indieauth-demo.herokuapp.com/\">https://austin-indieauth-demo.herokuapp.com</a></p>",
"text": "Photo credit: Noah Read\n\nAs expected, IndieWebCamp Austin was great! Demo time begins in a few minutes and I decided to add IndieAuth authentication to a test project I already had on Github named example_rails51_vuejs. I followed the Indieauth for Developers instructions and deployed the updated project to https://austin-indieauth-demo.herokuapp.com"
},
"name": "Simple Indieauth Project for IndieWebCamp Austin",
"_id": "124175",
"_source": "246",
"_is_read": true
}
Aaron Parecki talking about the building blocks of the IndieWeb — your own domain name, types of posts, Microformats, Webmention, and more — at IndieWebCamp.
{
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"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/6161.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p><a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/\">Aaron Parecki</a> talking about the building blocks of the IndieWeb \u2014 your own domain name, types of posts, Microformats, Webmention, and more \u2014 at IndieWebCamp.</p>",
"text": "Aaron Parecki talking about the building blocks of the IndieWeb \u2014 your own domain name, types of posts, Microformats, Webmention, and more \u2014 at IndieWebCamp."
},
"published": "2017-12-09T16:56:44+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-09T16:56:44+00:00",
"_id": "3769",
"_source": "12",
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The day before the event starts, we decided it was probably time to create a Facebook event for IndieWebCamp Austin. Priorities: blogs and wikis first. But feel free to RSVP on Facebook if you can make it!
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "manton",
"url": "http://www.manton.org",
"photo": null
},
"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/6159.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p>The day before the event starts, we decided it was probably time to create a <a href=\"https://www.facebook.com/events/134934643858347/\">Facebook event for IndieWebCamp Austin</a>. Priorities: blogs and wikis first. But feel free to RSVP on Facebook if you can make it!</p>",
"text": "The day before the event starts, we decided it was probably time to create a Facebook event for IndieWebCamp Austin. Priorities: blogs and wikis first. But feel free to RSVP on Facebook if you can make it!"
},
"published": "2017-12-08T23:12:41+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-08T23:12:41+00:00",
"_id": "3553",
"_source": "12",
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Two new podcast episodes today: Core Intuition 308 is a full hour about the MarsEdit 4 release. Timetable 90 is a full… 6 minutes about IndieWebCamp and my week.
{
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"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/6149.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Two new podcast episodes today: <a href=\"https://coreint.org/308\">Core Intuition 308</a> is a full hour about the MarsEdit 4 release. <a href=\"http://timetable.manton.org/2017/12/episode-90-breakfast-taco-catering/\">Timetable 90</a> is a full\u2026 6 minutes about IndieWebCamp and my week.</p>",
"text": "Two new podcast episodes today: Core Intuition 308 is a full hour about the MarsEdit 4 release. Timetable 90 is a full\u2026 6 minutes about IndieWebCamp and my week."
},
"published": "2017-12-08T01:37:27+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-08T01:37:27+00:00",
"_id": "3324",
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IndieWebCamp Austin is this weekend! We’ll have IndieWeb co-founders @t and @aaronpk in town for the event. Join us for a day of IndieWeb topics, plus a hack day to work on your own web site or new projects.
{
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"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/6144.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p><a href=\"https://www.eventbrite.com/e/indiewebcamp-austin-2017-tickets-39918084064\">IndieWebCamp Austin</a> is this weekend! We\u2019ll have IndieWeb co-founders @t and @aaronpk in town for the event. Join us for a day of IndieWeb topics, plus a hack day to work on your own web site or new projects.</p>",
"text": "IndieWebCamp Austin is this weekend! We’ll have IndieWeb co-founders @t and @aaronpk in town for the event. Join us for a day of IndieWeb topics, plus a hack day to work on your own web site or new projects."
},
"published": "2017-12-06T21:28:32+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-06T21:28:32+00:00",
"_id": "2989",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "manton",
"url": "http://www.manton.org",
"photo": null
},
"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/timetable-on-marsedit-4-and-open-apis.html",
"name": "Timetable on MarsEdit 4 and open APIs",
"content": {
"html": "<p><em><a href=\"http://timetable.manton.org/2017/12/episode-89-more-blog-software/\">Today I posted another episode</a> of my daily podcast Timetable. It\u2019s a short episode about the MarsEdit 4 release and why even competing apps should be compatible and embrace the open web. Here\u2019s a transcript.</em></p>\n<p>Today, MarsEdit 4 shipped. I posted to my blog with a link to the new version, and I included some comments in the blog post about using MarsEdit with Micro.blog.</p>\n<p>Congrats to Daniel. This has been years in the making. It\u2019s great to see it come out, and we\u2019ll be talking more about this on my other podcast Core Intuition later this week.</p>\n<p>Even if Daniel wasn\u2019t my friend and co-host of Core Intuition, I\u2019d still be excited about MarsEdit, because more blogging software is a good thing. The Mac version of Micro.blog kind of competes with MarsEdit, since you can use Micro.blog to post to WordPress, just like you can with MarsEdit. But it\u2019s also a nice complement, because you can use MarsEdit to post to blogs that are hosted on Micro.blog. And MarsEdit is full-featured and has more features that you might want to upgrade to, even if you\u2019re using Micro.blog.</p>\n<p>And this is how I think software should work, and why the open web and open APIs are important. You should be able to switch between apps without changing everything.</p>\n<p>You should be able to use MarsEdit to post to your blog. You should be able to use Micro.blog \u2014\u00a0the Mac app or the iOS app \u2014\u00a0to post to that same blog.</p>\n<p>Imagine if you could use the official Twitter app to post to Facebook. You open Twitter, you click new tweet, and then you click in the destination (somewhere in the UI), and you select Facebook instead. And instead of going to Twitter, it goes to Facebook.</p>\n<p>Sounds crazy. How could that possibly work? Why would Twitter or Facebook ever allow something like that?</p>\n<p>But that\u2019s how it <em>should</em> work. We are so used to these silos and these apps that are not compatible with anything, that we just accept it. But that\u2019s how it should work.</p>\n<p>You should be able to use multiple apps to post to different services. And that\u2019s what\u2019s happening with apps that are built with some compatibility in mind, especially on IndieWeb standards. That\u2019s what\u2019s happening with MarsEdit and Micro.blog, although on a much smaller scale.</p>\n<p>I\u2019ve been thinking about how much work we have to do to reach the audience of potential indie microbloggers. Last night, I attended <a href=\"https://www.meetup.com/austinrb/events/245027719/\">AustinRB</a>, a local meetup here in Austin for Ruby programmers. There was a great talk on metaprogramming \u2014 really enjoyed it. And as I mentioned yesterday, Tom Brown, who is also helping me out with IndieWebCamp planning\u2026 He gave a talk on the IndieWeb.</p>\n<p>And listening to questions from the audience, it was just so obvious how far we have to go. Everyone is so used to Twitter and Facebook and Instagram, that in a way we have to outline the IndieWeb and services like Micro.blog in a way that mainstream users of other social networks can relate to.</p>\n<p>It\u2019s a big jump to go from only thinking about Twitter, to all of a sudden thinking about your own domain name, sending replies between independent web sites perhaps, to thinking about a timeline that is based on feeds from all over the web. It\u2019s a big jump.</p>\n<p>And in a way, it\u2019s kind of discouraging when I think about making that case for how the web should work. It\u2019s a massive task to explain the value of the open web and the danger of relying on 100% centralized networks.</p>\n<p>But on the other hand, there are a <em>lot</em> of people in the world, a lot of people who want to write on the internet, who care about what they say and how they say it. WordPress powers 29% of the web.</p>\n<p>The market is there. It\u2019s just a matter of reaching everyone. And so that\u2019s encouraging.</p>\n<p>And it starts in communities like the IndieWeb. And hopefully in the community we\u2019re trying to build on Micro.blog.</p>\n<p>It\u2019s not too late to register for IndieWebCamp. It\u2019s this weekend in Austin. Go to <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/\">IndieWeb.org</a>. I hope you can join us. There\u2019s a lot of work to do to build the web that we need. Thanks for listening today.</p>",
"text": "Today I posted another episode of my daily podcast Timetable. It’s a short episode about the MarsEdit 4 release and why even competing apps should be compatible and embrace the open web. Here’s a transcript.\nToday, MarsEdit 4 shipped. I posted to my blog with a link to the new version, and I included some comments in the blog post about using MarsEdit with Micro.blog.\nCongrats to Daniel. This has been years in the making. It’s great to see it come out, and we’ll be talking more about this on my other podcast Core Intuition later this week.\nEven if Daniel wasn’t my friend and co-host of Core Intuition, I’d still be excited about MarsEdit, because more blogging software is a good thing. The Mac version of Micro.blog kind of competes with MarsEdit, since you can use Micro.blog to post to WordPress, just like you can with MarsEdit. But it’s also a nice complement, because you can use MarsEdit to post to blogs that are hosted on Micro.blog. And MarsEdit is full-featured and has more features that you might want to upgrade to, even if you’re using Micro.blog.\nAnd this is how I think software should work, and why the open web and open APIs are important. You should be able to switch between apps without changing everything.\nYou should be able to use MarsEdit to post to your blog. You should be able to use Micro.blog \u2014\u00a0the Mac app or the iOS app \u2014\u00a0to post to that same blog.\nImagine if you could use the official Twitter app to post to Facebook. You open Twitter, you click new tweet, and then you click in the destination (somewhere in the UI), and you select Facebook instead. And instead of going to Twitter, it goes to Facebook.\nSounds crazy. How could that possibly work? Why would Twitter or Facebook ever allow something like that?\nBut that’s how it should work. We are so used to these silos and these apps that are not compatible with anything, that we just accept it. But that’s how it should work.\nYou should be able to use multiple apps to post to different services. And that’s what’s happening with apps that are built with some compatibility in mind, especially on IndieWeb standards. That’s what’s happening with MarsEdit and Micro.blog, although on a much smaller scale.\nI’ve been thinking about how much work we have to do to reach the audience of potential indie microbloggers. Last night, I attended AustinRB, a local meetup here in Austin for Ruby programmers. There was a great talk on metaprogramming \u2014 really enjoyed it. And as I mentioned yesterday, Tom Brown, who is also helping me out with IndieWebCamp planning\u2026 He gave a talk on the IndieWeb.\nAnd listening to questions from the audience, it was just so obvious how far we have to go. Everyone is so used to Twitter and Facebook and Instagram, that in a way we have to outline the IndieWeb and services like Micro.blog in a way that mainstream users of other social networks can relate to.\nIt’s a big jump to go from only thinking about Twitter, to all of a sudden thinking about your own domain name, sending replies between independent web sites perhaps, to thinking about a timeline that is based on feeds from all over the web. It’s a big jump.\nAnd in a way, it’s kind of discouraging when I think about making that case for how the web should work. It’s a massive task to explain the value of the open web and the danger of relying on 100% centralized networks.\nBut on the other hand, there are a lot of people in the world, a lot of people who want to write on the internet, who care about what they say and how they say it. WordPress powers 29% of the web.\nThe market is there. It’s just a matter of reaching everyone. And so that’s encouraging.\nAnd it starts in communities like the IndieWeb. And hopefully in the community we’re trying to build on Micro.blog.\nIt’s not too late to register for IndieWebCamp. It’s this weekend in Austin. Go to IndieWeb.org. I hope you can join us. There’s a lot of work to do to build the web that we need. Thanks for listening today."
},
"published": "2017-12-05T20:24:07+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-05T20:24:07+00:00",
"_id": "2732",
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{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "manton",
"url": "http://www.manton.org",
"photo": null
},
"url": "http://www.manton.org/2017/12/6119.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Got some stickers for IndieWebCamp. It\u2019s next weekend! You can learn more <a href=\"https://www.eventbrite.com/e/indiewebcamp-austin-2017-tickets-39918084064\">about the event or register here</a>.</p>\n<p><img src=\"http://www.manton.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/f96fb430b98b43c3a0778d7be8eabeff.jpg\" width=\"600\" height=\"600\" alt=\"f96fb430b98b43c3a0778d7be8eabeff.jpg\" /></p>",
"text": "Got some stickers for IndieWebCamp. It\u2019s next weekend! You can learn more about the event or register here."
},
"published": "2017-12-03T17:43:33+00:00",
"updated": "2017-12-03T17:43:33+00:00",
"_id": "2043",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2017-12-01T09:49:59Z",
"url": "https://adactio.com/links/13152",
"category": [
"indieweb",
"posse",
"publishing",
"ownership",
"medium",
"twitter",
"facebook",
"cdn"
],
"bookmark-of": [
"https://nicolas-hoizey.com/2017/11/medium-is-only-an-edge-server-of-your-posse-cdn-your-own-blog-is-the-origin.html"
],
"content": {
"text": "Medium is only an edge server of your POSSE CDN, your own blog is the origin\n\n \n\n\n Medium, Twitter, Facebook and others are edge services for your content \u2026 Your platform is the origin.",
"html": "<h3>\n<a class=\"p-name u-bookmark-of\" href=\"https://nicolas-hoizey.com/2017/11/medium-is-only-an-edge-server-of-your-posse-cdn-your-own-blog-is-the-origin.html\">\nMedium is only an edge server of your POSSE CDN, your own blog is the origin\n</a>\n</h3>\n\n<blockquote>\n <p>Medium, Twitter, Facebook and others are edge services for your content \u2026 Your platform is the origin.</p>\n</blockquote>"
},
"_id": "1658",
"_source": "2",
"_is_read": true
}