{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-26T16:00:51+0000",
"url": "http://known.kevinmarks.com/2018/the-social-media-platforms-like-facebook-twitter",
"category": [
"indieweb"
],
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/kevinmarks/status/978300761204338690"
],
"content": {
"text": "\u201cthe social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter\u2026 are: The Spew.\n\nIt is like a global garbage pile of digital flotsam and jetsam, over which peasants scurry around and scour, looking for some morsel here, a crumb there, which can be monetized.\u201d https://www.easydns.com/blog/2018/03/26/should-you-delete-your-facebook-page/ #indieweb",
"html": "\u201cthe social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter\u2026 are: The Spew.<br />\nIt is like a global garbage pile of digital flotsam and jetsam, over which peasants scurry around and scour, looking for some morsel here, a crumb there, which can be monetized.\u201d <a href=\"https://www.easydns.com/blog/2018/03/26/should-you-delete-your-facebook-page/\">https://www.easydns.com/blog/2018/03/26/should-you-delete-your-facebook-page/</a> <a href=\"http://known.kevinmarks.com/tag/indieweb\" class=\"p-category\">#indieweb</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Kevin Marks",
"url": "http://known.kevinmarks.com/profile/kevinmarks",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/known.kevinmarks.com/f893d11435a62200ec9585e0ea3d84b2bdc478aa0a056dda35a43ce4c04d58a0.jpg"
},
"_id": "162608",
"_source": "205",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-26T13:23:50+0000",
"url": "http://known.kevinmarks.com/2018/why-does-jamespoulos-think-the-bbc-is",
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/kevinmarks/status/978261246309879809"
],
"content": {
"text": "Why does @jamespoulos think the BBC is a bad thing? \u201cFacebook might soon become a 21st-century BBC. But outside its walled gardens, the wilds of online won't be so easily tamed.\u201d https://amp.thedailybeast.com/facebooks-existential-crisis-isnt-what-you-think-it-is?__indieweb_impr...",
"html": "Why does @jamespoulos think the BBC is a bad thing? \u201cFacebook might soon become a 21st-century BBC. But outside its walled gardens, the wilds of online won't be so easily tamed.\u201d <a href=\"https://amp.thedailybeast.com/facebooks-existential-crisis-isnt-what-you-think-it-is?__indieweb_impression=true\">https://amp.thedailybeast.com/facebooks-existential-crisis-isnt-what-you-think-it-is?__indieweb_impr...</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Kevin Marks",
"url": "http://known.kevinmarks.com/profile/kevinmarks",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/known.kevinmarks.com/f893d11435a62200ec9585e0ea3d84b2bdc478aa0a056dda35a43ce4c04d58a0.jpg"
},
"_id": "162609",
"_source": "205",
"_is_read": true
}
As with anything, there will always be people on all spectrums of belief. But just know, the IndieWeb has defined 4 generations of potential users (https://indieweb.org/generations) because we believe that a world can exist where people that don’t have to build their own website in order to own their data. However until the tooling is advanced enough, only the earlier generations will be able to effectively own their data.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-25T16:34:19-04:00",
"summary": "As with anything, there will always be people on all spectrums of belief. But just know, the IndieWeb has defined 4 generations of potential users (https://indieweb.org/generations) because we believe that a world can exist where people that don\u2019t have to build their own website in order to own their data. However until the tooling is advanced enough, only the earlier generations will be able to effectively own their data.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/03/25/18/reply/",
"category": [
"indieweb"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://mobile.twitter.com/blaine/status/977799174392606720"
],
"content": {
"text": "As with anything, there will always be people on all spectrums of belief. But just know, the IndieWeb has defined 4 generations of potential users (https://indieweb.org/generations) because we believe that a world can exist where people that don\u2019t have to build their own website in order to own their data. However until the tooling is advanced enough, only the earlier generations will be able to effectively own their data.",
"html": "<p>As with anything, there will always be people on all spectrums of belief. But just know, the IndieWeb has defined 4 generations of potential users (https://indieweb.org/generations) because we believe that a world can exist where people that don\u2019t have to build their own website in order to own their data. However until the tooling is advanced enough, only the earlier generations will be able to effectively own their data.</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/eddiehinkle.com/cf9f85e26d4be531bc908d37f69bff1c50b50b87fd066b254f1332c3553df1a8.jpg"
},
"refs": {
"https://mobile.twitter.com/blaine/status/977799174392606720": {
"type": "entry",
"url": "https://mobile.twitter.com/blaine/status/977799174392606720",
"name": "https://mobile.twitter.com/blaine/status/977799174392606720"
}
},
"_id": "159952",
"_source": "226",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Peter Molnar",
"url": "https://petermolnar.net",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://petermolnar.net/internet-emotional-core/",
"published": "2018-03-25T21:20:00+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p>There is a video out there, titled \"The Fall of The Simpsons: How it Happened\"<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn1\">1</a>. It starts by introducing a mediocre show that airs every night, called \"The Simpsons\", and compares it to a genius cartoon, that used to air in the early 90s, called \"The Simpsons\". <em>Watch the video, because it's good, and I'm about to use it's conclusion</em>.</p>\n<p>It reckons that the tremendous difference is due to shrinking layers in jokes, and, more importantly, in the characters after season 7. I believe something similar happened online, which made the Internet become the internet.</p>\n<p>Many moons ago, while still living in London, the pedal of our flatmate's sewing machine broke down, and I started digging for replacement parts for her. I stumbled upon a detailed website about ancient capacitors<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn2\">2</a>. It resembled other, gorgeous sources of knowledge: one of my all time favourite is leofoo's site on historical Nikon equipment<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn3\">3</a>. All decades old sites, containing specialist level knowledge on topics only used to be found in books in dusty corners of forgotten libraries.</p>\n<p>There's an interesting article about how chronological ordering destroyed the original way of curating content<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn4\">4</a> during the early online era, and I think the article got many things right. Try to imagine a slow web: slow connection slow updates, slow everything. Take away social networks - no Twitter, no Facebook. Forget news aggregators: no more Hacker News or Reddit, not even Technorati. Grab your laptop and put in down on a desk, preferably in a corner - you're not allowed to move it. Use the HTML version of DuckDuckGo<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn5\">5</a> to search, and navigate with links from one site to another. That's how it was like; surfing on the <em>information highway</em>, and if you really want to experience it, UbuWeb<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn6\">6</a> will allow you to do so.</p>\n<p>Most of the content was hand crafted, arranged to be readable, not searchable; it was human first, not machine first. Nearly everything online had a lot of effort put into it, even if the result was eye-blowing red text on blue background<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn7\">7</a>; somebody worked a lot on it. If you wanted it out there you learnt HTML, how to use FTP, how to link, how to format your page.</p>\n<p>We used to have homepages. Homes on the Internet. <em>Not profiles, no; profile is something the authorities make about you in dossier.</em></p>\n<p>6 years ago Anil Dash released a video, \"The web we lost\"<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn8\">8</a> and lamented the web 2.0 - <em>I despise this phrase; a horrible buzzword everyone used to label anything with; if you put 'cloud' and 'blockchain' together, you'll get the level of buzz that was 'web 2.0'</em> -, that fall short to social media, but make no mistake: the Internet, the carefully laboured web 1.0, had already went underground when tools made it simple for anyone to publish with just a few clicks.</p>\n<p>The social web lost against social media, because it didn't (couldn't?) keep up with making things even simpler. Always on, always instant, always present. It served the purpose of a disposable web perfectly, where the most common goal is to seek fame, attention, to follow trends, to gain followers.</p>\n<p>There are people who never gave up, and are still tirelessly building tools, protocols, ideas, to lead people out of social media. The IndieWeb<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn9\">9</a>'s goals are simple: own your data, have an online home, and connect with others through this. And so it's completely reasonable to hear:</p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>I want blogging to be as easy as tweeting.<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn10\">10</a></p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>But... what will this really achieve? This may sound rude and elitist, but the more I think about it the more I believe: the true way out of the swamp of social media is for things to require a little effort.</p>\n<p>To make people think about what they produce, to make them connect to their online content. It's like IKEA<a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fn11\">11</a>: once you put time, and a minor amount of sweat - or swearing - into it, it'll feel more yours, than something comfortably delivered.</p>\n<p>The Internet is still present, but it's shrinking. Content people really care about, customised looking homepages, carefully curated photo galleries are all diminishing. It would be fantastic to return to a world of personal websites, but that needs the love and work that used to be put into them, just like 20 years ago.</p>\n<p>At this point in time, most people don't seem to relate to their online content. It's expendable. We need to make them care about it, and simpler tooling, on it's own, will not help with the lack of emotional connection.</p>\n<p><a href=\"https://news.indieweb.org/en\">This entry was sent to IndieNews.</a></p>\n\n\n<ol><li><p><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqFNbCcyFkk\">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqFNbCcyFkk</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref1\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://www.vintage-radio.com/repair-restore-information/valve_capacitors.html\">http://www.vintage-radio.com/repair-restore-information/valve_capacitors.html</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref2\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://www.mir.com.my/rb/photography/\">http://www.mir.com.my/rb/photography/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref3\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://stackingthebricks.com/how-blogs-broke-the-web/\">https://stackingthebricks.com/how-blogs-broke-the-web/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref4\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://duckduckgo.com/html/\">https://duckduckgo.com/html/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref5\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2016/12/ubuweb_the_20_year_old_website_that_collects_the_forgotten_and_the_unfamiliar.html\">http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2016/12/ubuweb_the_20_year_old_website_that_collects_the_forgotten_and_the_unfamiliar.html</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref6\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://code.divshot.com/geo-bootstrap/\">http://code.divshot.com/geo-bootstrap/</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref7\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://anildash.com/2012/12/the-web-we-lost.html\">http://anildash.com/2012/12/the-web-we-lost.html</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref8\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/\">https://indieweb.org</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref9\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"http://www.manton.org/2018/03/indieweb-generation-4-and-hosted-domains.html\">http://www.manton.org/2018/03/indieweb-generation-4-and-hosted-domains.html</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref10\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n<li><p><a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IKEA_effect\">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IKEA_effect</a><a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/#fnref11\">\u21a9</a></p></li>\n</ol>",
"text": "There is a video out there, titled \"The Fall of The Simpsons: How it Happened\"1. It starts by introducing a mediocre show that airs every night, called \"The Simpsons\", and compares it to a genius cartoon, that used to air in the early 90s, called \"The Simpsons\". Watch the video, because it's good, and I'm about to use it's conclusion.\nIt reckons that the tremendous difference is due to shrinking layers in jokes, and, more importantly, in the characters after season 7. I believe something similar happened online, which made the Internet become the internet.\nMany moons ago, while still living in London, the pedal of our flatmate's sewing machine broke down, and I started digging for replacement parts for her. I stumbled upon a detailed website about ancient capacitors2. It resembled other, gorgeous sources of knowledge: one of my all time favourite is leofoo's site on historical Nikon equipment3. All decades old sites, containing specialist level knowledge on topics only used to be found in books in dusty corners of forgotten libraries.\nThere's an interesting article about how chronological ordering destroyed the original way of curating content4 during the early online era, and I think the article got many things right. Try to imagine a slow web: slow connection slow updates, slow everything. Take away social networks - no Twitter, no Facebook. Forget news aggregators: no more Hacker News or Reddit, not even Technorati. Grab your laptop and put in down on a desk, preferably in a corner - you're not allowed to move it. Use the HTML version of DuckDuckGo5 to search, and navigate with links from one site to another. That's how it was like; surfing on the information highway, and if you really want to experience it, UbuWeb6 will allow you to do so.\nMost of the content was hand crafted, arranged to be readable, not searchable; it was human first, not machine first. Nearly everything online had a lot of effort put into it, even if the result was eye-blowing red text on blue background7; somebody worked a lot on it. If you wanted it out there you learnt HTML, how to use FTP, how to link, how to format your page.\nWe used to have homepages. Homes on the Internet. Not profiles, no; profile is something the authorities make about you in dossier.\n6 years ago Anil Dash released a video, \"The web we lost\"8 and lamented the web 2.0 - I despise this phrase; a horrible buzzword everyone used to label anything with; if you put 'cloud' and 'blockchain' together, you'll get the level of buzz that was 'web 2.0' -, that fall short to social media, but make no mistake: the Internet, the carefully laboured web 1.0, had already went underground when tools made it simple for anyone to publish with just a few clicks.\nThe social web lost against social media, because it didn't (couldn't?) keep up with making things even simpler. Always on, always instant, always present. It served the purpose of a disposable web perfectly, where the most common goal is to seek fame, attention, to follow trends, to gain followers.\nThere are people who never gave up, and are still tirelessly building tools, protocols, ideas, to lead people out of social media. The IndieWeb9's goals are simple: own your data, have an online home, and connect with others through this. And so it's completely reasonable to hear:\n\nI want blogging to be as easy as tweeting.10\n\nBut... what will this really achieve? This may sound rude and elitist, but the more I think about it the more I believe: the true way out of the swamp of social media is for things to require a little effort.\nTo make people think about what they produce, to make them connect to their online content. It's like IKEA11: once you put time, and a minor amount of sweat - or swearing - into it, it'll feel more yours, than something comfortably delivered.\nThe Internet is still present, but it's shrinking. Content people really care about, customised looking homepages, carefully curated photo galleries are all diminishing. It would be fantastic to return to a world of personal websites, but that needs the love and work that used to be put into them, just like 20 years ago.\nAt this point in time, most people don't seem to relate to their online content. It's expendable. We need to make them care about it, and simpler tooling, on it's own, will not help with the lack of emotional connection.\nThis entry was sent to IndieNews.\n\n\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqFNbCcyFkk\u21a9\nhttp://www.vintage-radio.com/repair-restore-information/valve_capacitors.html\u21a9\nhttp://www.mir.com.my/rb/photography/\u21a9\nhttps://stackingthebricks.com/how-blogs-broke-the-web/\u21a9\nhttps://duckduckgo.com/html/\u21a9\nhttp://www.slate.com/articles/technology/future_tense/2016/12/ubuweb_the_20_year_old_website_that_collects_the_forgotten_and_the_unfamiliar.html\u21a9\nhttp://code.divshot.com/geo-bootstrap/\u21a9\nhttp://anildash.com/2012/12/the-web-we-lost.html\u21a9\nhttps://indieweb.org\u21a9\nhttp://www.manton.org/2018/03/indieweb-generation-4-and-hosted-domains.html\u21a9\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IKEA_effect\u21a9"
},
"name": "The internet that took over the Internet",
"_id": "161761",
"_source": "268",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-25T13:03:14-04:00",
"summary": "How are these currently being imported into Microsub?",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/03/25/9/reply/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://aaronparecki.com/2018/03/25/10/"
],
"content": {
"text": "How are these currently being imported into Microsub?",
"html": "<p>How are these currently being imported into Microsub?</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/eddiehinkle.com/cf9f85e26d4be531bc908d37f69bff1c50b50b87fd066b254f1332c3553df1a8.jpg"
},
"refs": {
"https://aaronparecki.com/2018/03/25/10/": {
"type": "entry",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/2018/03/25/10/",
"name": "https://aaronparecki.com/2018/03/25/10/"
}
},
"_id": "159199",
"_source": "226",
"_is_read": true
}
Also, micro.blog with Monocle is a little bit more complicated because Monocle is Microsub (reading API) plus Micropub (posting API). Micro.blog currently supports a subset of Micropub (intentionally), and Microsub is still so new, that while I think there are eventual plans to add support, it’ll probably be a little while.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-25T13:01:49-04:00",
"summary": "Also, micro.blog with Monocle is a little bit more complicated because Monocle is Microsub (reading API) plus Micropub (posting API). Micro.blog currently supports a subset of Micropub (intentionally), and Microsub is still so new, that while I think there are eventual plans to add support, it\u2019ll probably be a little while.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/03/25/8/reply/",
"category": [
"indieweb",
"micro.blog"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://micro.blog/mikehaynes/427827"
],
"content": {
"text": "Also, micro.blog with Monocle is a little bit more complicated because Monocle is Microsub (reading API) plus Micropub (posting API). Micro.blog currently supports a subset of Micropub (intentionally), and Microsub is still so new, that while I think there are eventual plans to add support, it\u2019ll probably be a little while.",
"html": "<p>Also, micro.blog with Monocle is a little bit more complicated because Monocle is Microsub (reading API) plus Micropub (posting API). Micro.blog currently supports a subset of Micropub (intentionally), and Microsub is still so new, that while I <em>think</em> there are eventual plans to add support, it\u2019ll probably be a little while.</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/eddiehinkle.com/cf9f85e26d4be531bc908d37f69bff1c50b50b87fd066b254f1332c3553df1a8.jpg"
},
"refs": {
"https://micro.blog/mikehaynes/427827": {
"type": "entry",
"url": "https://micro.blog/mikehaynes/427827",
"name": "https://micro.blog/mikehaynes/427827"
}
},
"_id": "159200",
"_source": "226",
"_is_read": true
}
Using Twitter for OAuth 2.0 is just a first step into the IndieWeb. IndieAuth can technically support all sorts of login options (emails, mobile login, passwords, etc) @manton has expressed that he has plans for deeper IndieAuth integration in micro.blog, and David Shanske is currently working on an IndieAuth plug-in for WordPress that will allow the use of the Wordpress User/Pass to login to Quill and other Micropub clients
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-25T12:49:45-04:00",
"summary": "Using Twitter for OAuth 2.0 is just a first step into the IndieWeb. IndieAuth can technically support all sorts of login options (emails, mobile login, passwords, etc) @manton has expressed that he has plans for deeper IndieAuth integration in micro.blog, and David Shanske is currently working on an IndieAuth plug-in for WordPress that will allow the use of the Wordpress User/Pass to login to Quill and other Micropub clients",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/03/25/7/reply/",
"category": [
"indieauth",
"indieweb"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://blog.vanessahamshere.uk/2018/03/25/90/"
],
"content": {
"text": "Using Twitter for OAuth 2.0 is just a first step into the IndieWeb. IndieAuth can technically support all sorts of login options (emails, mobile login, passwords, etc) @manton has expressed that he has plans for deeper IndieAuth integration in micro.blog, and David Shanske is currently working on an IndieAuth plug-in for WordPress that will allow the use of the Wordpress User/Pass to login to Quill and other Micropub clients",
"html": "<p>Using Twitter for OAuth 2.0 is just a first step into the IndieWeb. IndieAuth can technically support all sorts of login options (emails, mobile login, passwords, etc) <a href=\"https://eddiehinkle.com/timeline/undefined\">@manton</a> has expressed that he has plans for deeper IndieAuth integration in micro.blog, and <a href=\"https://david.shanske.com/\">David Shanske</a> is currently working on an IndieAuth plug-in for WordPress that will allow the use of the Wordpress User/Pass to login to Quill and other Micropub clients</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/eddiehinkle.com/cf9f85e26d4be531bc908d37f69bff1c50b50b87fd066b254f1332c3553df1a8.jpg"
},
"refs": {
"https://blog.vanessahamshere.uk/2018/03/25/90/": {
"type": "entry",
"url": "https://blog.vanessahamshere.uk/2018/03/25/90/",
"name": "https://blog.vanessahamshere.uk/2018/03/25/90/"
}
},
"_id": "159201",
"_source": "226",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-25T09:26:03-07:00",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/2018/03/25/10/",
"category": [
"monocle",
"indieweb"
],
"photo": [
"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/dda4335a71d68e5ac28c3494190f93904c8830df99cb18e7ab88ee1d718739da.png"
],
"content": {
"text": "I think it might be time to turn off email notifications from GitHub since it's nicer to read these in Monocle where I can reply inline!"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Aaron Parecki",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/2b8e1668dcd9cfa6a170b3724df740695f73a15c2a825962fd0a0967ec11ecdc.jpg"
},
"_id": "158899",
"_source": "16",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-24T23:09:18-04:00",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2018/03/24/230918/",
"category": [
"podcast",
"IndieWeb",
"this-week-indieweb-podcast"
],
"audio": [
"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/media.martymcgui.re/64a1f1cdca306c4d6e6a90fcfd23faef3bd2f92e63925ef0a810347434e4642d.mp3"
],
"syndication": [
"https://huffduffer.com/schmarty/467687",
"https://twitter.com/schmarty/status/977746199993348096",
"https://www.facebook.com/marty.mcguire.54/posts/10211696865999136"
],
"name": "This Week in the IndieWeb Audio Edition \u2022 March 17th - 23rd, 2018",
"content": {
"text": "Show/Hide Transcript \n \n Facebook quitters, a Puny micropub server, and where\u2019s the love for future generations?\n\nIt\u2019s the audio edition for This Week in the IndieWeb for March 17th - 23rd, 2018.\n\nYou can find all of my audio editions and subscribe with your favorite podcast app here: martymcgui.re/podcasts/indieweb/.\n\nMusic from Aaron Parecki\u2019s 100DaysOfMusic project: Day 85 - Suit, Day 48 - Glitch, Day 49 - Floating, Day 9, and Day 11\n\nThanks to everyone in the IndieWeb chat for their feedback and suggestions. Please drop me a note if there are any changes you\u2019d like to see for this audio edition!",
"html": "Show/Hide Transcript \n \n <p>Facebook quitters, a Puny micropub server, and where\u2019s the love for future generations?</p>\n\n<p>It\u2019s the audio edition for <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/this-week/2018-03-23.html\">This Week in the IndieWeb for March 17th - 23rd, 2018</a>.</p>\n\n<p>You can find all of my audio editions and subscribe with your favorite podcast app here: <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/podcasts/indieweb/\">martymcgui.re/podcasts/indieweb/</a>.</p>\n\n<p>Music from <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/\">Aaron Parecki</a>\u2019s <a href=\"https://100.aaronparecki.com/\">100DaysOfMusic project</a>: <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2017/03/15/14/day85\">Day 85 - Suit</a>, <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2017/02/06/7/day48\">Day 48 - Glitch</a>, <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2017/02/07/4/day49\">Day 49 - Floating</a>, <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2016/12/29/21/day-9\">Day 9</a>, and <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2016/12/31/15/\">Day 11</a></p>\n\n<p>Thanks to everyone in the <a href=\"https://chat.indieweb.org/\">IndieWeb chat</a> for their feedback and suggestions. Please drop me a note if there are any changes you\u2019d like to see for this audio edition!</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Marty McGuire",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/martymcgui.re/4f9fac2b9e3ae62998c557418143efe288bca8170a119921a9c6bfeb0a1263a2.jpg"
},
"_id": "158236",
"_source": "175",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-23T16:38:48-04:00",
"url": "https://kartikprabhu.com/notes/fb-for-shopping",
"category": [
"indieweb"
],
"photo": [
"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/lh3.googleusercontent.com/54d17dfdb01067a643859aceef536fbc29f03c4a4270785b5d20389d427e7b52.jpg"
],
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/kartik_prabhu/status/977284810791059456"
],
"content": {
"text": "Seems like @facebook is becoming a place more for shopping and less for people.\n\nsee also: https://kartikprabhu.com/notes/twitter-for-brands\n\nSomeone should invent a new social network!",
"html": "Seems like @facebook is becoming a place more for shopping and less for people.\n\nsee also: <a href=\"https://kartikprabhu.com/notes/twitter-for-brands\">https://kartikprabhu.com/notes/twitter-for-brands</a>\n\nSomeone should invent a new social network!\n\t<a href=\"https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/IUk0ud3sxZaupNJU9zBWTbrDkjR7X8KlZyTJngeoVnVQ4f6SRmIymbA4Bj1Xu2_JoLKDuh-2SmDftnWAd1bBIhD4U8PoMCr2ZNTia_wKgzMMcPl3E2S5n4c0mmVJD4Ro_9REbSiTwIINhCzQssTXPoqe_m3HHOMXryo6SPdDKhh477t0GEA5WbPTPAW2VhL-N7ks0Z6DzqkLB2igQWeP7WCoRzDqsC7tKxBNLsoMD00EyL1pO4fZCD_9yc0Ngf9IuJ6aXWxNP4zmdWNz3iON8ZVyPEkVS3vuP6atIsZshZtw1KvcEYJ6nLdNPzqDsGCLI-isS_vAboobvG-8oDUJILWANzrLXPahXRcRQld3OtjXj31El05YkclyOW9ofBnfQHekZfzpYGF6L2G3rZsNDRUtlv9qMAq9H4-sP9PhXfdFfOpiRO82MdIslogl21pz20V3dsiU3OwdaXUgn7B0R31qEQICPmL1RmjYrZBr4rFnV8aL42tkYuQ-DdTT9aDqSNeHbceg7DMtIsWxS03qhAi3urRXQls1ZRR-CLzItf598JzS4gXsB6sdWI7iBImn--apbYTcndAXO38x8Q2H8hCYtJOhEyaAQQV9gZJZ=w312-h669-no\"></a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Kartik Prabhu",
"url": "https://kartikprabhu.com/about#me",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/kartikprabhu.com/981e0000045eab42b01b65701176ae41915fc92f36edd0137979ffd4af0c00d1.jpg"
},
"_id": "157448",
"_source": "204",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Jimmy Baum",
"url": "http://amongthestones.com",
"photo": null
},
"url": "http://amongthestones.com/microblog/friday1144am/",
"name": "Friday 11:44 AM",
"content": {
"html": "<blockquote><p>\n \u201cIf you can\u2019t use your own domain name, you can\u2019t own it. Your content will be forever stuck at those silo URLs, beholden to the whims of the algorithmic timeline and shifting priorities of the executive team.\u201d\n</p></blockquote>\n<p>\u2014 <a href=\"http://www.manton.org/2018/03/indieweb-generation-4-and-hosted-domains.html\">IndieWeb generation 4 and hosted domains</a></p>",
"text": "\u201cIf you can\u2019t use your own domain name, you can\u2019t own it. Your content will be forever stuck at those silo URLs, beholden to the whims of the algorithmic timeline and shifting priorities of the executive team.\u201d\n\n\u2014 IndieWeb generation 4 and hosted domains"
},
"published": "2018-03-23T16:28:45+00:00",
"updated": "2018-03-23T16:28:45+00:00",
"_id": "157404",
"_source": "231",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Colin Walker",
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/bridging-the-gap/",
"published": "2018-03-23T20:08:38+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Eli Mellen <a href=\"https://eli.li/entry.php?id=20180318015703\">wrote a great post</a> about how the <a href=\"https://colinwalker.blog/?s=%23indieweb\">#indieweb</a> needs to be more accessible to non-developers. It prompted some considered response including <a href=\"https://www.jeremycherfas.net/blog/a-user-considers\">this post from Jeremy Cherfas</a> in which he points to <a href=\"https://petermolnar.net/re-eli-20180318015703/\">a response from Peter Molnar</a>. And then there is \"<a href=\"https://david.shanske.com/2018/03/18/an-indieweb-podcast-episode-0/\">An Indieweb Podcast</a>\" from David Shanske and Chris Aldridge.</p>\n<p>Eli linked to the <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/generations\">indieweb generations</a> page (the suggested adoption path) exclaiming that much of the current technology is rooted in generations 1 & 2 (the more technical users) but needs to be accessible to those in generations 3 & 4.</p>\n<p>He espoused <a href=\"https://micro.blog/\">micro.blog</a> as an example of pushing things towards the later generations suggesting it's <em>'time to update some of the tooling\"</em> to bridge the gap.</p>\n<p>Having written previously about the need for easier implementation I didn't want to just repeat myself, or Eli, so wasn't sure how to respond or what extra I could add.</p>\n<p>But then two posts cemented my thoughts.</p>\n<p>Firstly, Manton Reece (creator of micro.blog) highlighted that the much sought after ownership of content doesn't just mean owning the server and having direct control over the source code. Instead, it's about <em>\"portable URLs and data. It\u2019s about domain names\"</em> so that a site can outlive any platform.</p>\n<p>Micro.blog as a service definitely straddles generations 3 & 4 as it works just as well with existing blogs as a blog hosted on the service itself. But If you opt for the latter then Manton has made things considerably simpler for you.</p>\n<p>A CMS, webmentions, publishing by micropub, it's all built in, nothing else required apart from a micropub client - of which the native iOS and Mac micro.blog apps are perfectly functional and more than adequate examples.</p>\n<p>This is exactly what Eli alludes to when he says you can't assume that users will care about the tech or the specs - they just want the tools.</p>\n<p>Peter Molnar argues that <em>\"people should care, they should be at least be aware of what's happening when they press a publish button\"</em> and that <em>\"providing the tools only is not a goal I can align with.\"</em></p>\n<p>I have to agree with Eli here.</p>\n<p>People don't have any idea how Twitter and Facebook work but are willing to throw themselves at it despite warnings. Merely a fraction of the population has ever heard of MX records, and wouldn't know their POP3 from their IMAP, but billions still use email.</p>\n<p>This is why ecosystems and adoption curves exist; some blaze the trails and develop solutions so others can use them without having to.</p>\n<p>WordPress users, for example, load plugins to get the functionality they require with no idea of how that's actually achieved. It's taken on faith because the creators and the standards organisations have done their jobs.</p>\n<p>And <em>that</em> is the generational gap</p>\n<p>Next, Jason Kottke's linked to Dan Cohen's post \"<a href=\"https://dancohen.org/2018/03/21/back-to-the-blog/\">Back to the Blog</a>\" in which he talks about the importance of writing on one's own domain but suggests many don't because we are social animals and social networks provide <em>\"a powerful sense of ambient humanity.\"</em></p>\n<p>I've previously described micro.blog as a social layer or glue but I think \"ambient humanity\" sums it up perfectly - the feeling that <em>\"others are here\"</em> as Dan puts it. This is absolutely what micro.blog helps to achieve: that connection between people, between blogs, even if you have set up on your own.</p>\n<p>You don't have to be isolated.</p>\n<p>The aim of the indieweb is that we can do our own thing, or join something like micro.blog, and that our sites and services are portable and interoperable because the technology is platform agnostic. For this to happen the ecosystem needs to be mature with tooling simple enough that anyone can plug and play, or have it built in to their platform of choice, without needing to know how it works.</p>\n<p>It needs to be invisible.</p>",
"text": "Eli Mellen wrote a great post about how the #indieweb needs to be more accessible to non-developers. It prompted some considered response including this post from Jeremy Cherfas in which he points to a response from Peter Molnar. And then there is \"An Indieweb Podcast\" from David Shanske and Chris Aldridge.\nEli linked to the indieweb generations page (the suggested adoption path) exclaiming that much of the current technology is rooted in generations 1 & 2 (the more technical users) but needs to be accessible to those in generations 3 & 4.\nHe espoused micro.blog as an example of pushing things towards the later generations suggesting it's 'time to update some of the tooling\" to bridge the gap.\nHaving written previously about the need for easier implementation I didn't want to just repeat myself, or Eli, so wasn't sure how to respond or what extra I could add.\nBut then two posts cemented my thoughts.\nFirstly, Manton Reece (creator of micro.blog) highlighted that the much sought after ownership of content doesn't just mean owning the server and having direct control over the source code. Instead, it's about \"portable URLs and data. It\u2019s about domain names\" so that a site can outlive any platform.\nMicro.blog as a service definitely straddles generations 3 & 4 as it works just as well with existing blogs as a blog hosted on the service itself. But If you opt for the latter then Manton has made things considerably simpler for you.\nA CMS, webmentions, publishing by micropub, it's all built in, nothing else required apart from a micropub client - of which the native iOS and Mac micro.blog apps are perfectly functional and more than adequate examples.\nThis is exactly what Eli alludes to when he says you can't assume that users will care about the tech or the specs - they just want the tools.\nPeter Molnar argues that \"people should care, they should be at least be aware of what's happening when they press a publish button\" and that \"providing the tools only is not a goal I can align with.\"\nI have to agree with Eli here.\nPeople don't have any idea how Twitter and Facebook work but are willing to throw themselves at it despite warnings. Merely a fraction of the population has ever heard of MX records, and wouldn't know their POP3 from their IMAP, but billions still use email.\nThis is why ecosystems and adoption curves exist; some blaze the trails and develop solutions so others can use them without having to.\nWordPress users, for example, load plugins to get the functionality they require with no idea of how that's actually achieved. It's taken on faith because the creators and the standards organisations have done their jobs.\nAnd that is the generational gap\nNext, Jason Kottke's linked to Dan Cohen's post \"Back to the Blog\" in which he talks about the importance of writing on one's own domain but suggests many don't because we are social animals and social networks provide \"a powerful sense of ambient humanity.\"\nI've previously described micro.blog as a social layer or glue but I think \"ambient humanity\" sums it up perfectly - the feeling that \"others are here\" as Dan puts it. This is absolutely what micro.blog helps to achieve: that connection between people, between blogs, even if you have set up on your own.\nYou don't have to be isolated.\nThe aim of the indieweb is that we can do our own thing, or join something like micro.blog, and that our sites and services are portable and interoperable because the technology is platform agnostic. For this to happen the ecosystem needs to be mature with tooling simple enough that anyone can plug and play, or have it built in to their platform of choice, without needing to know how it works.\nIt needs to be invisible."
},
"name": "Bridging the gap",
"_id": "156958",
"_source": "237",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-23T15:00:20+01:00",
"url": "https://realize.be/notes/1313",
"name": "#11",
"content": {
"text": "@pstuifzand do you think I could get an alpha invite for your micropub client. Curious to test :) Working myself on https://github.com/swentel/indigenous-android (and pinging you now from it heh)",
"html": "<p>@pstuifzand do you think I could get an alpha invite for your micropub client. Curious to test :) Working myself on <a href=\"https://github.com/swentel/indigenous-android\">https://github.com/swentel/indigenous-android</a> (and pinging you now from it heh)</p>"
},
"_id": "156957",
"_source": "213",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-23T16:18:43+00:00",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/huby-and-now-the-bigger-reveal-since-youve-liked-my",
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/ChrisAldrich/status/977218119574917120"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/huby/status/976930523238060034",
"http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/huby-plain-old-semantic-html-with-microformats-in-combination-with"
],
"content": {
"text": "@huby And now the bigger reveal! Since you've liked my tweet, you'll notice that I'm backfeeding reactions and comments from my tweets, so your \"like\" also lives on my website at the original post which was syndicated to Twitter. http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/huby-plain-old-semantic-html-with-microformats-in-combination-with",
"html": "@huby And now the bigger reveal! Since you've liked my tweet, you'll notice that I'm backfeeding reactions and comments from my tweets, so your \"like\" also lives on my website at the original post which was syndicated to Twitter. <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/huby-plain-old-semantic-html-with-microformats-in-combination-with\">http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/huby-plain-old-semantic-html-with-microformats-in-combination-with</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Chris Aldrich",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/profile/chrisaldrich",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/stream.boffosocko.com/d0ba9f65fcbf0cef3bdbcccc0b6a1f42b1310f7ab2e07208c7a396166cde26b1.jpg"
},
"_id": "155948",
"_source": "192",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-23T09:48:05+00:00",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/kaushalmodi-_dgoldsmith-it-also-looks-like-_am1t-is-also-in",
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/ChrisAldrich/status/977119847040593920"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/ChrisAldrich/status/977116413436493824"
],
"content": {
"text": "@kaushalmodi @_dgoldsmith It also looks like @_am1t is also in the Hugo camp as well for additional possible help and collaboration. \nhttps://www.amitgawande.com/indiewebify-hugo-website/",
"html": "<a href=\"https://twitter.com/kaushalmodi\">@kaushalmodi</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/_dgoldsmith\">@_dgoldsmith</a> It also looks like <a href=\"https://twitter.com/_am1t\">@_am1t</a> is also in the Hugo camp as well for additional possible help and collaboration. <br /><a href=\"https://www.amitgawande.com/indiewebify-hugo-website/\">https://www.amitgawande.com/indiewebify-hugo-website/</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Chris Aldrich",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/profile/chrisaldrich",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/stream.boffosocko.com/d0ba9f65fcbf0cef3bdbcccc0b6a1f42b1310f7ab2e07208c7a396166cde26b1.jpg"
},
"_id": "155949",
"_source": "192",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-23T09:34:26+00:00",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/kaushalmodi-_dgoldsmith-it-looks-like-schussman-has-gotten-webmention-and",
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/ChrisAldrich/status/977116413436493824"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/_dgoldsmith/status/977109743532724224"
],
"content": {
"text": "@kaushalmodi @_dgoldsmith It looks like @schussman has gotten Webmention and display as well as a manual box working on his Hugo site as well, so he may be of some help too: https://prettygoodhat.com/post/2018-01-14-retuning-indieweb/",
"html": "<a href=\"https://twitter.com/kaushalmodi\">@kaushalmodi</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/_dgoldsmith\">@_dgoldsmith</a> It looks like <a href=\"https://twitter.com/schussman\">@schussman</a> has gotten Webmention and display as well as a manual box working on his Hugo site as well, so he may be of some help too: <a href=\"https://prettygoodhat.com/post/2018-01-14-retuning-indieweb/\">https://prettygoodhat.com/post/2018-01-14-retuning-indieweb/</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Chris Aldrich",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/profile/chrisaldrich",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/stream.boffosocko.com/d0ba9f65fcbf0cef3bdbcccc0b6a1f42b1310f7ab2e07208c7a396166cde26b1.jpg"
},
"_id": "155950",
"_source": "192",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-22T23:54:50+00:00",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/jorge_romeo-ive-written-a-short-intro-to-some-of-the",
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/ChrisAldrich/status/976970510985777152"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/Jorge_Romeo/status/976697869502746624"
],
"content": {
"text": "@Jorge_Romeo I've written a short intro to some of the pieces if you can't wait: http://boffosocko.com/2017/07/28/an-introduction-to-the-indieweb/",
"html": "<a href=\"https://twitter.com/Jorge_Romeo\">@Jorge_Romeo</a> I've written a short intro to some of the pieces if you can't wait: <a href=\"http://boffosocko.com/2017/07/28/an-introduction-to-the-indieweb/\">http://boffosocko.com/2017/07/28/an-introduction-to-the-indieweb/</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Chris Aldrich",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/profile/chrisaldrich",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/stream.boffosocko.com/d0ba9f65fcbf0cef3bdbcccc0b6a1f42b1310f7ab2e07208c7a396166cde26b1.jpg"
},
"_id": "155951",
"_source": "192",
"_is_read": true
}
@huby plain old semantic HTML with microformats in combination with the webmention protocol allow one to post "likes" to one's own website and send them to others. Here's a simple example: http://boffosocko.com/2018/01/11/1-million-webmentions/
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-22T23:34:55+00:00",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/huby-plain-old-semantic-html-with-microformats-in-combination-with",
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/ChrisAldrich/status/976965497429352450"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/huby/status/976930523238060034"
],
"content": {
"text": "@huby plain old semantic HTML with microformats in combination with the webmention protocol allow one to post \"likes\" to one's own website and send them to others. Here's a simple example: http://boffosocko.com/2018/01/11/1-million-webmentions/",
"html": "<a href=\"https://twitter.com/huby\">@huby</a> plain old semantic HTML with microformats in combination with the webmention protocol allow one to post \"likes\" to one's own website and send them to others. Here's a simple example: <a href=\"http://boffosocko.com/2018/01/11/1-million-webmentions/\">http://boffosocko.com/2018/01/11/1-million-webmentions/</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Chris Aldrich",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/profile/chrisaldrich",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/stream.boffosocko.com/d0ba9f65fcbf0cef3bdbcccc0b6a1f42b1310f7ab2e07208c7a396166cde26b1.jpg"
},
"_id": "155952",
"_source": "192",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-22T22:53:07+00:00",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/2018/kaushalmodi-also-on-your-site-im-seeing-relme-instead-of",
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/ChrisAldrich/status/976954987778539522"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/kaushalmodi/status/976946679504130050"
],
"content": {
"text": "@kaushalmodi Also, on your site I'm seeing rel=me instead of the rel=\"me\" with the proper quotes around me. See http://microformats.org/wiki/rel-me for examples.",
"html": "<a href=\"https://twitter.com/kaushalmodi\">@kaushalmodi</a> Also, on your site I'm seeing rel=me instead of the rel=\"me\" with the proper quotes around me. See <a href=\"http://microformats.org/wiki/rel-me\">http://microformats.org/wiki/rel-me</a> for examples."
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Chris Aldrich",
"url": "http://stream.boffosocko.com/profile/chrisaldrich",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/stream.boffosocko.com/d0ba9f65fcbf0cef3bdbcccc0b6a1f42b1310f7ab2e07208c7a396166cde26b1.jpg"
},
"_id": "155953",
"_source": "192",
"_is_read": true
}