@johnjohnston This presentation makes my itch for a public multisite #WordPress install with an #IndieWeb stack even worse... I may have to pick your brain a bit more on it.
#pressedconf18
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"text": "@johnjohnston This presentation makes my itch for a public multisite #WordPress install with an #IndieWeb stack even worse... I may have to pick your brain a bit more on it.\n#pressedconf18",
"html": "@johnjohnston This presentation makes my itch for a public multisite <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/WordPress\" class=\"p-category\">#WordPress</a> install with an <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/IndieWeb\" class=\"p-category\">#IndieWeb</a> stack even worse... I may have to pick your brain a bit more on it.<br /><a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/pressedconf18\" class=\"p-category\">#pressedconf18</a>"
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@openetc Have you considered adding the webmention plugins for site to site conversation between participants? https://indieweb.org/Webmention
https://indieweb.org/Wordpress_Webmention_Plugin
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"text": "@openetc Have you considered adding the webmention plugins for site to site conversation between participants? https://indieweb.org/Webmention\nhttps://indieweb.org/Wordpress_Webmention_Plugin",
"html": "<a href=\"https://twitter.com/openetc\">@openetc</a> Have you considered adding the webmention plugins for site to site conversation between participants? <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/Webmention\">https://indieweb.org/Webmention</a><br /><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/Wordpress_Webmention_Plugin\">https://indieweb.org/Wordpress_Webmention_Plugin</a>"
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"text": "This is just the kind of post I added a chicken feed to my WordPress site for. #pressedconfused #indieweb #fun\nhttps://twitter.com/openetc/status/979406583854698496?s=09\nhttp://www.boffosocko.com/kind/chicken/",
"html": "This is just the kind of post I added a chicken feed to my WordPress site for. <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/pressedconfused\" class=\"p-category\">#pressedconfused</a> <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/indieweb\" class=\"p-category\">#indieweb</a> <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/fun\" class=\"p-category\">#fun</a><br /><a href=\"https://twitter.com/openetc/status/979406583854698496?s=09\">https://twitter.com/openetc/status/979406583854698496?s=09</a><br /><a href=\"http://www.boffosocko.com/kind/chicken/\">http://www.boffosocko.com/kind/chicken/</a>"
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"text": "This is another interesting example for the #indieweb presentations page #pressedconf18 https://twitter.com/cogdog/status/979399034657009665?s=09\nhttps://indieweb.org/presentation",
"html": "This is another interesting example for the <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/indieweb\" class=\"p-category\">#indieweb</a> presentations page <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/pressedconf18\" class=\"p-category\">#pressedconf18</a> <a href=\"https://twitter.com/cogdog/status/979399034657009665?s=09\">https://twitter.com/cogdog/status/979399034657009665?s=09</a><br /><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/presentation\">https://indieweb.org/presentation</a>"
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Just published v0.4.2 of the PHP Microformats parser! https://github.com/indieweb/php-mf2/releases/tag/v0.4.2 Thanks to @martijnvdven and @gregorlove for all their work on this release!
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"text": "Just published v0.4.2 of the PHP Microformats parser! https://github.com/indieweb/php-mf2/releases/tag/v0.4.2 Thanks to @martijnvdven and @gregorlove for all their work on this release!",
"html": "Just published v0.4.2 of the PHP Microformats parser! <a href=\"https://github.com/indieweb/php-mf2/releases/tag/v0\">https://github.com/indieweb/php-mf2/releases/tag/v0</a>.4.2 Thanks to <a href=\"https://twitter.com/martijnvdven\">@martijnvdven</a> and <a href=\"https://twitter.com/gregorlove\">@gregorlove</a> for all their work on this release!"
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"html": "<a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2018/03/12/17/building-an-indieweb-reader\">Building an IndieWeb Reader</a> by <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/\"><img src=\"https://aaronparecki.com/images/profile.jpg\" alt=\"Building an IndieWeb Reader profile\" title=\"Building an IndieWeb Reader\" />Aaron Parecki</a><em> (Aaron Parecki)</em>\n<blockquote>Over the last several months, I've been slowly putting the pieces in place to be able to build a solid indieweb reader. Today, I feel like I finally have enough in place to consider this functional enough that I am now using it every day! \n\nOne of the major missing pieces of the IndieWeb ecosystem h...</blockquote>\n\nI don\u2019t understand most of the technical pieces behind this project, Aaron, but I think it\u2019s brilliant.\n<p>Photo by <a href=\"https://unsplash.com/photos/1RBCAuJQZzo\">Thomas Wong</a> on Unsplash.</p>\n<p>The post <a href=\"https://islandinthenet.com/building-an-indieweb-reader/\"><span class='p-name'>Building an IndieWeb Reader</span></a> by <a href=\"https://islandinthenet.com/\"><span class='p-author h-card'>Kh\u00fcrt Williams</span></a> appeared first on <a href=\"https://islandinthenet.com/\">Island in the Net</a>.</p>",
"text": "Building an IndieWeb Reader by Aaron Parecki (Aaron Parecki)\nOver the last several months, I've been slowly putting the pieces in place to be able to build a solid indieweb reader. Today, I feel like I finally have enough in place to consider this functional enough that I am now using it every day! \n\nOne of the major missing pieces of the IndieWeb ecosystem h...\n\nI don\u2019t understand most of the technical pieces behind this project, Aaron, but I think it\u2019s brilliant.\nPhoto by Thomas Wong on Unsplash.\nThe post <span class='p-name'>Building an IndieWeb Reader</span> by <span class='p-author h-card'>Kh\u00fcrt Williams</span> appeared first on Island in the Net."
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"name": "HWC Baltimore 2018-03-27 Wrap-Up",
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"text": "After a postponement due to snows on the first day of spring, Baltimore's second Homebrew Website Club of March met at the Digital Harbor Foundation Tech Center on March 27th. \n \n\nHere are some notes from the \"broadcast\" portion of the meetup:\njonathanprozzi.net \u2013 Talked about his recent experiments with Netlify and JAMstack. Had been researching static site hosting services for a while and found a lot of hype. After playing w/ Netlify he feels like it lives up to the hype! Was specifically interested in a static site generator called Gatsby, which uses the React front-end framework to render content.\nderekfields.is \u2013 Been building a blog section for his site on a static site generator called Hexo. Found the theming stuff to be confusing and time-consuming, but has something working. Will eventually replace the theme with his own as he understands it more. Really likes the Hexo admin composer and compared with the editor for Ghost. Feels like the features help him write. Also setting up a Now.sh tiny server for a subdomain to host VueJS apps.\nbrksavage.com \u2013 Set a goal to do something creative and post about it every month. Did a big project for February (created a desk-sized piece filled w/ the word \"bored\"). Now writing it up and thinking about ways to make it easier to publish in the future.\nwww.dariusmccoy.com \u2013 Still building up momentum on his Wordpress site. Had a scare that he was locked out of his admin but got back in. Now that he has a working site, he is setting goals for himself about what he wants that site to have and how he wants to present himself there.\n\n Robert (gnostech.net) \u2013 Working on owning his data. Has a Nextcloud service set up on his domain, where he can access all his data from his phone and more. Has been taking lots of notes about his home set up (Nextcloud, Let's Encrypt, ad filtering firewall at home, and more). Wants to build a blog to share both how-tos on what he has set up and how, but also the way he decided on his particular needs. Has been using NAS4Free to have more control over his home network storage.\n \n\n\n martymcgui.re \u2013 Is finally back after missing several HWCs. He has definitely missed them! Talked about the need for indie readers that allow reading and posting reactions to personal sites all in one. Demo'd Together, and Monocle Microsub clients as well as Aperture for Microsub server to handle all the nitty-gritty of fetching and parsing feeds.\n \n\nOther discussion:\n\n Derek started us off with a really nice warm-up. We took turns with each person sharing compliments/thanks/encouragement about things people are working on and/or doing for and/or learning from one another. (This was seriously really nice).\n \n\n \n JAMstack (Javascript, APIs, Markup). Name was coined because some \"static\" sites have lots of dynamic functionality.\n Jonathan gave a demo of Netlify serving pages from a GitHub repo. Talked about how lots of different workflows can be used to manage content (e.g. Ghost, Netlify CMS, etc) without worrying about the final step of compiling the source into HTML and serving those static pages. Netlify has tons of features in the free tier (SSL with Let's Encrypt, support for forms, and more).\n Q: How do they make money? A: Great question! They're advertised all over the place in the web design world. Maybe consulting? For example, they did a huge redesign for Smashing Magazine.\n Q: Do we have to use GitHub? A: That's all Jonathan has played with so far, but they probably support other source control services.\n Q: What content goes in the Git repo? A: The source content, templates, etc. E.g. the output of \"hexo init\".\n Q: How does the DNS setup work? A: Netlify gives you IP addresses and you point A records at them. Same way you would for a Digital Ocean droplet or other virtual server.\n With custom domains, pulling content from GitHub, and tools like the (also free) Netlify CMS that ease editing, this could be a strong competitor for e.g. Wordpress.com sites, barring some initial setup pain.\n Was able to replace FormSpree service with Netlify's free form handling service. He can see the submitted form data by logging into his Netlify account.\n \n Talked about recent creepy Facebook news and efforts like cleverdevil's to escape it with our content intact. Marty was inspired by that to grab his Facebook content with fb-export and the DownAlbum extension for Chrome.\n If Facebook goes away or runs into issues, what happens to projects like React or their other open source projects?\n Would a giant like Amazon step up? What would an Amazon social network look like?\n If Facebook actually \"falls\" (however unlikely), would another centralized social network \"win\"? Probably!\nLeft-to-right: dariusmccoy.com, jonathanprozzi.net, gnostech.net, martymcgui.re, derekfields.is, brksavage.com\n Thanks to everybody who came out! We hope to see you all again at our next meeting on Tuesday, April 3rd!",
"html": "<p>\n After a postponement due to snows on the first day of spring, Baltimore's <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/events/2018-03-27-homebrew-website-club\">second Homebrew Website Club of March</a> met at the <a href=\"https://www.digitalharbor.org/\">Digital Harbor Foundation Tech Center</a> on March 27th. \n <br /></p>\n<p>Here are some notes from the \"broadcast\" portion of the meetup:</p>\n<p><a href=\"https://jonathanprozzi.net/\">jonathanprozzi.net</a> \u2013 Talked about his <a href=\"https://jonathanprozzi.net/reflection/learning-and-project-update-march-11-2018/\">recent experiments with Netlify and JAMstack</a>. Had been researching static site hosting services for a while and found a lot of hype. After playing w/ <a href=\"https://www.netlify.com/\">Netlify</a> he feels like it lives up to the hype! Was specifically interested in a static site generator called <a href=\"https://www.gatsbyjs.org/\">Gatsby</a>, which uses the <a href=\"https://reactjs.org/\">React</a> front-end framework to render content.</p>\n<p><a href=\"https://derekfields.is\">derekfields.is</a> \u2013 Been building a blog section for his site on a static site generator called <a href=\"https://hexo.io/\">Hexo</a>. Found the theming stuff to be confusing and time-consuming, but has something working. Will eventually replace the theme with his own as he understands it more. Really likes the Hexo admin composer and compared with the editor for <a href=\"https://ghost.org/\">Ghost</a>. Feels like the features help him write. Also setting up a <a href=\"https://now.sh/\">Now.sh</a> tiny server for a subdomain to host <a href=\"https://vuejs.org/\">VueJS</a> apps.</p>\n<p><a href=\"https://brksavage.com/\">brksavage.com</a> \u2013 Set a goal to do something creative and post about it every month. Did a big project for February (created a desk-sized piece filled w/ the word \"bored\"). Now writing it up and thinking about ways to make it easier to publish in the future.</p>\n<p><a href=\"http://www.dariusmccoy.com/\">www.dariusmccoy.com</a> \u2013 Still building up momentum on his Wordpress site. Had a scare that he was locked out of his admin but got back in. Now that he has a working site, he is setting goals for himself about what he wants that site to have and how he wants to present himself there.</p>\n<p>\n Robert (<a href=\"https://gnostech.net/\">gnostech.net</a>) \u2013 Working on owning his data. Has a <a href=\"https://nextcloud.com/\">Nextcloud</a> service set up on his domain, where he can access all his data from his phone and more. Has been taking lots of notes about his home set up (Nextcloud, <a href=\"https://letsencrypt.org/\">Let's Encrypt</a>, ad filtering firewall at home, and more). Wants to build a blog to share both how-tos on what he has set up and how, but also the way he decided on his particular needs. Has been using <a href=\"https://www.nas4free.org/\">NAS4Free</a> to have more control over his home network storage.\n <br /></p>\n<p>\n <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/\">martymcgui.re</a> \u2013 Is finally back after missing several HWCs. He has definitely missed them! Talked about the need for indie readers that allow reading and posting reactions to personal sites all in one. Demo'd <a href=\"https://alltogethernow.io/\">Together</a>, and <a href=\"https://monocle.p3k.io/\">Monocle</a> <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/Microsub\">Microsub</a> clients as well as Aperture for Microsub server to handle all the nitty-gritty of fetching and parsing feeds.\n <br /></p>\n<p>Other discussion:</p>\n<ul><li>\n Derek started us off with a really nice warm-up. We took turns with each person sharing compliments/thanks/encouragement about things people are working on and/or doing for and/or learning from one another. (This was seriously really nice).\n <br /></li>\n <li>\n JAMstack (Javascript, APIs, Markup). Name was coined because some \"static\" sites have lots of dynamic functionality.\n <ul><li>Jonathan gave a demo of Netlify serving pages from a GitHub repo. Talked about how lots of different workflows can be used to manage content (e.g. Ghost, Netlify CMS, etc) without worrying about the final step of compiling the source into HTML and serving those static pages. Netlify has tons of features in the free tier (SSL with Let's Encrypt, support for forms, and more).</li>\n <li>Q: How do they make money? A: Great question! They're advertised all over the place in the web design world. Maybe consulting? For example, they did a huge redesign for Smashing Magazine.</li>\n <li>Q: Do we have to use GitHub? A: That's all Jonathan has played with so far, but they probably support other source control services.</li>\n <li>Q: What content goes in the Git repo? A: The source content, templates, etc. E.g. the output of \"hexo init\".</li>\n <li>Q: How does the DNS setup work? A: Netlify gives you IP addresses and you point A records at them. Same way you would for a Digital Ocean droplet or other virtual server.</li>\n <li>With custom domains, pulling content from GitHub, and tools like the (also free) Netlify CMS that ease editing, this could be a strong competitor for e.g. Wordpress.com sites, barring some initial setup pain.</li>\n <li>Was able to replace FormSpree service with Netlify's free form handling service. He can see the submitted form data by logging into his Netlify account.</li>\n </ul></li>\n <li>Talked about recent creepy Facebook news and <a href=\"https://cleverdevil.io/2018/freeing-myself-from-facebook\">efforts like cleverdevil's to escape it with our content intact</a>. Marty was inspired by that to grab his Facebook content with <a href=\"https://github.com/danburzo/fb-export\">fb-export</a> and the <a href=\"https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/downalbum/cgjnhhjpfcdhbhlcmmjppicjmgfkppok\">DownAlbum extension for Chrome</a>.</li>\n <li>If Facebook goes away or runs into issues, what happens to projects like React or their other open source projects?</li>\n <li>Would a giant like Amazon step up? What would an Amazon social network look like?</li>\n <li>If Facebook actually \"falls\" (however unlikely), would another centralized social network \"win\"? Probably!</li>\n</ul><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/media.martymcgui.re/15c90ac8012782d824b56ce27c6b8e1397621686aa880b4b159b8163415d6850.jpg\" alt=\"\" />Left-to-right: dariusmccoy.com, jonathanprozzi.net, gnostech.net, martymcgui.re, derekfields.is, brksavage.com<p>\n Thanks to everybody who came out! We hope to see you all again at our next meeting on Tuesday, April 3rd!\n <br /></p>"
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"html": "<a href=\"https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/03/11/9/article/\">A Citizen of the IndieWeb</a> by Eddie Hinkle<em> (eddiehinkle.com)</em>\n<blockquote>So when I read a question like \u201cWhat does it mean to be a citizen?\u201d as opposed to a question like \u201cWhat does it mean to be a member of?\u201d I take that as a much different question. So because of that, I actually want to start with a simpler question:<br />What does it mean to be a member of the IndieWeb?</blockquote>\n\n\n<p>The post <a href=\"https://islandinthenet.com/citizenship/\"><span class='p-name'>Citizenship</span></a> by <a href=\"https://islandinthenet.com/\"><span class='p-author h-card'>Kh\u00fcrt Williams</span></a> appeared first on <a href=\"https://islandinthenet.com/\">Island in the Net</a>.</p>",
"text": "A Citizen of the IndieWeb by Eddie Hinkle (eddiehinkle.com)\nSo when I read a question like \u201cWhat does it mean to be a citizen?\u201d as opposed to a question like \u201cWhat does it mean to be a member of?\u201d I take that as a much different question. So because of that, I actually want to start with a simpler question:\nWhat does it mean to be a member of the IndieWeb?\n\n\nThe post <span class='p-name'>Citizenship</span> by <span class='p-author h-card'>Kh\u00fcrt Williams</span> appeared first on Island in the Net."
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Anil documents the steady decline of empowering features from web browsers: view source; in-situ authoring; transclusion, but finishes with the greatest loss of all: your own website at your own address.
There are no technical barriers for why we couldn’t share our photos to our own sites instead of to Instagram, or why we couldn’t post stupid memes to our own web address instead of on Facebook or Reddit. There are social barriers, of course — if we stubbornly used our own websites right now, none of our family or friends would see our stuff. Yet there’s been a dogged community of web nerds working on that problem for a decade or two, trying to see if they can get the ease or convenience of sharing on Facebook or Twitter or Instagram to work across a distributed network where everyone has their own websites.
(Although it’s a bit of shame that Anil posted this on Ev’s blog instead of his own.)
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"text": "The Missing Building Blocks of the Web \u2013 Anil Dash \u2013 Medium\n\n\n\nAnil documents the steady decline of empowering features from web browsers: view source; in-situ authoring; transclusion, but finishes with the greatest loss of all: your own website at your own address.\n\n\n There are no technical barriers for why we couldn\u2019t share our photos to our own sites instead of to Instagram, or why we couldn\u2019t post stupid memes to our own web address instead of on Facebook or Reddit. There are social barriers, of course\u200a\u2014\u200aif we stubbornly used our own websites right now, none of our family or friends would see our stuff. Yet there\u2019s been a dogged community of web nerds working on that problem for a decade or two, trying to see if they can get the ease or convenience of sharing on Facebook or Twitter or Instagram to work across a distributed network where everyone has their own websites.\n\n\n(Although it\u2019s a bit of shame that Anil posted this on Ev\u2019s blog instead of his own.)",
"html": "<h3>\n<a class=\"p-name u-bookmark-of\" href=\"https://medium.com/@anildash/the-missing-building-blocks-of-the-web-3fa490ae5cbc\">\nThe Missing Building Blocks of the Web \u2013 Anil Dash \u2013 Medium\n</a>\n</h3>\n\n<p>Anil documents the steady decline of empowering features from web browsers: view source; in-situ authoring; transclusion, but finishes with the greatest loss of all: your own website at your own address.</p>\n\n<blockquote>\n <p>There are no technical barriers for why we couldn\u2019t share our photos to our own sites instead of to Instagram, or why we couldn\u2019t post stupid memes to our own web address instead of on Facebook or Reddit. There are social barriers, of course\u200a\u2014\u200aif we stubbornly used our own websites right now, none of our family or friends would see our stuff. Yet there\u2019s been a dogged community of web nerds working on that problem for a decade or two, trying to see if they can get the ease or convenience of sharing on Facebook or Twitter or Instagram to work across a distributed network where everyone has their own websites.</p>\n</blockquote>\n\n<p>(Although it\u2019s a bit of shame that Anil posted this on Ev\u2019s blog instead of <a href=\"http://anildash.com/\">his own</a>.)</p>"
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@SchumakerA Seeing your bio, I'll also note that there's a number of educators and related edtech folks in the #IndieWeb as well. https://indieweb.org/Indieweb_for_Education
Happy to help if you have any questions.
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"text": "@SchumakerA Seeing your bio, I'll also note that there's a number of educators and related edtech folks in the #IndieWeb as well. https://indieweb.org/Indieweb_for_Education\n\nHappy to help if you have any questions.",
"html": "<a href=\"https://twitter.com/SchumakerA\">@SchumakerA</a> Seeing your bio, I'll also note that there's a number of educators and related edtech folks in the <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/IndieWeb\" class=\"p-category\">#IndieWeb</a> as well. <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/Indieweb_for_Education\">https://indieweb.org/Indieweb_for_Education</a><br />\nHappy to help if you have any questions.<br />"
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Thinking about going #IndieWeb, but haven't made a platform choice? @GrabaPerch is an interesting choice with Webmention support and more. Also currently on sale! #DeleteFacebook
https://twitter.com/grabaperch/status/978314153705295877
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"text": "Thinking about going #IndieWeb, but haven't made a platform choice? @GrabaPerch is an interesting choice with Webmention support and more. Also currently on sale! #DeleteFacebook\nhttps://twitter.com/grabaperch/status/978314153705295877",
"html": "Thinking about going <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/IndieWeb\" class=\"p-category\">#IndieWeb</a>, but haven't made a platform choice? @GrabaPerch is an interesting choice with Webmention support and more. Also currently on sale! <a href=\"http://stream.boffosocko.com/tag/DeleteFacebook\" class=\"p-category\">#DeleteFacebook</a><br /><a href=\"https://twitter.com/grabaperch/status/978314153705295877\">https://twitter.com/grabaperch/status/978314153705295877</a><br />"
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"author": {
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“there are two kinds of companies, those that feed on customer ignorance compared to those who prosper via customer savvy . I think it is obvious to all, at least now, that Facebook needs customer ignorance to survive.” https://www.easydns.com/blog/2018/03/26/should-you-delete-your-facebook-page/ #indieweb
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"published": "2018-03-26T16:02:13+0000",
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"text": "\u201cthere are two kinds of companies, those that feed on customer ignorance compared to those who prosper via customer savvy . I think it is obvious to all, at least now, that Facebook needs customer ignorance to survive.\u201d https://www.easydns.com/blog/2018/03/26/should-you-delete-your-facebook-page/ #indieweb",
"html": "\u201cthere are two kinds of companies, those that feed on customer ignorance compared to those who prosper via customer savvy . I think it is obvious to all, at least now, that Facebook needs customer ignorance to survive.\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>"
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"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Kevin Marks",
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"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/known.kevinmarks.com/f893d11435a62200ec9585e0ea3d84b2bdc478aa0a056dda35a43ce4c04d58a0.jpg"
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“the social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter… are: The Spew.
It 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.” https://www.easydns.com/blog/2018/03/26/should-you-delete-your-facebook-page/ #indieweb
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"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-26T16:00:51+0000",
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"syndication": [
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"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>"
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"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Kevin Marks",
"url": "http://known.kevinmarks.com/profile/kevinmarks",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/known.kevinmarks.com/f893d11435a62200ec9585e0ea3d84b2bdc478aa0a056dda35a43ce4c04d58a0.jpg"
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Why does @jamespoulos think the BBC is a bad thing? “Facebook might soon become a 21st-century BBC. But outside its walled gardens, the wilds of online won't be so easily tamed.” https://amp.thedailybeast.com/facebooks-existential-crisis-isnt-what-you-think-it-is?__indieweb_impr...
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"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>"
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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.
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"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/03/25/18/reply/",
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"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.",
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"author": {
"name": "Peter Molnar",
"url": "https://petermolnar.net",
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},
"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"
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"name": "The internet that took over the Internet",
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How are these currently being imported into Microsub?
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"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/",
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"text": "How are these currently being imported into Microsub?",
"html": "<p>How are these currently being imported into Microsub?</p>"
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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"
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"in-reply-to": [
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"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>"
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"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
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"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/eddiehinkle.com/cf9f85e26d4be531bc908d37f69bff1c50b50b87fd066b254f1332c3553df1a8.jpg"
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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"
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"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>"
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"name": "https://blog.vanessahamshere.uk/2018/03/25/90/"
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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!
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-03-25T09:26:03-07:00",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/2018/03/25/10/",
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"indieweb"
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],
"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"
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