The writing has long been on the wall: Twitter is going to destroy its third-party ecosystem. Why? To focus on controlling the entire experience for their proprietary platform. If you haven’t considered the #IndieWeb, now is the time. With services like Micro.blog available, it’s now easier than ever to participate in the open social web.
I'm surprised that HTML5 support slipped through the cracks in PHP's DOM extension, but very glad Masterminds was there to cover for them. It's pretty easy to switch over and seems to be working well so far as a replacement HTML parser.

Only one quirk if you're not a composer fan, (the horror!) you need to write your own autoloader.  That's fair enough given you're opting out of a controlled file system structure, and luckily it's super easy. Instead of including Mastermind's HTML5.php directly you just need your own snippet, something like:
<?php

include 'HTML5.php';

function html5_autoload($className) {
  $file = 'library/' . str_replace('\', '/', $className) . '.php';
  if (file_exists($file)) include $file;
}

spl_autoload_register('html5_autoload');

Nomention

Anyone who didn't get enough of Open Domains Lab this afternoon is more than welcome to join in on the #IndieWeb chat to continue conversing and building their website. #DoOO
https://twitter.com/TaylorJadin/status/979489643925295104
https://indieweb.org/discuss

This is just a test to see if I can restrict which links webmentions are sent to:

Link 1

Link 2

@spigot Yes, you have to publish first. Looks like there's something putting a lot of hidden svg files into your content. A plugin perhaps?
You can also find some potential help in the chat at https://chat.indieweb.org/wordpress/
@spigot It's not Brid.gy, instead it looks like it's caused by the microformats and their placement in your particular theme. https://brid.gy/about/#microformats
You can find a preview of what Bridgy will publish at https://brid.gy/twitter/spigot if you want to test before sending.
Another #silo bites the dust. @OpenTable is shutting down @Foodspotting.
#indieweb
Digital Catapult open call for Future Social Media pitches: https://www.digitalcatapultcentre.org.uk/open-calls/future-social-media-enhancing-cohesion-through-a... - in EU with "a project, innovation or solution using social media that aims to enhance cohesion between technology providers, creative content makers, their users/adopters and research" #indieweb
#indieweb #posse #personal #publishing #blog #notes #webmention #syndication #drupal

Homebrew Website Club Baltimore

#event #HWC #IWC #IndieWeb #HWCBaltimore
“I think we will dig through this hole, but it will take a few years,” Zuckerberg said.

Has Zuck been so isolated from criticism that no one ever said &quot;when you're in a hole, stop digging&quot; to him? #indieweb https://t.co/tYEivTKUQd?amp=1
@rolandturner great post. Insightful, agreed on "two fronts".
Re: reduce use of Facebook, some steps: https://indieweb.org/Facebook#How_to_wean_yourself_from

Here’s also a page to help reduce appaccess to FB login, more: https://indieweb.org/appaccess

Reply sent from my indieweb site

First Quarter 2018 in Review

I'd like to be able to consume content from https://micro.blog and comment on peoples posts and get back their comments but without actually the need to use their software. It's kind of close because they use webmentions and I've seen some links to RSS feeds, but the UI if you're not logged in is quite awful.

For example, I found https://micro.blog/jthingelstad by randomly typing https://manton.micro.blog/ which turned out to be the test blog of the creator of Micro.blog all the way down in the footer I found a link to https://micro.blog/manton which for some reason has compleatly different content than the subdomain. There I saw him mentioning https://micro.blog/jthingelstad so I rewrote the URL to https://jthingelstad.micro.blog and was looking for a link to their RSS. The footer didn't have one but the HTML head has one which luckily my browser shows. https://micro.blog/jthingelstad didn't have a link to that RSS feed nor to the subdomain where I can find the link to the RSS feed.

I think they would get much more traction if they did some homework on not putting up those walls around their garden like everyone else does. I'll follow this one guy now and we'll see if I can get into this community with just my own software and without signing up for a username there.

This Week in the IndieWeb Audio Edition • March 24th - 30th, 2018

#podcast #IndieWeb #this-week-indieweb-podcast

This is a great analysis on the ability to import and export posts via Micropub/mf2. The benefit of that is even private posts can be exported! I definitely want to think through this more

#indieweb #micropub

Going Serverless with Python WSGI Apps

Come to Homebrew Website Club in sf this Wednesday and people will help with that feeling https://indieweb.org/events/2018-04-04-homebrew-website-club

Back to the Blog – Dan Cohen

On moving from silos to your own website:

Over the last year, especially, it has seemed much more like “blog to write, tweet to fight.” Moreover, the way that our writing and personal data has been used by social media companies has become more obviously problematic—not that it wasn’t problematic to begin with.

Which is why it’s once again a good time to blog, especially on one’s own domain.

But on the other hand…

It is psychological gravity, not technical inertia, however, that is the greater force against the open web. Human beings are social animals and centralized social media like Twitter and Facebook provide a powerful sense of ambient humanity—the feeling that “others are here”—that is often missing when one writes on one’s own site.

That’s true …which is why brid.gy is such an incredibly powerful service for, well, bridging the gap between your own personal site and the silos, allowing for that feeling of ambient humanity.

#indieweb #blogging #blogs #writing #personal #publishing #silos #twitter #facebook #social #networks #ambient #humanity