{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-07-11T19:20:59-04:00",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2018/07/11/192059/",
"category": [
"HWC",
"IndieWeb",
"Baltimore",
"wrap-up"
],
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/schmarty/status/1017188787363962880",
"https://www.facebook.com/events/2131315447143424/"
],
"name": "HWC Baltimore 2018-07-11 Wrap-Up",
"content": {
"text": "Baltimore's first Homebrew Website Club of July met at the Digital Harbor Foundation Tech Center on July 11th! \nHere are some notes from the \"broadcast\" portion of the meetup:\njonathanprozzi.net \u2014 Been building static HTML/CSS layouts for fun! Some\u00a0examples. Also started practicing turning those designs into layouts in Figma. Had a usability testing call w/ the folks from Gatsby that turned into a great discussion about how to better build community starters.\ndariusmccoy.com \u2014 Was having some issues w/ his site, which is hosted on AWS. He is thinking about wiping his instance and starting a new one, since he has lost track of some of his passwords. In a tricky spot because AWS doesn't offer any tech support for free tier users. Talked about switching to Digital Ocean or something simpler but will have to balance his budgets to justify the costs.\nderekfields.is\u00a0\u2014 Been taking a Udemy course on VueJS. Before that has been working on a schedule for developing his website. Has a friend doing the same and they mutually keep each other on track to spend a certain amount of time on developing their skills and sites. It's kind of working!\n\n martymcgui.re \u2014 Brought a bunch of stickers and other fun things home from IndieWeb Summit! Had a great time seeing folks he met last year and meeting new folks. Lots of great discussion sessions, hacking projects, wild ideas, and more. He really needs to write it up on his site! His hack day project also desperately needs to be written up \u2013 it's an IndieWeb-style web ring, available at \ud83d\udd78\ud83d\udc8d.ws\u00a0! This week he added support for indielogin.com, which lets people sign in using their own websites by setting up only a couple of links.\n \n\nOther discussion:\n\nIndieWeb Summit! Marty went and loved it. Next year would love to bring more folks from HWC Baltimore, and travel assistance is available. We'll work on it.\n \n Marty met Jared Ewy\u00a0of name.com\u00a0at the Summit and talked about all the cool work DHF does teaching youth to build websites, the upcoming Web Shop, hosting HWC and IWC Baltimore, etc. Jared gave him a bunch of codes for free domains and some hosting discounts to benefit that work, so we discussed lots of ideas!\n \n\n Some possibilities: give Web Shop youth employees incentive to work on their own projects, outside of paid jobs, to learn more about building their own sites. Host a special Homebrew Website Club that's a 2-hour jam for new folks who don't have a domain yet to get set up with a website. Host a longer \"Build Your Website Day\" (maybe in coordination with a multi-city Drag Queen Build-a-Website Day?)\n What would an IndieWeb \"starter pack\" look like for a quick \"you have a domain but no money\" way to get started? GitHub looks good for skill building for folks that want to get into web development someday because it's mostly managed by hand. Netlify looks pretty good for this because they offer hosting, flexible static site generation, SSL for HTTPS, and the NetlifyCMS. They also support some features like building your own webhooks on JavaScript, which could eventually be used to handle common IndieWeb building block endpoints (IndieAuth, Micropub, Webmention, ...) Because they run all the stuff for a given site from a git repository, it's possible to take a site from Netlify and set it up elsewhere if their offerings change.\n \"Packages\" for a getting started workshop. E.g. \"what will you get at the end + what will you need to learn along the way.\" Static HTML/CSS on GitHub could get a portfolio site done. For $5/mo a Neocities site can be hosted on a custom domain and requires no Git/GitHub wrangling. Micro.blog hosting is also $5/mo and brings a ton of features, interactivity, and community.\n Talked about VueJS passing React in terms of number of stars on GitHub, and speculating why that is. For example, VueJS can be a lot easier to dip your toes in and get started without a complicated build toolchain.\nLeft-to-right: martymcgui.re, dariusmccoy.net, jonathanprozzi.net, derekfields.isThanks to everybody who came out! We hope to see you all again at our next meeting on Wednesday July 25th\u00a0at 6:30pm (quiet writing hour at 5:30pm)!",
"html": "Baltimore's <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/events/2018-07-11-homebrew-website-club\">first Homebrew Website Club of July</a> met at the <a href=\"https://www.digitalharbor.org/\">Digital Harbor Foundation Tech Center</a> on July 11th! \n<p>Here are some notes from the \"broadcast\" portion of the meetup:</p>\n<p><a href=\"https://jonathanprozzi.net/\">jonathanprozzi.net</a> \u2014 Been building static HTML/CSS layouts for fun! <a href=\"https://jonathanprozzi.net/learning/fun-with-html-css-layouts-part-one-layouts-1-3/\">Some</a>\u00a0<a href=\"https://jonathanprozzi.net/learning/fun-with-html-css-layouts-part-two/\">examples</a>. Also started practicing turning those designs into layouts in <a href=\"https://www.figma.com\">Figma</a>. Had a usability testing call w/ the folks from <a href=\"https://www.gatsbyjs.com/\">Gatsby</a> that turned into a great discussion about how to better build community starters.</p>\n<a href=\"http://www.dariusmccoy.com/\">dariusmccoy.com</a> \u2014 Was having some issues w/ his site, which is hosted on AWS. He is thinking about wiping his instance and starting a new one, since he has lost track of some of his passwords. In a tricky spot because AWS doesn't offer any tech support for free tier users. Talked about switching to Digital Ocean or something simpler but will have to balance his budgets to justify the costs.\n<p><a href=\"http://derekfields.is/\">derekfields.is</a>\u00a0\u2014 Been taking a Udemy course on VueJS. Before that has been working on a schedule for developing his website. Has a friend doing the same and they mutually keep each other on track to spend a certain amount of time on developing their skills and sites. It's kind of working!</p>\n<p>\n <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/\">martymcgui.re</a> \u2014 Brought a bunch of stickers and other fun things home from IndieWeb Summit! Had a great time seeing folks he met last year and meeting new folks. Lots of great discussion sessions, hacking projects, wild ideas, and more. He really needs to write it up on his site! His hack day project also desperately needs to be written up \u2013 it's an IndieWeb-style web ring, available at <a>\ud83d\udd78\ud83d\udc8d.ws</a>\u00a0! This week he added support for <a href=\"https://indielogin.com/\">indielogin.com</a>, which lets people sign in using their own websites by <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/RelMeAuth\">setting up only a couple of links</a>.\n <br /></p>\nOther discussion:\n<ul><li>\n<a href=\"https://indieweb.org/2018\">IndieWeb Summit</a>! Marty went and loved it. Next year would love to bring more folks from HWC Baltimore, and travel assistance is available. We'll work on it.</li>\n <li>\n Marty met <a href=\"http://ewy.me/\">Jared Ewy</a>\u00a0of <a href=\"https://name.com/\">name.com</a>\u00a0at the Summit and talked about all the cool work DHF does teaching youth to build websites, the upcoming Web Shop, hosting HWC and IWC Baltimore, etc. Jared gave him a bunch of codes for free domains and some hosting discounts to benefit that work, so we discussed lots of ideas!\n <br /></li>\n <li>Some possibilities: give Web Shop youth employees incentive to work on their own projects, outside of paid jobs, to learn more about building their own sites. Host a special Homebrew Website Club that's a 2-hour jam for new folks who don't have a domain yet to get set up with a website. Host a longer \"Build Your Website Day\" (maybe in coordination with a <a href=\"https://twitter.com/sdepolo/status/1011739362122334208\">multi-city Drag Queen Build-a-Website Day</a>?)</li>\n <li>What would an IndieWeb \"starter pack\" look like for a quick \"you have a domain but no money\" way to get started? GitHub looks good for skill building for folks that want to get into web development someday because it's mostly managed by hand. Netlify looks pretty good for this because they offer hosting, flexible static site generation, SSL for HTTPS, and the NetlifyCMS. They also support some features like building your own webhooks on JavaScript, which could eventually be used to handle common IndieWeb building block endpoints (IndieAuth, Micropub, Webmention, ...) Because they run all the stuff for a given site from a git repository, it's possible to take a site from Netlify and set it up elsewhere if their offerings change.</li>\n <li>\"Packages\" for a getting started workshop. E.g. \"what will you get at the end + what will you need to learn along the way.\" Static HTML/CSS on GitHub could get a portfolio site done. For $5/mo a <a href=\"http://neocities.org/\">Neocities</a> site can be hosted on a custom domain and requires no Git/GitHub wrangling. <a href=\"https://micro.blog/\">Micro.blog</a> hosting is also $5/mo and brings a ton of features, interactivity, and community.</li>\n <li>Talked about VueJS passing React in terms of number of stars on GitHub, and speculating why that is. For example, VueJS can be a lot easier to dip your toes in and get started without a complicated build toolchain.</li>\n</ul><img src=\"https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/1127acf1b67d51fa640077be4c098625690f567f/68747470733a2f2f6d656469612e6d617274796d636775692e72652f38392f62332f33312f36372f31316364383233633833343838396430353035623339336137343432653333653134396262393261303533356631366634303232653966352e6a7067\" alt=\"Photo of HWC Baltimore attendees\" />Left-to-right: martymcgui.re, dariusmccoy.net, jonathanprozzi.net, derekfields.is<p>Thanks to everybody who came out! We hope to see you all again at our next meeting on <strong>Wednesday </strong><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/events/2018-07-25-homebrew-website-club\">July 25th</a>\u00a0at <strong>6:30pm</strong> (quiet writing hour at 5:30pm)!</p>"
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-07-11T16:08:40Z",
"url": "https://adactio.com/journal/14120",
"category": [
"rss",
"tags",
"feeds",
"links",
"linking",
"folksonomy",
"indieweb",
"publishing",
"journal",
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"tagging",
"hyperlinks",
"hypertext"
],
"syndication": [
"https://medium.com/@adactio/29514a02ccc2"
],
"name": "Links, tags, and feeds",
"content": {
"text": "A little while back, I switched from using Chrome as my day-to-day browser to using Firefox. I could feel myself getting a bit too comfortable with one particular browser, and that\u2019s not good. I reckon it\u2019s good to shake things up a little every now and then. Besides, there really isn\u2019t that much difference once you\u2019ve transferred over bookmarks and cookies.\n\nUnfortunately I\u2019m being bitten by this little bug in Firefox. It causes some of my bookmarklets to fail on certain sites with strict Content Security Policies (and CSPs shouldn\u2019t affect bookmarklets). I might have to switch back to Chrome because of this.\n\nI use bookmarklets throughout the day. There\u2019s the Huffduffer bookmarklet, of course, for whenever I come across a podcast episode or other piece of audio that I want to listen to later. But there\u2019s also my own home-rolled bookmarklet for posting links to my site. It doesn\u2019t do anything clever\u2014it grabs the title and URL of the currently open page and pre-populates a form in a new window, leaving me to add a short description and some tags.\n\nIf you\u2019re reading this, then you\u2019re familiar with the \u201cjournal\u201d section of adactio.com, but the \u201clinks\u201d section is where I post the most. Here, for example, are all the links I posted yesterday. It varies from day to day, but there\u2019s generally a handful.\n\nShould you wish to keep track of everything I\u2019m linking to, there\u2019s a twitterbot you can follow called @adactioLinks. It uses a simple IFTTT recipe to poll my RSS feed of links and send out a tweet whenever there\u2019s a new entry.\n\nOr you can drink straight from the source and subscribe to the RSS feed itself, if you\u2019re still rocking it old-school. But if RSS is your bag, then you might appreciate a way to filter those links\u2026\n\nAll my links are tagged. Heavily. This is because all my links are \u201cnotes to future self\u201d, and all my future self has to do is ask \u201cwhat would past me have tagged that link with?\u201d when I\u2019m trying to find something I previously linked to. I end up using my site\u2019s URLs as an interface:\n\n\nadactio.com/links/tags/serviceworkers or \nadactio.com/links/tags/sci-fi\nAt the front-end gatherings at Clearleft, I usually wrap up with a quick tour of whatever I\u2019ve added that week to:\n\nadactio.com/links/tags/frontend\nWell, each one of those tags also has a corresponding RSS feed:\n\nadactio.com/links/tags/serviceworkers/rss\nadactio.com/links/tags/sci-fi/rss\nadactio.com/links/tags/frontend/rss\n\u2026and so on.\n\nThat means you can subscribe to just the links tagged with something you\u2019re interested in. Here\u2019s the full list of tags if you\u2019re interested in seeing the inside of my head.\n\nThis also works for my journal entries. If you\u2019re only interested in my blog posts about frontend development, you might want to subscribe to:\n\nadactio.com/journal/tags/frontend/rss\nHere are all the tags from my journal.\n\nYou can even mix them up. For everything I\u2019ve tagged with \u201ctypography\u201d\u2014whether it\u2019s links, journal entries, or articles\u2014the URL is:\n\nadactio.com/tags/typography\nThe corresponding RSS feed is:\n\nadactio.com/tags/typography/rss\nYou get the idea. Basically, if something on my site is a list of items, chances are there\u2019s a corresponding RSS feeds. Sometimes there might even be a JSON feed. Hack some URLs to see.\n\nMeanwhile, I\u2019ll be linking, linking, linking\u2026",
"html": "<p>A little while back, I switched from using Chrome as my day-to-day browser to using Firefox. I could feel myself getting a bit too comfortable with one particular browser, and that\u2019s not good. I reckon it\u2019s good to shake things up a little every now and then. Besides, there really isn\u2019t that much difference once you\u2019ve transferred over bookmarks and cookies.</p>\n\n<p>Unfortunately I\u2019m being bitten by <a href=\"https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=866522\">this little bug in Firefox</a>. It causes some of my bookmarklets to fail on certain sites with strict Content Security Policies (and CSPs shouldn\u2019t affect bookmarklets). I might have to switch back to Chrome because of this.</p>\n\n<p>I use bookmarklets throughout the day. There\u2019s the <a href=\"https://huffduffer.com/\">Huffduffer</a> bookmarklet, of course, for whenever I come across a podcast episode or other piece of audio that I want to listen to later. But there\u2019s also my own home-rolled bookmarklet for posting links to my site. It doesn\u2019t do anything clever\u2014it grabs the title and URL of the currently open page and pre-populates a form in a new window, leaving me to add a short description and some tags.</p>\n\n<p>If you\u2019re reading this, then you\u2019re familiar with <a href=\"https://adactio.com/journal/\">the \u201cjournal\u201d section</a> of adactio.com, but <a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/\">the \u201clinks\u201d section</a> is where I post the most. Here, for example, are <a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/archive/2018/07/10\">all the links I posted yesterday</a>. It varies from day to day, but there\u2019s generally a handful.</p>\n\n<p>Should you wish to keep track of everything I\u2019m linking to, there\u2019s a twitterbot you can follow called <a href=\"https://twitter.com/adactioLinks\">@adactioLinks</a>. It uses a simple IFTTT recipe to poll <a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/rss\">my RSS feed of links</a> and send out a tweet whenever there\u2019s a new entry.</p>\n\n<p>Or you can drink straight from the source and subscribe to <a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/rss\">the RSS feed</a> itself, if you\u2019re still rocking it old-school. But if RSS is your bag, then you might appreciate a way to filter those links\u2026</p>\n\n<p>All my links are tagged. Heavily. This is because all my links are \u201cnotes to future self\u201d, and all my future self has to do is ask \u201cwhat would past me have tagged that link with?\u201d when I\u2019m trying to find something I previously linked to. I end up using my site\u2019s URLs as an interface:</p>\n\n<ul><li>\n<a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/tags/serviceworkers\"><code>adactio.com/links/tags/serviceworkers</code></a> or </li>\n<li><a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/tags/sci-fi\"><code>adactio.com/links/tags/sci-fi</code></a></li>\n</ul><p>At the front-end gatherings at <a href=\"https://clearleft.com/\">Clearleft</a>, I usually wrap up with a quick tour of whatever I\u2019ve added that week to:</p>\n\n<ul><li><a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/tags/frontend\"><code>adactio.com/links/tags/frontend</code></a></li>\n</ul><p>Well, each one of those tags also has a corresponding RSS feed:</p>\n\n<ul><li><a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/tags/serviceworkers/rss\"><code>adactio.com/links/tags/serviceworkers/rss</code></a></li>\n<li><a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/tags/sci-fi/rss\"><code>adactio.com/links/tags/sci-fi/rss</code></a></li>\n<li><a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/tags/frontend/rss\"><code>adactio.com/links/tags/frontend/rss</code></a></li>\n</ul><p>\u2026and so on.</p>\n\n<p>That means you can subscribe to just the links tagged with something you\u2019re interested in. Here\u2019s <a href=\"https://adactio.com/links/tags/\">the full list of tags</a> if you\u2019re interested in seeing the inside of my head.</p>\n\n<p>This also works for my journal entries. If you\u2019re only interested in my <a href=\"https://adactio.com/journal/tags/frontend\">blog posts about frontend development</a>, you might want to subscribe to:</p>\n\n<ul><li><a href=\"https://adactio.com/journal/tags/frontend/rss\"><code>adactio.com/journal/tags/frontend/rss</code></a></li>\n</ul><p>Here are <a href=\"https://adactio.com/journal/tags\">all the tags</a> from my journal.</p>\n\n<p>You can even mix them up. For everything I\u2019ve tagged with \u201ctypography\u201d\u2014whether it\u2019s links, journal entries, or articles\u2014the URL is:</p>\n\n<ul><li><a href=\"https://adactio.com/tags/typography\"><code>adactio.com/tags/typography</code></a></li>\n</ul><p>The corresponding RSS feed is:</p>\n\n<ul><li><a href=\"https://adactio.com/tags/typography/rss\"><code>adactio.com/tags/typography/rss</code></a></li>\n</ul><p>You get the idea. Basically, if something on my site is a list of items, chances are there\u2019s a corresponding RSS feeds. Sometimes there might even be a <a href=\"https://jsonfeed.org/\">JSON feed</a>. Hack some URLs to see.</p>\n\n<p>Meanwhile, I\u2019ll be linking, linking, linking\u2026</p>"
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Quill's event creation UI now has venue autocomplete and a map preview, and sends the full venue information to your Micropub endpoint as an h-card! Selecting a location also sets the timezone offset of the event start/end date properly too!
This just made it so much easier to post events to my site, so I expect to be posting a lot more now!
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"text": "Quill's event creation UI now has venue autocomplete and a map preview, and sends the full venue information to your Micropub endpoint as an h-card! Selecting a location also sets the timezone offset of the event start/end date properly too! \n\nThis just made it so much easier to post events to my site, so I expect to be posting a lot more now!",
"html": "Quill's event creation UI now has venue autocomplete and a map preview, and sends the full venue information to your Micropub endpoint as an h-card! Selecting a location also sets the timezone offset of the event start/end date properly too! <br /><br />This just made it so much easier to post events to my site, so I expect to be posting a lot more now!"
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Yeah, I think from the micro.blog side of things it makes sense to hide it from the UI. From the IndieWeb side of things, I think over the next year we’ll see expansion into follower lists to help readers, recommendations and the vouch system. For this reason, I think data wise keeping the full follower list is important.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-07-10T13:06:20-04:00",
"summary": "Yeah, I think from the micro.blog side of things it makes sense to hide it from the UI. From the IndieWeb side of things, I think over the next year we\u2019ll see expansion into follower lists to help readers, recommendations and the vouch system. For this reason, I think data wise keeping the full follower list is important.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/07/10/6/reply/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://micro.blog/manton/703850"
],
"content": {
"text": "Yeah, I think from the micro.blog side of things it makes sense to hide it from the UI. From the IndieWeb side of things, I think over the next year we\u2019ll see expansion into follower lists to help readers, recommendations and the vouch system. For this reason, I think data wise keeping the full follower list is important.",
"html": "<p>Yeah, I think from the micro.blog side of things it makes sense to hide it from the UI. From the IndieWeb side of things, I think over the next year we\u2019ll see expansion into follower lists to help readers, recommendations and the vouch system. For this reason, I think data wise keeping the full follower list is important.</p>"
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"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-07-09T22:47:13-04:00",
"summary": "In fact, that reply (and this reply) was sent into Micro.blog system via webmention from my website.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/07/09/23/reply/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://www.izq.fm/2018/07/09/id-love-it.html"
],
"content": {
"text": "In fact, that reply (and this reply) was sent into Micro.blog system via webmention from my website.",
"html": "<p>In fact, that reply (and this reply) was sent into Micro.blog system via webmention from my website.</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/cc9591b69c2c835fa2c6e23745b224db4b4b431f/68747470733a2f2f656464696568696e6b6c652e636f6d2f696d616765732f70726f66696c652e6a7067"
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Hey there! M.b does support webmentions, just not 100%. There are definitely more improvements @manton can (and has expressed a desire) to make. Unfortunately, every feature has to be prioritized 🙂 This has the current info on what is working for webmentions: http://help.micro.blog/2017/webmention/
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"published": "2018-07-09T22:45:00-04:00",
"summary": "Hey there! M.b does support webmentions, just not 100%. There are definitely more improvements @manton can (and has expressed a desire) to make. Unfortunately, every feature has to be prioritized \ud83d\ude42 This has the current info on what is working for webmentions: http://help.micro.blog/2017/webmention/",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/07/09/22/reply/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://www.izq.fm/2018/07/09/id-love-it.html"
],
"content": {
"text": "Hey there! M.b does support webmentions, just not 100%. There are definitely more improvements @manton can (and has expressed a desire) to make. Unfortunately, every feature has to be prioritized \ud83d\ude42 This has the current info on what is working for webmentions: http://help.micro.blog/2017/webmention/",
"html": "<p>Hey there! M.b does support webmentions, just not 100%. There are definitely more improvements <a href=\"https://eddiehinkle.com/timeline/undefined\">@manton</a> can (and has expressed a desire) to make. Unfortunately, every feature has to be prioritized \ud83d\ude42 This has the current info on what is working for webmentions: http://help.micro.blog/2017/webmention/</p>"
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{
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"url": "https://monday.micro.blog/2018/07/09/episode-eli.html",
"published": "2018-07-09T09:14:07-07:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p><a href=\"https://micro.blog/eli\">Eli Mellen</a>, an art historian and printmaker turned web developer, talks to Jean about how he went from his \u201cangsty LiveJournal\u201d to being a proponent of the IndieWeb, and why he likes the new <a href=\"https://xn--sr8hvo.ws/\">IndieWeb Ring</a>. Eli is also the maintainer of <a href=\"https://m.b.wiki.eli.li/\">Micro.wiki: Community resources for the avid Micro.blogger</a>.</p>",
"text": "Eli Mellen, an art historian and printmaker turned web developer, talks to Jean about how he went from his \u201cangsty LiveJournal\u201d to being a proponent of the IndieWeb, and why he likes the new IndieWeb Ring. Eli is also the maintainer of Micro.wiki: Community resources for the avid Micro.blogger."
},
"name": "Episode 17: @eli",
"audio": [
"https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/7d2100bd230bbec5d49c0f173117c0e9314ebb2a/687474703a2f2f6d6f6e6461792e6d6963726f2e626c6f672f75706c6f6164732f323031382f363339623866393663612e6d7033"
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-07-09T19:12:29-04:00",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2018/07/09/191229/",
"category": [
"podcast",
"IndieWeb",
"this-week-indieweb-podcast"
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"https://huffduffer.com/schmarty/491040",
"https://twitter.com/schmarty/status/1016461080099524608",
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],
"name": "This Week in the IndieWeb Audio Edition \u2022 June 30th - July 6th, 2018",
"content": {
"text": "Show/Hide Transcript \n \n Reddit-but-IndieWeb, Facebook\u2019s socialized risks, and you got your ActivityPub in my Webmention. It\u2019s the audio edition for This Week in the IndieWeb for June 30th - July 6th, 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>Reddit-but-IndieWeb, Facebook\u2019s socialized risks, and you got your ActivityPub in my Webmention. It\u2019s the audio edition for <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/this-week/2018-07-06.html\">This Week in the IndieWeb for June 30th - July 6th, 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>"
},
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"type": "card",
"name": "Marty McGuire",
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Homebrew Website Club returns! Come on out and work on your personal website, or learn more about how to escape the social media silos by building something of your own!
We’ll have updates about the recent IndieWeb Summit, a return of webrings, and much more!
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"text": "I'm going!Homebrew Website Club returns! Come on out and work on your personal website, or learn more about how to escape the social media silos by building something of your own!\nWe\u2019ll have updates about the recent IndieWeb Summit, a return of webrings, and much more!",
"html": "I'm going!<p>Homebrew Website Club returns! Come on out and work on your personal website, or learn more about how to escape the social media silos by building something of your own!</p>\n<p>We\u2019ll have updates about the recent IndieWeb Summit, a return of webrings, and much more!</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Marty McGuire",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/",
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"published": "2018-07-09T16:10:10-04:00",
"summary": "Please note: We are back to meeting on Wednesday and meeting at 6:30pm. Be sure to double-check your calendars! Join us for an evening of quiet writing, IndieWeb demos, and discussions! Create or update your personal web site! Finish that blog post you\u2019ve been writing, edit the wiki! Demos of recent IndieWeb breakthroughs, share what you\u2019ve gotten working! Join a...",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2018/07/09/161010/",
"name": "Homebrew Website Club Baltimore",
"author": {
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"name": "martymcgui.re",
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I think something like Slack’s reactions could be great. It lines up with something we’ve been experimenting with in the IndieWeb as “reacji”. Essentially they are replies with just a single emoji under the hood. But in processing and UIs we can think of them as reactions. I find Slack’s approach very beneficial.
{
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"summary": "I think something like Slack\u2019s reactions could be great. It lines up with something we\u2019ve been experimenting with in the IndieWeb as \u201creacji\u201d. Essentially they are replies with just a single emoji under the hood. But in processing and UIs we can think of them as reactions. I find Slack\u2019s approach very beneficial.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/07/09/11/reply/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://micro.blog/manton/696955"
],
"content": {
"text": "I think something like Slack\u2019s reactions could be great. It lines up with something we\u2019ve been experimenting with in the IndieWeb as \u201creacji\u201d. Essentially they are replies with just a single emoji under the hood. But in processing and UIs we can think of them as reactions. I find Slack\u2019s approach very beneficial.",
"html": "<p>I think something like Slack\u2019s reactions could be great. It lines up with something we\u2019ve been experimenting with in the IndieWeb as \u201creacji\u201d. Essentially they are replies with just a single emoji under the hood. But in processing and UIs we can think of them as reactions. I find Slack\u2019s approach very beneficial.</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/cc9591b69c2c835fa2c6e23745b224db4b4b431f/68747470733a2f2f656464696568696e6b6c652e636f6d2f696d616765732f70726f66696c652e6a7067"
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There’s a new Micro Monday podcast episode out! “Eli Mellen, an art historian and printmaker turned web developer, talks to Jean about…” LiveJournal, the IndieWeb, 🕸️💍, Micro.wiki, and more.
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"url": "https://www.manton.org/2018/07/09/162924.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p>There\u2019s a <a href=\"https://monday.micro.blog/2018/07/09/episode-eli.html\">new Micro Monday podcast episode</a> out! \u201cEli Mellen, an art historian and printmaker turned web developer, talks to Jean about\u2026\u201d LiveJournal, the IndieWeb, \ud83d\udd78\ufe0f\ud83d\udc8d, Micro.wiki, and more.</p>",
"text": "There\u2019s a new Micro Monday podcast episode out! \u201cEli Mellen, an art historian and printmaker turned web developer, talks to Jean about\u2026\u201d LiveJournal, the IndieWeb, \ud83d\udd78\ufe0f\ud83d\udc8d, Micro.wiki, and more."
},
"published": "2018-07-09T11:29:24-05:00",
"_id": "575705",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
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"url": "https://www.manton.org/2018/07/09/new-features-this.html",
"name": "New features this week",
"content": {
"html": "<p>I rolled out several new features to Micro.blog today:</p>\n\n<ul><li><strong>LinkedIn cross-posting.</strong> I don\u2019t use LinkedIn very often, but I kept hearing this request enough that it slowly bubbled up to the top of the priority queue as I was making improvements to cross-posting. Micro.blog can now send any new post to LinkedIn automatically.</li>\n <li><strong>Show following users on the web.</strong> For a long time you\u2019ve been able to see who someone is following in the native apps, but not on the web version of Micro.blog. Now the web version more closely matches the experience on iOS and macOS. This is a nice way to discover new users to follow. (We still <a href=\"http://www.manton.org/2018/07/twitter-power-users.html\">never show followers or follower counts</a>.)</li>\n <li><strong>Better hosted page redirects.</strong> Blogs hosted on Micro.blog can have pages in the navigation for things like contact information, a resume, current projects, books you love, etc. If you want to link to an external site, you can just paste the URL into the contents of the page. These redirects work better now without briefly loading the blog layout.</li>\n <li><strong>Indiepaper for saving articles to read later.</strong> This is an experimental feature inspired by some ongoing work in the IndieWeb community. <a href=\"http://help.micro.blog/2018/indiepaper/\">There\u2019s a help page</a> if you\u2019re interested in learning more. I\u2019ll have some more thoughts later on how this might evolve.</li>\n <li><strong>Pass-through legacy URL redirects.</strong> The last missing piece to migrate my main blog with 16 years of posts to Micro.blog hosting. Because I had accumulated so many random files on manton.org that I didn\u2019t want to migrate, this feature allows me to have Micro.blog host all posts and photos, but if Micro.blog sees a URL it doesn\u2019t recognize it can forward that to a different URL on the old server. (I\u2019ll be enabling this manually for people who need it for now.)</li>\n</ul><p>It\u2019s really nice to finally have <a href=\"http://manton.org/2018/07/08/migrated-mantonorg-to.html\">manton.org hosted on Micro.blog</a>. I\u2019ve learned a lot going through this that I can use to help others migrating away from Wordpress.</p>\n\n<p>I also cleaned up the text on a few pages and made other small bug fixes. Thanks for using Micro.blog! Your support means we can keep making it better.</p>",
"text": "I rolled out several new features to Micro.blog today:\n\nLinkedIn cross-posting. I don\u2019t use LinkedIn very often, but I kept hearing this request enough that it slowly bubbled up to the top of the priority queue as I was making improvements to cross-posting. Micro.blog can now send any new post to LinkedIn automatically.\n Show following users on the web. For a long time you\u2019ve been able to see who someone is following in the native apps, but not on the web version of Micro.blog. Now the web version more closely matches the experience on iOS and macOS. This is a nice way to discover new users to follow. (We still never show followers or follower counts.)\n Better hosted page redirects. Blogs hosted on Micro.blog can have pages in the navigation for things like contact information, a resume, current projects, books you love, etc. If you want to link to an external site, you can just paste the URL into the contents of the page. These redirects work better now without briefly loading the blog layout.\n Indiepaper for saving articles to read later. This is an experimental feature inspired by some ongoing work in the IndieWeb community. There\u2019s a help page if you\u2019re interested in learning more. I\u2019ll have some more thoughts later on how this might evolve.\n Pass-through legacy URL redirects. The last missing piece to migrate my main blog with 16 years of posts to Micro.blog hosting. Because I had accumulated so many random files on manton.org that I didn\u2019t want to migrate, this feature allows me to have Micro.blog host all posts and photos, but if Micro.blog sees a URL it doesn\u2019t recognize it can forward that to a different URL on the old server. (I\u2019ll be enabling this manually for people who need it for now.)\nIt\u2019s really nice to finally have manton.org hosted on Micro.blog. I\u2019ve learned a lot going through this that I can use to help others migrating away from Wordpress.\n\nI also cleaned up the text on a few pages and made other small bug fixes. Thanks for using Micro.blog! Your support means we can keep making it better."
},
"published": "2018-07-09T09:30:54-05:00",
"_id": "574160",
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Over the past couple of days I've noticed a problem when posting a comment on the blog.
The comment is submitted but you are not directed back to the post. No follow-up actions occur either such as sending a webmention where appropriate or mailing me to advise that a comment has been submitted.
After checking, I saw the site is generating a 405 error in wp-comments-post.php which checks that the request method is POST and fails if the method doesn't match.
I'm not sure when it started but I think it might have coincided with the update to WordPress 4.9.7.
I tried disabling a number of plugins and custom functions to no avail. Searches revealed that this is a relatively common issue with some saying it relates to a problem sending emails from WordPress. I turned off the email notification options in Discussion Settings and comments started working.
Email is definitely the issue. I've tried a couple of SMTP plugins instead of relying on defaults but get the same error so I don't know what's actually causing it.
I've left the email notifications off for now so that things work until I can find the cause. There may, consequently, be a delay in me responding or reacting to comments.
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Colin Walker",
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/09-07-2018-1239/",
"published": "2018-07-09T11:39:24+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Over the past couple of days I've noticed a problem when posting a comment on the blog.</p>\n<p>The comment is submitted but you are not directed back to the post. No follow-up actions occur either such as sending a webmention where appropriate or mailing me to advise that a comment has been submitted.</p>\n<p>After checking, I saw the site is generating a 405 error in wp-comments-post.php which checks that the request method is <code>POST</code> and fails if the method doesn't match.</p>\n<p>I'm not sure when it started but I think it might have coincided with the update to WordPress 4.9.7.</p>\n<p>I tried disabling a number of plugins and custom functions to no avail. Searches revealed that this is a relatively common issue with some saying it relates to a problem sending emails from WordPress. I turned off the email notification options in Discussion Settings and comments started working.</p>\n<p>Email is definitely the issue. I've tried a couple of SMTP plugins instead of relying on defaults but get the same error so I don't know what's actually causing it.</p>\n<p>I've left the email notifications off for now so that things work until I can find the cause. There may, consequently, be a delay in me responding or reacting to comments.</p>",
"text": "Over the past couple of days I've noticed a problem when posting a comment on the blog.\nThe comment is submitted but you are not directed back to the post. No follow-up actions occur either such as sending a webmention where appropriate or mailing me to advise that a comment has been submitted.\nAfter checking, I saw the site is generating a 405 error in wp-comments-post.php which checks that the request method is POST and fails if the method doesn't match.\nI'm not sure when it started but I think it might have coincided with the update to WordPress 4.9.7.\nI tried disabling a number of plugins and custom functions to no avail. Searches revealed that this is a relatively common issue with some saying it relates to a problem sending emails from WordPress. I turned off the email notification options in Discussion Settings and comments started working.\nEmail is definitely the issue. I've tried a couple of SMTP plugins instead of relying on defaults but get the same error so I don't know what's actually causing it.\nI've left the email notifications off for now so that things work until I can find the cause. There may, consequently, be a delay in me responding or reacting to comments."
},
"_id": "574140",
"_source": "237",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Colin Walker",
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/vouch/",
"published": "2018-07-03T12:03:25+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p><a href=\"https://david.shanske.com/2018/07/01/brainstorming-on-implementing-vouch-following-and-blogrolls/\">David Shanske</a> wrote about a <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/2018/vouch\">brainstorming session</a> held at Indieweb Summit 2018 about implementing \"<a href=\"https://indieweb.org/Vouch\">Vouch</a>\" - a trust/anti-spam extension for webmention.</p>\n<p>The idea of Vouch is that people create a list of webmention senders they trust and make this available to others. If a domain is in a published trusted list then it has been \"vouched for\" meaning it's safe to accept and approve webmentions from that domain.</p>\n<p>As David says <em>\"This should block automated spam and aid in moderation.\"</em></p>\n<p>But, problem is, <em>\"(w)here do you find people who have been approved by people you have approved of?\"</em> How do we build lists and share them? Can a blogroll be such a list?</p>\n<p>Various ideas were proposed including using a <code>rel</code> value such as follower, following or contact, or maybe using microformats markup to declare <code>u-follow-of</code> entries in a h-feed.</p>\n<p>Now, the issue with a blogroll is that, unless it's explicitly curated, its member sites may well not be configured to send webmentions and it might be a bit of a waste.</p>\n<p>As such, I thought my <a href=\"https://colinwalker.blog/directory/\">/Directory</a> could be an ideal place to hold such a list. It is automated, only includes sites that have sent webmentions and only shows those that I approve - I've not had webmention spam but any would be removed from comments and not appear in the directory.</p>\n<p>I've laid the groundwork by adding a h-feed and <code>u-follow-of</code> markup to the Directory plugin (subject to tweaking but it's a start) so we now need the missing link of telling other sites where your list is.</p>",
"text": "David Shanske wrote about a brainstorming session held at Indieweb Summit 2018 about implementing \"Vouch\" - a trust/anti-spam extension for webmention.\nThe idea of Vouch is that people create a list of webmention senders they trust and make this available to others. If a domain is in a published trusted list then it has been \"vouched for\" meaning it's safe to accept and approve webmentions from that domain.\nAs David says \"This should block automated spam and aid in moderation.\"\nBut, problem is, \"(w)here do you find people who have been approved by people you have approved of?\" How do we build lists and share them? Can a blogroll be such a list?\nVarious ideas were proposed including using a rel value such as follower, following or contact, or maybe using microformats markup to declare u-follow-of entries in a h-feed.\nNow, the issue with a blogroll is that, unless it's explicitly curated, its member sites may well not be configured to send webmentions and it might be a bit of a waste.\nAs such, I thought my /Directory could be an ideal place to hold such a list. It is automated, only includes sites that have sent webmentions and only shows those that I approve - I've not had webmention spam but any would be removed from comments and not appear in the directory.\nI've laid the groundwork by adding a h-feed and u-follow-of markup to the Directory plugin (subject to tweaking but it's a start) so we now need the missing link of telling other sites where your list is."
},
"name": "Vouch",
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"I doubt if the blogosphere of 2018 is smaller in absolute terms than the blogosphere of the early 2000s. In fact I'm pretty sure it's orders of magnitude larger...
What changed is we lost the center."
The emergence of social networks as a driving force on the internet gave people quicker, easier ways to make a point, connect and have conversations. Blogs still existed but became isolated, the strands that wove them together as more of a community unraveled.
Things have been getting better:
a backlash in some quarters
the indieweb movement seeking to facilitate cross-talk using technologies like webmentions
micro.blog aiming to get people focused on blogging again
But it is still too easy to jump on your social platform of choice rather than have discussions via blogs.
{
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"name": "Colin Walker",
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/",
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},
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/26-06-2018-1500/",
"published": "2018-06-26T14:02:09+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p><em>Liked: <a href=\"http://scripting.com/2018/06/26/114410.html\">Scripting News: What became of the blogosphere?</a>...</em></p>\n<blockquote><p>\n <em>\"I doubt if the blogosphere of 2018 is smaller in absolute terms than the blogosphere of the early 2000s. In fact I'm pretty sure it's orders of magnitude larger...</em></p>\n<p> <em>What changed is we lost the center.\"</em>\n</p></blockquote>\n<p>The emergence of social networks as a driving force on the internet gave people quicker, easier ways to make a point, connect and have conversations. Blogs still existed but became isolated, the strands that wove them together as more of a community unraveled.</p>\n<p>Things have been getting better:</p>\n<ul><li>a backlash in some quarters</li>\n<li>the indieweb movement seeking to facilitate cross-talk using technologies like webmentions</li>\n<li>micro.blog aiming to get people focused on blogging again</li>\n</ul><p>But it is still too easy to jump on your social platform of choice rather than have discussions via blogs.</p>",
"text": "Liked: Scripting News: What became of the blogosphere?...\n\n \"I doubt if the blogosphere of 2018 is smaller in absolute terms than the blogosphere of the early 2000s. In fact I'm pretty sure it's orders of magnitude larger...\n What changed is we lost the center.\"\n\nThe emergence of social networks as a driving force on the internet gave people quicker, easier ways to make a point, connect and have conversations. Blogs still existed but became isolated, the strands that wove them together as more of a community unraveled.\nThings have been getting better:\na backlash in some quarters\nthe indieweb movement seeking to facilitate cross-talk using technologies like webmentions\nmicro.blog aiming to get people focused on blogging again\nBut it is still too easy to jump on your social platform of choice rather than have discussions via blogs."
},
"_id": "574152",
"_source": "237",
"_is_read": true
}
If you’re familiar with OAuth, this introduction to IndieAuth walks through the process of how auth for the open web works. Really happy that Micro.blog supports this now.
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"url": "https://www.manton.org/2018/07/07/if-youre-familiar.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p>If you\u2019re familiar with OAuth, <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2018/07/07/7/oauth-for-the-open-web\">this introduction to IndieAuth</a> walks through the process of how auth for the open web works. Really happy that Micro.blog supports this now.</p>",
"text": "If you\u2019re familiar with OAuth, this introduction to IndieAuth walks through the process of how auth for the open web works. Really happy that Micro.blog supports this now."
},
"published": "2018-07-07T15:41:12-05:00",
"_id": "570871",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": null,
"url": "https://www.manton.org/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://www.manton.org/2018/07/06/212232.html",
"content": {
"html": "<p>We posted <a href=\"https://coreint.org/2018/07/episode-335-kind-of-a-challenge-for-newcomers/\">a new episode of Core Intuition</a> this week with a summary of my time at IndieWeb Summit and more.</p>",
"text": "We posted a new episode of Core Intuition this week with a summary of my time at IndieWeb Summit and more."
},
"published": "2018-07-06T16:22:32-05:00",
"_id": "570873",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": null,
"url": "https://www.manton.org/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://www.manton.org/2018/07/04/indieauth-for-external.html",
"name": "IndieAuth for external blogs",
"content": {
"html": "<p>Earlier this week I wrote about <a href=\"http://www.manton.org/2018/07/indieauth-for-micro-blog.html\">making Micro.blog an IndieAuth provider</a>. This allows anyone with a Micro.blog-hosted blog to sign in to IndieWeb-compatible apps. For example, using <a href=\"http://ownyourgram.com/\">OwnYourGram</a> to automatically copy Instagram photos to your own blog on Micro.blog.</p>\n\n<p>I\u2019ve now expanded this support to let anyone use Micro.blog to authorize an app even if your blog is hosted outside of Micro.blog. If you host somewhere else, you\u2019ll still be responsible for setting up posting, but having basic IndieAuth support can be useful if you want to connect your blog to tools that don\u2019t need to post, like <a href=\"https://xn--sr8hvo.ws/\">IndieWeb Ring</a> or the <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/\">IndieWeb.org</a> wiki.</p>\n\n<p>There are instructions <a href=\"http://help.micro.blog/2017/web-site-verification/\">on this Micro.blog help page</a> for adding the appropriate HTML tags to your site.</p>",
"text": "Earlier this week I wrote about making Micro.blog an IndieAuth provider. This allows anyone with a Micro.blog-hosted blog to sign in to IndieWeb-compatible apps. For example, using OwnYourGram to automatically copy Instagram photos to your own blog on Micro.blog.\n\nI\u2019ve now expanded this support to let anyone use Micro.blog to authorize an app even if your blog is hosted outside of Micro.blog. If you host somewhere else, you\u2019ll still be responsible for setting up posting, but having basic IndieAuth support can be useful if you want to connect your blog to tools that don\u2019t need to post, like IndieWeb Ring or the IndieWeb.org wiki.\n\nThere are instructions on this Micro.blog help page for adding the appropriate HTML tags to your site."
},
"published": "2018-07-04T08:21:54-05:00",
"_id": "570880",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}