New release for Indigenous includes saving notes, articles and replies as draft so you can publish them later! #indieweb
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-10-01T23:32:43+02:00",
"url": "https://realize.be/notes/1573",
"content": {
"text": "New release for Indigenous includes saving notes, articles and replies as draft so you can publish them later! #indieweb"
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "1206207",
"_source": "213",
"_is_read": true
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Want to update posts in your #drupal site with Indigenous ? Who doesn't ! :) The android client and #indieweb module has experimental support now for querying posts and then updating a single post.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-09-17T17:06:35+02:00",
"url": "https://realize.be/notes/1550",
"content": {
"text": "Want to update posts in your #drupal site with Indigenous ? Who doesn't ! :) The android client and #indieweb module has experimental support now for querying posts and then updating a single post."
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "1206210",
"_source": "213",
"_is_read": true
}
The #Drupal #IndieWeb module is now able to send micropub requests to Aperture on incoming Webmentions to my site, which allows me to create a 'Notifications' channel. One step closer to killing the Twitter client!
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-09-12T12:51:29+02:00",
"url": "https://realize.be/notes/1545",
"content": {
"text": "The #Drupal #IndieWeb module is now able to send micropub requests to Aperture on incoming Webmentions to my site, which allows me to create a 'Notifications' channel. One step closer to killing the Twitter client!",
"html": "<p>The #Drupal #IndieWeb module is now able to send micropub requests to Aperture on incoming Webmentions to my site, which allows me to create a 'Notifications' channel. One step closer to killing the Twitter client!</p>"
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "1206211",
"_source": "213",
"_is_read": true
}
Indigenous is now publicly available on Google Play. Post easily to your site, or keep up with friends and interesting sites. More features coming soon, as well as to the #drupal module! #indieweb #social Google Play Store
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-09-06T10:48:21+02:00",
"url": "https://realize.be/notes/1530",
"content": {
"text": "Indigenous is now publicly available on Google Play. Post easily to your site, or keep up with friends and interesting sites. More features coming soon, as well as to the #drupal module! #indieweb #social Google Play Store",
"html": "<p>Indigenous is now publicly available on Google Play. Post easily to your site, or keep up with friends and interesting sites. More features coming soon, as well as to the #drupal module! #indieweb #social <a href=\"https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.indieweb.indigenous\">Google Play Store</a></p>"
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "1206213",
"_source": "213",
"_is_read": true
}
This might be a handy #indieweb #WordPres plugin for folks using micro.blog to custom tailor a feed https://github.com/billerickson/BE-RSS-Builder
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-10-12T12:59:41-04:00",
"url": "https://miklb.com/blog/2018/10/12/4494/",
"syndication": [
"https://mastodon.social/@miklb/100883731695585481"
],
"content": {
"text": "This might be a handy #indieweb #WordPres plugin for folks using micro.blog to custom tailor a feed https://github.com/billerickson/BE-RSS-Builder",
"html": "This might be a handy #indieweb #WordPres plugin for folks using micro.blog to custom tailor a feed <a href=\"https://github.com/billerickson/BE-RSS-Builder\">https://github.com/billerickson/BE-RSS-Builder</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Michael Bishop",
"url": "https://miklb.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/fa0674caee1c8265a0b0a240a0ec9c5d99ee50a2/68747470733a2f2f7365637572652e67726176617461722e636f6d2f6176617461722f63333961316436646637333532353934356366653530653939646164613733303f733d353026643d64656661756c7426723d72"
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "1202293",
"_source": "42",
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Just published a writeup of the @MySlingStudio rig I'm bringing to film IndieWebCamp Nürnberg and Berlin! It has 3 cameras, plus an HDMI input for presenter's slides, wireless mics, and still all fits into a backpack! https://aaronparecki.com/2018/10/15/4/portable-wireless-live-video
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-10-15T09:45:21-07:00",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/2018/10/15/7/video",
"category": [
"video",
"livestream"
],
"syndication": [
"https://twitter.com/aaronpk/status/1051876701523795968"
],
"content": {
"text": "Just published a writeup of the @MySlingStudio rig I'm bringing to film IndieWebCamp N\u00fcrnberg and Berlin! It has 3 cameras, plus an HDMI input for presenter's slides, wireless mics, and still all fits into a backpack! https://aaronparecki.com/2018/10/15/4/portable-wireless-live-video",
"html": "Just published a writeup of the <a href=\"https://twitter.com/MySlingStudio\">@MySlingStudio</a> rig I'm bringing to film IndieWebCamp N\u00fcrnberg and Berlin! It has 3 cameras, plus an HDMI input for presenter's slides, wireless mics, and still all fits into a backpack! <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2018/10/15/4/portable-wireless-live-video\"><span>https://</span>aaronparecki.com/2018/10/15/4/portable-wireless-live-video</a>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Aaron Parecki",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/2b8e1668dcd9cfa6a170b3724df740695f73a15c2a825962fd0a0967ec11ecdc.jpg"
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"post-type": "note",
"_id": "1200951",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-10-15T09:01:33-07:00",
"url": "https://aaronparecki.com/2018/10/15/4/portable-wireless-live-video",
"category": [
"video",
"livestream"
],
"name": "Portable Wireless Live Video Rig",
"content": {
"text": "I've been looking for ways to slim down the amount of equipment I need to bring to record conferences talks, both to make it easier to travel to other cities, as well as to speed up the setup time during an event.\n\nThis post outlines my current favorite set of hardware for recording and livestreaming conference talks and meetups. I'm able to fit all of this into a backpack and carry it on my bicycle to local events, or take it on planes to events in another country.\n\n\n\nVideo Switcher\n\nThe SlingStudio system has been a total game changer, packing an unbelievable amount of power into a tiny box.\n\n\n\nAt the core of the system is the SlingStudio Hub. This is the brains of the operation: a video switcher, encoder, and recorder. This device broadcasts its own wifi hotspot, which you can then connect your cameras and controllers to. You can use any HDMI camera as a video source by using a CameraLink to wirelessly connect the HDMI device, or you can use any iOS or Android device as a camera as well. This provides a great opportunity to have a super compact rig, since iPhone cameras are actually pretty good now.\n\nFor small productions, I will bring one iPhone camera, and one camcorder connected via HDMI. The iPhone provides a good enough picture for a wide shot of the room, and the camcorder provides good optical zoom and low light capability for a close-up of the presenter.\n\nThe rear of the device provides a few ports, most importantly an HDMI input and audio input, which means you have a built-in way to grab the slides from the presenter as well as a good audio feed.\n\n\n\nI usually plug in an HDMI 1x2 splitter into the input, so that I can send the presenter's computer to the house projector as well as this device. This makes the computer show up as a camera angle in the switcher. The hub can accept a huge variety of HDMI resolutions as the input and it handles scaling itself. I haven't yet found a computer that this device couldn't handle.\n\nSwitcher Controller\n\nThe Hub is controlled via an iPad or Mac app. I usually use an iPad since it's nice having a dedicated device with a touch screen for this, plus it's easier to walk around with the iPad.\n\n\n\nYou start by connecting the iPad to the Hub's wifi hotspot that it broadcasts, then when you launch the SlingStudio Console app, it will connect to the Hub and provide you with a controller interface to see all the camera angles and switch between them.\n\nCameras\n\nSince my goal is to have this pack up entirely in a backpack, I wanted to find the smallest options for cameras, even if it comes somewhat at the expense of quality. I typically use one or two iPhone SEs ($100 used), and a Canon Vixia HF R500 ($200). (The R500s are discontinued, replaced by the Canon Vixia HF R800, which is only a minor upgrade).\n\nClose-Up\n\n\n\nI use the Canon for a close-up shot of the presenter, since it has optical zoom and is pretty good at low light. The camera itself doesn't weigh much, so it can fit on a small tripod. I use a short tripod with a monopod extension, which has the benefit of having a pretty small footprint. This wouldn't hold up a DSLR when fully extended, but handles the Canon just fine.\n\nThe Canon camera also has an audio input, so I can connect a wireless microphone receiver to this such as the super compact Sony ECMAW4 Bluetooth microphone.\n\n\n\nThe Canon provides a mini HDMI output, which connects to the micro HDMI input on the SlingStudio CameraLink transmitter. The CameraLink connects wirelessly to the Hub, so I can place the camera wherever. The battery in the CameraLink lasts a couple hours, long enough that I don't need to worry about it for a short talk, but if I'm going to be filming for a whole evening I'll make sure to connect it to micro USB power or at least an external battery pack.\n\n\n\nWide/Rear View\n\n\n\nWith one good close-up view of the presenter, I just need a wide view as a secondary or fallback camera angle. I usually place this camera in the back of the room so that the audience as well as the projector are visible. Since I have both a close-up of the presenter as well as their slides brought in directly, I can get away with using an iPhone as this camera angle despite its slightly reduced quality.\n\nThe iPhone SE has a pretty decent camera. It's the same cameras as in the iPhone 6s line, but you can get a used iPhone SE for about $100 now, making this the cheapest way to get another camera angle into the mix.\n\nTo use the iPhone as a camera, you first connect the iPhone to the Hub's wifi hotspot that it broadcasts. Then you launch the SlingStudio Capture app and it will instantly show up as a camera angle in the Hub. You can long-press on the iPhone screen to lock the focus and exposure as well, which is useful when your presenters have slides that switch between white and black backgrounds, which would otherwise confuse the auto-focus and auto-exposure that the phone does.\n\nRunning the camera and wifi on the iPhones the whole event would drain the battery in about a half hour, so I always make sure to plug in the phone during the event. The stock charger cable is usually too short to do anything with, so I bring a 10' lightning cable which gives me enough length to run it to a power outlet somewhere nearby.\n\n\n\nAudio\n\nAudio is of course a huge part of getting a good quality recording of a presentation. The camera mics built in to camcorders or the iPhone will not get good results at all, since they aren't that good to begin with plus the devices will be typically 10+ feet from the presenter. Instead, you need a microphone super close to the presenter, like a lav mic or handheld mic.\n\nDepending on the situation, I have a few different setups I use for capturing audio. If the venue is providing amplification for the presenter, then I first try to find a way to tap into the house audio. The Hub has an 1/8\" input, so I just need to make sure to place the Hub close enough to the house mixing board to run an audio cable to it.\n\nIf I need to bring my own microphones and audio gear, or if I'm recording a discussion around a table, then I'll bring either a wireless mic or wired stage or boundary microphones.\n\nWireless Microphones\n\n\n\nThe smallest wireless mic I've found is the Sony ECMAW4 Bluetooth microphone. The transmitter and receiver are both the same shape, both only slightly larger than the AAA battery that powers them. It's relatively inexpensive too, at $150. There is a microphone built in, but it also has an 1/8\" jack to connect a lav mic. You definitely get better audio using a lav mic, so if you can manage asking the presenters to wear that I highly recommend it.\n\nYou can connect the receiver to either the SlingStudio Hub or the Canon camera using a 1/8\" cable.\n\nTabletop Microphone\n\n\n\n\n\nIf you need to capture audio around a whole table, or if you can't get your presenters to wear a microphone, then the best option is to place a boundary microphone on the podium.\n\nAudio Technica makes a fantastic wireless mic system that runs on 2.4ghz rather than a dedicated wireless mic frequency. There are some new FCC regulations coming that will re-allocate the frequencies that many wireless mics use, so it will no longer be legal to operate many of those. This system uses 2.4ghz, the same frequencies that Bluetooth and Wi-Fi use, so will always be safe to use.\n\nThe benefit of using a wireless mic for this, of course, is you don't need to worry about placing the Hub nearby the stage or podium. This also cuts down on the amount of wires you need to bring, which can save a lot of packing space.\n\nWired Microphones\n\nFor one reason or another, you may find it better to use a wired microphone. A wired microphone will usually provide better audio quality and be more stable than wireless mics, though it does come at the cost of more wires to carry and more setup time to connect them.\n\n\n\nThe Saramonic SmartRig+ 2-Channel Mixer is a small mixer that provides phantom power so you can use nice microphones with it. It plugs into the 1/8\" jack on the SlingStudio hub. It does run on a 9V battery with no external power option, although I haven't been able to drain the battery during a normal one-day event yet.\n\nI have two microphones I usually use depending on the situation.\n\n\nShure Boundary Condenser Microphone - This microphone will pick up everyone sitting around a table. You can also set it on a podium to not worry about your presenters fiddling with microphones. If you have a really large room, connect two of these to the mixer.\n\nShure SM58 - The Shure SM58 is a long-time standard in stage microphones. It works best when the speaker is a few inches away from the mic, and it does an amazing job of isolating sounds to avoid background noise. You'll need to either ask your presenters to hold the microphone, or give them a stand that places the mic close to their mouth.\nLivestreaming\n\nOnce all the audio and video sources are connected to the hub, you can press record and everything gets recorded as both the mixed track as well as individually. If you make a mistake while live cutting between camera angles, you can always recover by grabbing the original footage from the camera angle you need.\n\nThe other amazing thing is the SlingStudio Hub also has built-in streaming capabilities. It can connect to the venue's wifi, and then connect to Facebook or YouTube to broadcast a livestream. This makes it super easy to both stream an event live, while also recording the raw video for later editing.\n\nThere's not much more to say other than that, pretty much you just connect to a wifi hotspot and press stream. I've had good luck even streaming from an iPhone's wifi hotspot. You can choose the bitrate to stream at, anything from 2-5 mbps will give you a good result.\n\nI'm super impressed that this device lets me pack so much into a single package instead of using separate devices for each. This all fits into a backpack, along with my computer and other electronics I normally bring.\n\nPublished Videos\n\nHere are some videos I've produced with this rig so you can see the final results!\n\nDonut.js April 2018\nIndieWeb Summit 2018",
"html": "<p>I've been looking for ways to slim down the amount of equipment I need to bring to <a href=\"https://backpedal.tv/\">record conferences talks</a>, both to make it easier to travel to other cities, as well as to speed up the setup time during an event.</p>\n\n<p>This post outlines my current favorite set of hardware for recording and livestreaming conference talks and meetups. I'm able to fit all of this into a backpack and carry it on my bicycle to local events, or take it on planes to events in another country.</p>\n\n<p><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/8c8717cac64501cd8b21392891faa22035bc252c36b0f70f9d640cf808d277c4.jpg\" alt=\"portable-wireless-live-video.jpg\" /></p>\n\n<h2>Video Switcher</h2>\n\n<p>The SlingStudio system has been a total game changer, packing an unbelievable amount of power into a tiny box.</p>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B0711BCHJ4/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/062310c79d4038016e1d81f27eb0dc1576433475966a6bfb8dd83f4cdf050737.png\" style=\"width:200px;margin:0 auto;\" alt=\"sling-studio.png\" /></a></p>\n\n<p>At the core of the system is the <a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B0711BCHJ4/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">SlingStudio Hub</a>. This is the brains of the operation: a video switcher, encoder, and recorder. This device broadcasts its own wifi hotspot, which you can then connect your cameras and controllers to. You can use any HDMI camera as a video source by using a CameraLink to wirelessly connect the HDMI device, or you can use any iOS or Android device as a camera as well. This provides a great opportunity to have a super compact rig, since iPhone cameras are actually pretty good now.</p>\n\n<p>For small productions, I will bring one iPhone camera, and one camcorder connected via HDMI. The iPhone provides a good enough picture for a wide shot of the room, and the camcorder provides good optical zoom and low light capability for a close-up of the presenter.</p>\n\n<p>The rear of the device provides a few ports, most importantly an HDMI input and audio input, which means you have a built-in way to grab the slides from the presenter as well as a good audio feed.</p>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B0711BCHJ4/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/723c67ca7ffb021a8ec8c4353483fb9ddae119ec35889dcde109b661c271ae48.png\" style=\"width:200px;margin:0 auto;\" alt=\"sling-studio-back.png\" /></a></p>\n\n<p>I usually plug in an HDMI 1x2 splitter into the input, so that I can send the presenter's computer to the house projector as well as this device. This makes the computer show up as a camera angle in the switcher. The hub can accept a huge variety of HDMI resolutions as the input and it handles scaling itself. I haven't yet found a computer that this device couldn't handle.</p>\n\n<h3>Switcher Controller</h3>\n\n<p>The Hub is controlled via an iPad or Mac app. I usually use an iPad since it's nice having a dedicated device with a touch screen for this, plus it's easier to walk around with the iPad.</p>\n\n<p><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/120ba2ee2e2344d4118a98eba4cd1dba4812fc7ce32cf32eede5c2e071181c61.jpg\" alt=\"slingstudio-console.jpg\" /></p>\n\n<p>You start by connecting the iPad to the Hub's wifi hotspot that it broadcasts, then when you launch the <a href=\"https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/slingstudio-console/id1079346580?mt=8\">SlingStudio Console</a> app, it will connect to the Hub and provide you with a controller interface to see all the camera angles and switch between them.</p>\n\n<h2>Cameras</h2>\n\n<p>Since my goal is to have this pack up entirely in a backpack, I wanted to find the smallest options for cameras, even if it comes somewhat at the expense of quality. I typically use one or two iPhone SEs ($100 used), and a Canon Vixia HF R500 ($200). (The R500s are discontinued, replaced by the <a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B01N7OAH3I/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">Canon Vixia HF R800</a>, which is only a minor upgrade).</p>\n\n<h3>Close-Up</h3>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B01N7OAH3I/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/9e892c35520590321e922a95b33f8fa9fb2a63785f233313e372be66e829c14c.jpg\" style=\"width:300px;float:right;\" alt=\"camera-with-tripod.jpg\" /></a></p>\n\n<p>I use the Canon for a close-up shot of the presenter, since it has optical zoom and is pretty good at low light. The camera itself doesn't weigh much, so it can fit on a small tripod. I use a <a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B01L6W1ZYK/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">short tripod</a> with a <a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B01MQZPRXN/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">monopod extension</a>, which has the benefit of having a pretty small footprint. This wouldn't hold up a DSLR when fully extended, but handles the Canon just fine.</p>\n\n<p>The Canon camera also has an audio input, so I can connect a wireless microphone receiver to this such as the super compact <a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B00JWU6WWO/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">Sony ECMAW4</a> Bluetooth microphone.</p>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B0727VLYGC/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/1f3303a3dcec9e3909eee069e955c7ad4cb1e1972b9b37786f77b98f986961f1.png\" style=\"width:200px;float:left;\" alt=\"cameralink.png\" /></a></p>\n\n<p>The Canon provides a mini HDMI output, which connects to the micro HDMI input on the SlingStudio CameraLink transmitter. The CameraLink connects wirelessly to the Hub, so I can place the camera wherever. The battery in the CameraLink lasts a couple hours, long enough that I don't need to worry about it for a short talk, but if I'm going to be filming for a whole evening I'll make sure to connect it to micro USB power or at least an external battery pack.</p>\n\n\n\n<h3>Wide/Rear View</h3>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B076P8HV8F/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/4b63d51438db2351b6e7a5e9a0585a3bb62573cf2adc9ba1cbedd1a4ad7d82ba.jpg\" style=\"width:149px;float:right;\" alt=\"iphone-tripod.jpg\" /></a></p>\n\n<p>With one good close-up view of the presenter, I just need a wide view as a secondary or fallback camera angle. I usually place this camera in the back of the room so that the audience as well as the projector are visible. Since I have both a close-up of the presenter as well as their slides brought in directly, I can get away with using an iPhone as this camera angle despite its slightly reduced quality.</p>\n\n<p>The iPhone SE has a pretty decent camera. It's the same cameras as in the iPhone 6s line, but you can get a <a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B01DAJTZYE/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">used iPhone SE</a> for about $100 now, making this the cheapest way to get another camera angle into the mix.</p>\n\n<p>To use the iPhone as a camera, you first connect the iPhone to the Hub's wifi hotspot that it broadcasts. Then you launch the SlingStudio Capture app and it will instantly show up as a camera angle in the Hub. You can long-press on the iPhone screen to lock the focus and exposure as well, which is useful when your presenters have slides that switch between white and black backgrounds, which would otherwise confuse the auto-focus and auto-exposure that the phone does.</p>\n\n<p>Running the camera and wifi on the iPhones the whole event would drain the battery in about a half hour, so I always make sure to plug in the phone during the event. The stock charger cable is usually too short to do anything with, so I bring a <a href=\"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0177PDBII/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">10' lightning cable</a> which gives me enough length to run it to a power outlet somewhere nearby.</p>\n\n\n\n<h2>Audio</h2>\n\n<p>Audio is of course a huge part of getting a good quality recording of a presentation. The camera mics built in to camcorders or the iPhone will not get good results at all, since they aren't that good to begin with plus the devices will be typically 10+ feet from the presenter. Instead, you need a microphone super close to the presenter, like a lav mic or handheld mic.</p>\n\n<p>Depending on the situation, I have a few different setups I use for capturing audio. If the venue is providing amplification for the presenter, then I first try to find a way to tap into the house audio. The Hub has an 1/8\" input, so I just need to make sure to place the Hub close enough to the house mixing board to run an audio cable to it.</p>\n\n<p>If I need to bring my own microphones and audio gear, or if I'm recording a discussion around a table, then I'll bring either a wireless mic or wired stage or boundary microphones.</p>\n\n<h3>Wireless Microphones</h3>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JWU6WWO/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/0c2dfe1e4b8cab8ddf87a05590ea22637d053fceeab56b68c15d669b761d088a.png\" style=\"width:200px;float:right;\" alt=\"sony-wireless-mic.png\" /></a></p>\n\n<p>The smallest wireless mic I've found is the <a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B00JWU6WWO/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">Sony ECMAW4</a> Bluetooth microphone. The transmitter and receiver are both the same shape, both only slightly larger than the AAA battery that powers them. It's relatively inexpensive too, at $150. There is a microphone built in, but it also has an 1/8\" jack to connect a lav mic. You definitely get better audio using a lav mic, so if you can manage asking the presenters to wear that I highly recommend it.</p>\n\n<p>You can connect the receiver to either the SlingStudio Hub or the Canon camera using a 1/8\" cable.</p>\n\n<h3>Tabletop Microphone</h3>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B01AYAWGZM/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/df876711ddf9fafd708fdcde127396aee20861f2466210263fce66dda4fcfad3.png\" style=\"width:300px;float:right;\" alt=\"audio-technica-wireless-mic.png\" /></a></p>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B071HNS4LV/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/95de1684daebbf964377868783c4a8c3ca53796a0ca94826e9711604bd700433.png\" style=\"width:300px;float:right;\" alt=\"audio-technica-wireless-receiver.png\" /></a></p>\n\n<p>If you need to capture audio around a whole table, or if you can't get your presenters to wear a microphone, then the best option is to place a boundary microphone on the podium.</p>\n\n<p>Audio Technica makes a fantastic wireless mic system that runs on 2.4ghz rather than a dedicated wireless mic frequency. There are some new FCC regulations coming that will re-allocate the frequencies that many wireless mics use, so it will no longer be legal to operate many of those. This system uses 2.4ghz, the same frequencies that Bluetooth and Wi-Fi use, so will always be safe to use.</p>\n\n<p>The benefit of using a wireless mic for this, of course, is you don't need to worry about placing the Hub nearby the stage or podium. This also cuts down on the amount of wires you need to bring, which can save a lot of packing space.</p>\n\n<h3>Wired Microphones</h3>\n\n<p>For one reason or another, you may find it better to use a wired microphone. A wired microphone will usually provide better audio quality and be more stable than wireless mics, though it does come at the cost of more wires to carry and more setup time to connect them.</p>\n\n<p><a href=\"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0716NNXF4/?tag=apkdotcom-20\"><img src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/aaronparecki.com/68483a3714fd522a3cc161e7389ba29127c7a865994af1378a65a70f75897a0e.png\" style=\"width:240px;float:right;\" alt=\"smartrig.png\" /></a></p>\n\n<p>The <a href=\"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0716NNXF4/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">Saramonic SmartRig+ 2-Channel Mixer</a> is a small mixer that provides phantom power so you can use nice microphones with it. It plugs into the 1/8\" jack on the SlingStudio hub. It does run on a 9V battery with no external power option, although I haven't been able to drain the battery during a normal one-day event yet.</p>\n\n<p>I have two microphones I usually use depending on the situation.</p>\n\n<ul><li>\n<a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B00A361UMS/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">Shure Boundary Condenser Microphone</a> - This microphone will pick up everyone sitting around a table. You can also set it on a podium to not worry about your presenters fiddling with microphones. If you have a really large room, connect two of these to the mixer.</li>\n<li>\n<a href=\"https://amazon.com/dp/B000CZ0R42/?tag=apkdotcom-20\">Shure SM58</a> - The Shure SM58 is a long-time standard in stage microphones. It works best when the speaker is a few inches away from the mic, and it does an amazing job of isolating sounds to avoid background noise. You'll need to either ask your presenters to hold the microphone, or give them a stand that places the mic close to their mouth.</li>\n</ul><h2>Livestreaming</h2>\n\n<p>Once all the audio and video sources are connected to the hub, you can press record and everything gets recorded as both the mixed track as well as individually. If you make a mistake while live cutting between camera angles, you can always recover by grabbing the original footage from the camera angle you need.</p>\n\n<p>The other amazing thing is the SlingStudio Hub also has built-in streaming capabilities. It can connect to the venue's wifi, and then connect to Facebook or YouTube to broadcast a livestream. This makes it super easy to both stream an event live, while also recording the raw video for later editing.</p>\n\n<p>There's not much more to say other than that, pretty much you just connect to a wifi hotspot and press stream. I've had good luck even streaming from an iPhone's wifi hotspot. You can choose the bitrate to stream at, anything from 2-5 mbps will give you a good result.</p>\n\n<p>I'm super impressed that this device lets me pack so much into a single package instead of using separate devices for each. This all fits into a backpack, along with my computer and other electronics I normally bring.</p>\n\n<h2>Published Videos</h2>\n\n<p>Here are some videos I've produced with this rig so you can see the final results!</p>\n\n<ul><li><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHbYpCrLAcU\">Donut.js April 2018</a></li>\n<li><a href=\"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vcn9FJCEI1U\">IndieWeb Summit 2018</a></li>\n</ul>"
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Attending Indiewebcamp Berlin, the first time I’ve tried a European IWC. Should be fun. Anyone have any Berlin recommendations?
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"text": "Attending Indiewebcamp Berlin, the first time I\u2019ve tried a European IWC. Should be fun. Anyone have any Berlin recommendations?"
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Hey @indiewebcat did you see you were featured in @anomalily's talk opening #TEDxMtHood! #AddMoreCats #JustAddCats
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cleverdevil, have you ended up setting up a drafts Micropub workflow? I have been wanting to use drafts but I don’t want to lose control of the Micropub settings I’ve got in Indigenous so I think I’m gonna add callback and x-url-callback support to Indigenous, which should then allow for easy Micropub support across the Drafts and Shortcuts apps. I even have an idea about merging Siri Intent Shortcuts (the ones that run in the background) with x-callback-url to add support for essentially background x-url-callback support.
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"summary": "cleverdevil, have you ended up setting up a drafts Micropub workflow? I have been wanting to use drafts but I don\u2019t want to lose control of the Micropub settings I\u2019ve got in Indigenous so I think I\u2019m gonna add callback and x-url-callback support to Indigenous, which should then allow for easy Micropub support across the Drafts and Shortcuts apps. I even have an idea about merging Siri Intent Shortcuts (the ones that run in the background) with x-callback-url to add support for essentially background x-url-callback support.",
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"text": "cleverdevil, have you ended up setting up a drafts Micropub workflow? I have been wanting to use drafts but I don\u2019t want to lose control of the Micropub settings I\u2019ve got in Indigenous so I think I\u2019m gonna add callback and x-url-callback support to Indigenous, which should then allow for easy Micropub support across the Drafts and Shortcuts apps. I even have an idea about merging Siri Intent Shortcuts (the ones that run in the background) with x-callback-url to add support for essentially background x-url-callback support.",
"html": "<p><a href=\"https://cleverdevil.io\">cleverdevil</a>, have you ended up setting up a drafts Micropub workflow? I have been wanting to use drafts but I don\u2019t want to lose control of the Micropub settings I\u2019ve got in Indigenous so I think I\u2019m gonna add callback and x-url-callback support to Indigenous, which should then allow for easy Micropub support across the Drafts and Shortcuts apps. I even have an idea about merging Siri Intent Shortcuts (the ones that run in the background) with x-callback-url to add support for essentially background x-url-callback support.</p>"
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@bmann congrats on Micropub on your site and OwnYourGram too!
Great write-up!
Any Vancouver group photos? (beyond https://blog.bmannconsulting.com/24076/ :)
Post or upload to wiki?
https://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-09-indieweb-meetup
#IndieWeb weekly newsletter will be posted in a few hours!
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"text": "@bmann congrats on Micropub on your site and OwnYourGram too!\nGreat write-up!\n\nAny Vancouver group photos? (beyond https://blog.bmannconsulting.com/24076/ :)\n\nPost or upload to wiki?\nhttps://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-09-indieweb-meetup\n\n#IndieWeb weekly newsletter will be posted in a few hours!",
"html": "<a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/bmann\">@bmann</a> congrats on Micropub on your site and OwnYourGram too!<br />Great write-up!<br /><br />Any Vancouver group photos? (beyond <a href=\"https://blog.bmannconsulting.com/24076/\">https://blog.bmannconsulting.com/24076/</a> :)<br /><br />Post or upload to wiki?<br /><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-09-indieweb-meetup\">https://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-09-indieweb-meetup</a><br /><br />#<span class=\"p-category\">IndieWeb</span> weekly newsletter will be posted in a few hours!"
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"html": "<p>Earlier this week I wrote about some behind-the-scenes <a href=\"http://manton.org/2018/10/09/webmention-improvements-on.html\">Webmention changes</a> that improve how replies are handled for external blogs, and yesterday <a href=\"http://manton.org/2018/10/09/i-love-seeing.html\">we increased the storage</a> for hosted podcasts. Today I\u2019m rolling out some more visible new stuff on Micro.blog:</p>\n\n<ul><li>Added special sections of Discover for <a href=\"https://micro.blog/discover/inktober\">Inktober</a> and <a href=\"https://micro.blog/discover/nanowrimo\">NaNoWriMo</a>. I love seeing the art that has been posted already, and we want to do more to encourage the writers on Micro.blog next month.</li>\n <li>Added new invite link under \u201cPlans\u201d to invite someone to Micro.blog. If you already have a paid subscription you can pay for someone\u2019s blog hosting for a year! We\u2019ve heard from customers who want to offer this to friends or family to make it easier for them to get started blogging. It\u2019s a one-time $50 payment, so $10-off the usual year-long subscription.</li>\n <li>Added a progress spinner when loading the timeline on the web.</li>\n <li>Added \u201c\u2026\u201d button on the user profile page on the web with option to mute or report the user, matching what was recently added to the macOS version of Micro.blog.</li>\n <li>Plus a few bug fixes and cleanup to make things run more smoothly.</li>\n</ul><p>After a very busy summer, I feel like I\u2019m able to get back to deploying improvements to Micro.blog on a regular schedule. Still have a couple big features in the queue that I hope will be ready soon. Thanks for the support!</p>",
"text": "Earlier this week I wrote about some behind-the-scenes Webmention changes that improve how replies are handled for external blogs, and yesterday we increased the storage for hosted podcasts. Today I\u2019m rolling out some more visible new stuff on Micro.blog:\n\nAdded special sections of Discover for Inktober and NaNoWriMo. I love seeing the art that has been posted already, and we want to do more to encourage the writers on Micro.blog next month.\n Added new invite link under \u201cPlans\u201d to invite someone to Micro.blog. If you already have a paid subscription you can pay for someone\u2019s blog hosting for a year! We\u2019ve heard from customers who want to offer this to friends or family to make it easier for them to get started blogging. It\u2019s a one-time $50 payment, so $10-off the usual year-long subscription.\n Added a progress spinner when loading the timeline on the web.\n Added \u201c\u2026\u201d button on the user profile page on the web with option to mute or report the user, matching what was recently added to the macOS version of Micro.blog.\n Plus a few bug fixes and cleanup to make things run more smoothly.\nAfter a very busy summer, I feel like I\u2019m able to get back to deploying improvements to Micro.blog on a regular schedule. Still have a couple big features in the queue that I hope will be ready soon. Thanks for the support!"
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Also, here’s the standard interview questions we talk over:
General Section
- Introduce yourself
- How did you discover the IndieWeb?
- What does being part of the IndieWeb mean to you?
- What (if any?) IndieWebCamp events have you attended, and were there any that stuck out to you in a special way?
- Is there anything new or any changes you hope to see in the IndieWeb community over the next year?
Tech Section
- What service or software powers your website?
- What is something you’ve added or built on your website recently that you are particularly happy with?
- Have you run into any challenges or problems recently that you’d like help with from the IndieWeb community?
- What is the next thing you’d like to do with your website?
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"summary": "Also, here\u2019s the standard interview questions we talk over:\nGeneral Section Introduce yourself How did you discover the IndieWeb? What does being part of the IndieWeb mean to you? What (if any?) IndieWebCamp events have you attended, and were there any that stuck out to you in a special way? Is there anything new or any changes you hope to see in the IndieWeb community over the next year?\nTech Section What service or software powers your website? What is something you\u2019ve added or built on your website recently that you are particularly happy with? Have you run into any challenges or problems recently that you\u2019d like help with from the IndieWeb community? What is the next thing you\u2019d like to do with your website?",
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"text": "Also, here\u2019s the standard interview questions we talk over:\n\nGeneral Section\nIntroduce yourself\n How did you discover the IndieWeb?\n What does being part of the IndieWeb mean to you?\n What (if any?) IndieWebCamp events have you attended, and were there any that stuck out to you in a special way?\n Is there anything new or any changes you hope to see in the IndieWeb community over the next year?\nTech Section\nWhat service or software powers your website?\n What is something you\u2019ve added or built on your website recently that you are particularly happy with?\n Have you run into any challenges or problems recently that you\u2019d like help with from the IndieWeb community?\n What is the next thing you\u2019d like to do with your website?",
"html": "<p>Also, here\u2019s the standard interview questions we talk over:</p>\n\n<p>General Section</p>\n<ul><li>Introduce yourself</li>\n <li>How did you discover the IndieWeb?</li>\n <li>What does being part of the IndieWeb mean to you?</li>\n <li>What (if any?) IndieWebCamp events have you attended, and were there any that stuck out to you in a special way?</li>\n <li>Is there anything new or any changes you hope to see in the IndieWeb community over the next year?</li>\n</ul><p>Tech Section</p>\n<ul><li>What service or software powers your website?</li>\n <li>What is something you\u2019ve added or built on your website recently that you are particularly happy with?</li>\n <li>Have you run into any challenges or problems recently that you\u2019d like help with from the IndieWeb community?</li>\n <li>What is the next thing you\u2019d like to do with your website?</li>\n</ul>"
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"content": {
"html": "<p>There\u2019s a new one starting out, and I\u2019m at it! It will recur every two weeks at Mozilla on Evelyn in Mountain View! If you have your own website, or would like to have your own website or blog without depending on some big silo (like Facebook, Twitter, Medium etc), \u2026</p>",
"text": "There\u2019s a new one starting out, and I\u2019m at it! It will recur every two weeks at Mozilla on Evelyn in Mountain View! If you have your own website, or would like to have your own website or blog without depending on some big silo (like Facebook, Twitter, Medium etc), \u2026"
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For example, Boston is possibly starting an IndieWeb Meetup (https://twitter.com/Dries/status/1049071136791826437) and some virtual IndieWeb meetups (https://twitter.com/jgmac1106/status/1049785385482641409)
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"summary": "For example, Boston is possibly starting an IndieWeb Meetup (https://twitter.com/Dries/status/1049071136791826437) and some virtual IndieWeb meetups (https://twitter.com/jgmac1106/status/1049785385482641409)",
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"text": "For example, Boston is possibly starting an IndieWeb Meetup (https://twitter.com/Dries/status/1049071136791826437) and some virtual IndieWeb meetups (https://twitter.com/jgmac1106/status/1049785385482641409)",
"html": "<p>For example, Boston is possibly starting an IndieWeb Meetup (https://twitter.com/Dries/status/1049071136791826437) and some virtual IndieWeb meetups (https://twitter.com/jgmac1106/status/1049785385482641409)</p>"
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Currently, existing meetups will continue to be called HWC as to not confuse previous attendees. New meetups have the option to call themselves IndieWeb meetup or HWC. Either way it gets included in the events calendar (https://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-10-homebrew-website-club#Vancouver) Notice the only reason Vancouver is linked to another page here is because it’s meeting on a Tuesday rather than Wednesday which is the usual. Both IndieWeb meetups and HWC will be included in the weekly newsletter, and the routine podcasts (This Week in the IndieWeb Audio Edition and My Url Is). I don’t foresee any visitors being confused by it being called an IndieWeb meetup, in fact, I think you might have more visitors because people who are familiar with IndieWeb but NOT the HWC name will still be interested in attending.
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"summary": "Currently, existing meetups will continue to be called HWC as to not confuse previous attendees. New meetups have the option to call themselves IndieWeb meetup or HWC. Either way it gets included in the events calendar (https://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-10-homebrew-website-club#Vancouver) Notice the only reason Vancouver is linked to another page here is because it\u2019s meeting on a Tuesday rather than Wednesday which is the usual. Both IndieWeb meetups and HWC will be included in the weekly newsletter, and the routine podcasts (This Week in the IndieWeb Audio Edition and My Url Is). I don\u2019t foresee any visitors being confused by it being called an IndieWeb meetup, in fact, I think you might have more visitors because people who are familiar with IndieWeb but NOT the HWC name will still be interested in attending.",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/10/10/12/reply/",
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"text": "Currently, existing meetups will continue to be called HWC as to not confuse previous attendees. New meetups have the option to call themselves IndieWeb meetup or HWC. Either way it gets included in the events calendar (https://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-10-homebrew-website-club#Vancouver) Notice the only reason Vancouver is linked to another page here is because it\u2019s meeting on a Tuesday rather than Wednesday which is the usual. Both IndieWeb meetups and HWC will be included in the weekly newsletter, and the routine podcasts (This Week in the IndieWeb Audio Edition and My Url Is). I don\u2019t foresee any visitors being confused by it being called an IndieWeb meetup, in fact, I think you might have more visitors because people who are familiar with IndieWeb but NOT the HWC name will still be interested in attending.",
"html": "<p>Currently, existing meetups will continue to be called HWC as to not confuse previous attendees. New meetups have the option to call themselves IndieWeb meetup or HWC. Either way it gets included in the events calendar (https://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-10-homebrew-website-club#Vancouver) Notice the only reason Vancouver is linked to another page here is because it\u2019s meeting on a Tuesday rather than Wednesday which is the usual. Both IndieWeb meetups and HWC will be included in the weekly newsletter, and the routine podcasts (This Week in the IndieWeb Audio Edition and My Url Is). I don\u2019t foresee any visitors being confused by it being called an IndieWeb meetup, in fact, I think you might have more visitors because people who are familiar with IndieWeb but NOT the HWC name will still be interested in attending.</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
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"name": "https://micro.blog/pat/954720",
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Sounds like a great time! Glad you all had fun! Also, don’t feel pressure to rename it to Homebrew Website Club. At the last Organizers Meetup, IndieWeb Meetup was actually discussed as a likely possible rebranding of HWC, so you all might just be ahead of the curve! When I relaunch my local meetup, I’ll be calling it IndieWeb Meetup as well!
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-10-10T07:10:04-04:00",
"summary": "Sounds like a great time! Glad you all had fun! Also, don\u2019t feel pressure to rename it to Homebrew Website Club. At the last Organizers Meetup, IndieWeb Meetup was actually discussed as a likely possible rebranding of HWC, so you all might just be ahead of the curve! When I relaunch my local meetup, I\u2019ll be calling it IndieWeb Meetup as well!",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/2018/10/10/6/reply/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://patdryburgh.com/blog/vancouver-indieweb-meetup/"
],
"content": {
"text": "Sounds like a great time! Glad you all had fun! Also, don\u2019t feel pressure to rename it to Homebrew Website Club. At the last Organizers Meetup, IndieWeb Meetup was actually discussed as a likely possible rebranding of HWC, so you all might just be ahead of the curve! When I relaunch my local meetup, I\u2019ll be calling it IndieWeb Meetup as well!",
"html": "<p>Sounds like a great time! Glad you all had fun! Also, don\u2019t feel pressure to rename it to Homebrew Website Club. At the last Organizers Meetup, IndieWeb Meetup was actually discussed as a likely possible rebranding of HWC, so you all might just be ahead of the curve! When I relaunch my local meetup, I\u2019ll be calling it IndieWeb Meetup as well!</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Eddie Hinkle",
"url": "https://eddiehinkle.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/cc9591b69c2c835fa2c6e23745b224db4b4b431f/68747470733a2f2f656464696568696e6b6c652e636f6d2f696d616765732f70726f66696c652e6a7067"
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"url": "https://patdryburgh.com/blog/vancouver-indieweb-meetup/",
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{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": null,
"url": "https://herestomwiththeweather.com/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://herestomwiththeweather.com/2018/10/09/micro.blog-webmentions/",
"published": "2018-10-09T11:30:20+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p>This is great! <a href=\"https://www.manton.org/2018/10/09/webmention-improvements-on.html\">Webmention improvements on Micro.blog</a></p>",
"text": "This is great! Webmention improvements on Micro.blog"
},
"name": "Micro.blog webmentions",
"post-type": "article",
"_id": "1166220",
"_source": "246",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": null,
"url": "https://www.manton.org/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://www.manton.org/2018/10/09/webmention-improvements-on.html",
"name": "Webmention improvements on Micro.blog",
"content": {
"html": "<p>I rolled out a few Webmention improvements to <a href=\"https://micro.blog/\">Micro.blog</a> today:</p>\n\n<ul><li>Fixed the permalink for a reply when you aren\u2019t signed in, which was preventing external sites from verifying the link after receiving a Webmention from Micro.blog.</li>\n <li>Added limited support for accepting replies from external sites that do not have a Micro.blog account. Previously, Micro.blog would discard replies that could not be associated with an existing user. Now, these replies will be included in a thread using the domain name for the author. (Brid.gy replies from Twitter are not supported yet.)</li>\n <li>Improved replying on Micro.blog to send Webmentions to any external site in the reply chain, not just the root post. This more consistently allows replies to be copied to multiple external blogs that are participating in the conversation.</li>\n <li>Behind the scenes, for the last few months Micro.blog has been recording all incoming Webmentions, even if they don\u2019t target a specific reply or just can\u2019t be processed yet. This should allow us to add more reply-related features for hosted blogs in the future.</li>\n</ul><p>There may still be some quirks to work out with these changes, but I\u2019m happy to finish more of the plumbing around replies on Micro.blog. Getting closer to the IndieWeb vision for <a href=\"https://alistapart.com/article/webmentions-enabling-better-communication-on-the-internet\">how cross-site replies on the web can work</a>.</p>",
"text": "I rolled out a few Webmention improvements to Micro.blog today:\n\nFixed the permalink for a reply when you aren\u2019t signed in, which was preventing external sites from verifying the link after receiving a Webmention from Micro.blog.\n Added limited support for accepting replies from external sites that do not have a Micro.blog account. Previously, Micro.blog would discard replies that could not be associated with an existing user. Now, these replies will be included in a thread using the domain name for the author. (Brid.gy replies from Twitter are not supported yet.)\n Improved replying on Micro.blog to send Webmentions to any external site in the reply chain, not just the root post. This more consistently allows replies to be copied to multiple external blogs that are participating in the conversation.\n Behind the scenes, for the last few months Micro.blog has been recording all incoming Webmentions, even if they don\u2019t target a specific reply or just can\u2019t be processed yet. This should allow us to add more reply-related features for hosted blogs in the future.\nThere may still be some quirks to work out with these changes, but I\u2019m happy to finish more of the plumbing around replies on Micro.blog. Getting closer to the IndieWeb vision for how cross-site replies on the web can work."
},
"published": "2018-10-09T10:30:06-05:00",
"post-type": "article",
"_id": "1165065",
"_source": "12",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "IF TTT",
"url": "https://www.stillbreathing.co.uk/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://www.stillbreathing.co.uk/2018/10/08/testing-just-trying-something-out-part-of-my-indieweb-intentions",
"published": "2018-10-08T21:02:11+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<blockquote>\n<p><a href=\"https://twitter.com/hashtag/testing?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">#testing</a> just trying something out, part of my <a href=\"https://twitter.com/hashtag/IndieWeb?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">#IndieWeb</a> intentions\u2026</p>\n<p>\u2014 Chris Taylor (@mrwiblog) <a href=\"https://twitter.com/mrwiblog/status/1049404595552833537?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw\">October 8, 2018</a></p></blockquote>\n<p><br />from Twitter https://twitter.com/mrwiblog</p>",
"text": "#testing just trying something out, part of my #IndieWeb intentions\u2026\n\u2014 Chris Taylor (@mrwiblog) October 8, 2018\n\nfrom Twitter https://twitter.com/mrwiblog"
},
"name": "#testing just trying something out, part of my #IndieWeb intentions\u2026",
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "1160218",
"_source": "235",
"_is_read": true
}