Just pushed Version 2.0 of the Micropub plugin to the WordPress repository and am using a Micropub client to write this note about it.
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"text": "We're starting demos at @IndieWebCamp N\u00fcrnberg! Livestream is here \ud83d\udcfa\u27a1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZxDltB4_fo",
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Reading @adactio's Going Offline and learning about how to use Service Workers at #indiewebcamp! It's very nice to read someone's words to guide you through the otherwise obtuse syntax and APIs. https://abookapart.com/products/going-offline
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I have shared my Micropub action for @DraftsApp to the actions directory – https://actions.getdrafts.com/a/1QC
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"text": "I have shared my Micropub action for @DraftsApp to the actions directory \u2013 https://actions.getdrafts.com/a/1QC",
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Finally made a functioning Micropub action for @DraftsApp. Needs some tweaking, but I should be able to share soon.
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17:30: Optional writing hour and quiet socializing
18:30: IndieWeb demos and hack night!
Homebrew Website Club retro 1980s-style logo
Topics for this week: Upcoming IndieWebCamps! Nuremberg & Berlin Demos of personal website breakthroughs Create or update your personal web site!
Join a community with like-minded interests. Bring friends that want a personal site, or are interested in a healthy, independent web!
Any questions? Ask in #indieweb Slack or IRC
More information: IndieWeb Wiki Event Page
RSVP: post an indie RSVP on your own site!
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"html": "<p>\nWhen: <time class=\"dt-start\">2018-10-17 17:30</time>\u2026<time class=\"dt-end\">19:30</time><span>\nWhere: <a class=\"u-location h-card\" href=\"https://wiki.mozilla.org/SF\">Mozilla San Francisco</a>\n</span>\nHost: <a class=\"u-organizer h-card\" href=\"http://tantek.com/\">Tantek \u00c7elik</a>\n</p>\n\n<p>\n17:30: Optional writing hour and quiet socializing<br />\n18:30: IndieWeb demos and hack night!<br /></p>\n<p><img class=\"u-featured\" style=\"height:300px;\" src=\"https://aperture-media.p3k.io/indieweb.org/c24f7b1e711955ef818bde12e2a3e79708ecc9b106d95b460a9fefe93b0be723.jpg\" alt=\"Homebrew Website Club retro 1980s-style logo\" /></p>\n<p>Topics for this week:</p>\n<ul><li>Upcoming IndieWebCamps! <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/2018/Nuremberg\">Nuremberg</a> &\n<a href=\"https://indieweb.org/2018/Berlin\">Berlin</a>\n</li>\n<li>Demos of personal website breakthroughs</li>\n<li>Create or update your personal web site!</li>\n</ul><p>\nJoin a community with like-minded interests. Bring friends that want a personal site, or are interested in a healthy, independent web!\n</p>\n<p>\nAny questions? Ask in \n<a href=\"https://indieweb.org/discuss\">#indieweb Slack or IRC</a>\n</p>\n<p>\nMore information: \n<a class=\"u-url\" href=\"https://indieweb.org/events/2018-10-17-homebrew-website-club\">IndieWeb Wiki Event Page</a>\n</p>\n<p>\nRSVP: post an <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/rsvp\">indie RSVP</a> on your own site!\n</p>"
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Awesome! Glad to hear that you enjoyed it 😁 the IndieWebCamps are always a good time, even remotely! Although some end up having a better remote experience than others depending on the organizers, physical space and tech available. There is one this weekend in Nuremberg, even if you can’t follow it live due to your schedule, you can always follow along with the videos on YouTube after the fact. There’s a pretty interesting group gathering there, so I expect there will be some good discussions.
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From IndieWeb Summit 2017 to IndieWeb Summit 2018 (both of which happen in June), there was a lot of focus and effort into developing structures around what we call “Social Readers”, apps and services that allow you to following different website feeds, responding and interacting on your own website within the same app. It’s the dual-nature that Facebook and Twitter provides but this time centered around individual websites. For more information on how social readers work, Aaron Parecki wrote a great article.
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It’s a day late, but I’m excited to release Episode 2 of My Url Is. This week, featuring Rosemary Orchard. We had a super fun conversation about how she learned about the IndieWeb, about attending IndieWebCamps remotely and more!
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Haha, yeah you’re right. Source and Target aren’t much of a spec. I think some of the stuff that makes it cross over the line as a spec is “how do you discover someone’s webmention endpoint?”, “how do you verify a webmention’s authenticity?”, etc.
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"summary": "Haha, yeah you\u2019re right. Source and Target aren\u2019t much of a spec. I think some of the stuff that makes it cross over the line as a spec is \u201chow do you discover someone\u2019s webmention endpoint?\u201d, \u201chow do you verify a webmention\u2019s authenticity?\u201d, etc.",
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"text": "Haha, yeah you\u2019re right. Source and Target aren\u2019t much of a spec. I think some of the stuff that makes it cross over the line as a spec is \u201chow do you discover someone\u2019s webmention endpoint?\u201d, \u201chow do you verify a webmention\u2019s authenticity?\u201d, etc.",
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Marty McGuire
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"text": "Baltimore's second Homebrew Website Club of October met at the Digital Harbor Foundation Tech Center on October 16th.\nHere are some notes from the \"broadcast\" portion of the meetup:\n\n jonathanprozzi.net \u2014 Worked today on a post recapping our last HWC meeting, focusing on ideas to get more people involved. For work at DHF, still learning lots of NextJS and ExpressJS. Getting back into writing content!\n \n\n\n derekfields.is \u2014 Been a while! Last week in Minnesota for some networking. Met some cool people and talked to some companies, including Socrata, which was part of Open Baltimore. Also got back into bullet journaling after being away for a while. Working on legal and client-finding stuff for his freelance work.\n \n\n\n pulianas.com \u2014 Also been awhile since he's been to an HWC! Moved all his sites to HTTPS. His podcast (overanalyzed.fm) is now on iTunes, so he added that link to the site. Also tried to track down an official Overcast button but hasn't found it yet. Recently in San Jose for API World. Very little talk about building APIs and more about pitching specific products/services. Did learn a bit about microservices and case-studies of moving to them. Did some general maintenance on his WP site, and has been working on his own plugin for podcasting on WP.\n \n\n\n martymcgui.re \u2014 Been heavily porting his site from Jekyll to Hugo. Has had some fun porting things that he did as Ruby plugins for Jekyll into crazy Go template logic, like generating permashortlinks in NewBase60. Also had some fun setting up a new CSS Grid display for photos in posts with lots of them (example which apparently only works in Firefox). Also, after some struggling with his image proxy setup (because Hugo templating doesn't support HMAC signatures) is trying out Cloudinary's free tier for his image-resizing needs.\n \n\nOther discussion:\nPodcasting on WordPress is... a pain. Apple Podcasts refused to accept their feed due to http vs https issues and that was hard to track down.\n \nFerrite for audio editing on the iPad. Alec edits his podcasts there now. Some hiccups with the noise-cancelling and auto-levelling features being too-aggressive.\n Recording setups. Blue's new Yeti Nano looks cool.\n \n FF and Chrome starting to support the new dialog element. Maybe cool, maybe terrible?\n \n\nLeft-to-right: pulianas.com, jonathanprozzi.net, derekfields.is, martymcgui.reThanks to everyone who came out! We look forward to seeing you at our next meetup on Tuesday, November 13th at 7:30pm!",
"html": "<p>Baltimore's second <a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2018/09/20/125531/\">Homebrew Website Club of October</a> met at the <a href=\"https://digitialharbor.org/\">Digital Harbor Foundation Tech Center</a> on October 16th.</p>\n<p>Here are some notes from the \"broadcast\" portion of the meetup:</p>\n<p>\n jonathanprozzi.net \u2014 Worked today on a post recapping our last HWC meeting, focusing on ideas to get more people involved. For work at DHF, still learning lots of NextJS and ExpressJS. Getting back into writing content!\n <br /></p>\n<p>\n derekfields.is \u2014 Been a while! Last week in Minnesota for some networking. Met some cool people and talked to some companies, including <a href=\"https://www.socrata.com/\">Socrata</a>, which was part of <a href=\"https://data.baltimorecity.gov/\">Open Baltimore</a>. Also got back into bullet journaling after being away for a while. Working on legal and client-finding stuff for his freelance work.\n <br /></p>\n<p>\n pulianas.com \u2014 Also been awhile since he's been to an HWC! Moved all his sites to HTTPS. His podcast (overanalyzed.fm) is now on iTunes, so he added that link to the site. Also tried to track down an official Overcast button but hasn't found it yet. Recently in San Jose for API World. Very little talk about building APIs and more about pitching specific products/services. Did learn a bit about microservices and case-studies of moving to them. Did some general maintenance on his WP site, and has been working on his own plugin for podcasting on WP.\n <br /></p>\n<p>\n martymcgui.re \u2014 Been heavily porting his site from Jekyll to Hugo. Has had some fun porting things that he did as Ruby plugins for Jekyll into crazy Go template logic, like generating permashortlinks in <a href=\"http://tantek.pbworks.com/w/page/19402946/NewBase60\">NewBase60</a>. Also had some fun setting up a new CSS Grid display for photos in posts with lots of them (<a href=\"https://martymcgui.re/2018/10/06/144700/\">example</a> which apparently only works in Firefox). Also, after some struggling with his image proxy setup (because Hugo templating doesn't support HMAC signatures) is trying out <a href=\"https://cloudinary.com/\">Cloudinary's</a> free tier for his image-resizing needs.\n <br /></p>\n<p>Other discussion:</p>\n<ul><li>Podcasting on WordPress is... a pain. Apple Podcasts refused to accept their feed due to http vs https issues and that was hard to track down.</li>\n <li>\n<a href=\"https://www.wooji-juice.com/products/ferrite/\">Ferrite</a> for audio editing on the iPad. Alec edits his podcasts there now. Some hiccups with the noise-cancelling and auto-levelling features being too-aggressive.</li>\n <li>Recording setups. <a href=\"https://www.bluedesigns.com/products/yeti-nano/\">Blue's new Yeti Nano</a> looks cool.</li>\n <li>\n FF and Chrome starting to support the new dialog element. Maybe cool, maybe terrible?\n <br /></li>\n</ul><img class=\"u-featured\" src=\"https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/f70adcadd475474ecb3ba53d07f3775725329f69/68747470733a2f2f6d656469612e6d617274796d636775692e72652f39642f39642f64302f32332f37303662353235613636653834373435323462313963396336623735326236303636366136633933363361316232643166326262323464392e6a7067\" alt=\"706b525a66e8474524b19c9c6b752b60666a6c9363a1b2d1f2bb24d9.jpg\" />Left-to-right: pulianas.com, jonathanprozzi.net, derekfields.is, martymcgui.re<p>Thanks to everyone who came out! We look forward to seeing you at our next meetup on Tuesday, November 13th at 7:30pm!</p>"
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"published": "2018-10-16T20:35:34+02:00",
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"html": "<p>\n I wanted to attend the\n <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/2018/Nuremberg\">IndieWebCamp Nuremberg</a> this month,\n just as I did last year.\n While browsing the page for information, under \"Participating\" I saw a link\n to the \"<a href=\"https://indieweb.org/code-of-conduct\">Code of Conduct</a>\"\n that one has to adhere to when attending the event.\n </p>\n <p>\n There has been much talk about CoCs in the last years, and I generally try\n to ignore such things as much as possible, just like\n <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contributor_License_Agreement\">CLAs</a>\n and\n <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-disclosure_agreement\">NDAs</a>.\n But now it was that I should forced to follow one, and\n <a href=\"https://chat.indieweb.org/2018-10-07#t1538901858384200\">asked some questions about it in IRC</a>.\n </p>\n\n <ul><li><a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/code-of-conduct.htm#levels\">Levels of rules</a></li>\n <li><a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/code-of-conduct.htm#why\">Why?</a></li>\n <li>\n <a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/code-of-conduct.htm#problems\">Problems</a>\n <ul><li><a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/code-of-conduct.htm#safe\">People feel safe</a></li>\n <li><a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/code-of-conduct.htm#care\">Somebody will care</a></li>\n <li><a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/code-of-conduct.htm#ban\">Banning people is easier</a></li>\n <li><a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/code-of-conduct.htm#common\">Common sense is not common</a></li>\n </ul></li>\n <li><a href=\"http://cweiske.de/tagebuch/code-of-conduct.htm#fin\">Fin</a></li>\n </ul><h2>Levels of rules</h2>\n <p>\n My understanding of rules in societies is that there are two levels:\n </p>\n <ol><li>Law</li>\n <li><a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_sense\">Common sense</a> / good sense</li>\n </ol><p>\n If you break the law, police will come and arrest or fine you.\n </p>\n <p>\n If you do not follow good sense, people will yell at and/or avoid you.\n </p>\n <p>\n So, why do we need a third level?\n A \"Code of Conduct\", which also could be called \"house rules\"?\n </p>\n <p>\n If you add a Code of Conduct, you think that level 1 (law) does not help\n and level 2 (good sense) is not available/adhered to.\n </p>\n\n \n <h2>Why?</h2>\n <p>\n In the IRC discussion,\n <a href=\"https://rosemaryorchard.com/\">Rosemary Orchard</a>\n gave a couple of reasons for a CoC:\n </p>\n <ol><li>People feel safer if some rules are written down</li>\n <li>People know that somebody will care when they have a problem</li>\n <li>It is easier to ban people based on written rules</li>\n <li>\n At international communities/conferences, common sense is not actually\n \"common\" because of different backgrounds.\n </li>\n </ol><h2>Problems</h2>\n \n <h3>People feel safe</h3>\n <p>\n Reason 1, \"people feel safe\", follows the same reasoning that states follow\n when flooding public spaces with video surveillance.\n </p>\n <p>\n But just <em>feeling</em> safe does not actually <em>make</em> you safe.\n Video cameras do not make your life more safe,\n neither does a Code of Conduct.\n </p>\n\n\n <h3>Somebody will care</h3>\n <p>\n I'd have put this under \"good sense\", but that's obviously not enough.\n </p>\n\n\n <h3>Banning people is easier</h3>\n <p>\n The premise is that banning someone based on some written text is easier\n than referring to some nebulous common sense.\n </p>\n <p>\n I did realize that in the end, every Code of Conduct only exists to\n achieve one goal:\n Make it easy to ban people from some space, be it an online community\n or a conference.\n </p>\n\n\n <h3>Common sense is not common</h3>\n <p>\n This seems to be an easy argument:\n Because of diverse social backgrounds, members of an international community\n cannot assume that other members share the same common and good sense.\n </p>\n <p>\n If you follow this reasoning, then the rules written down in a Code of\n Conduct have to be very clear, so that people with different backgrounds\n can understand them without ambiguities.\n </p>\n <p>\n And this is where it all breaks:\n Instead of clear and unequivocal rules, the IndieWebCamp Code of Conduct\n (and probably all others, too) is full of soft words that can be\n bent in every direction:\n </p>\n <blockquote>\n <h4>Respectful behavior</h4>\n <ul><li>Be considerate, kind, constructive, and helpful.</li>\n <li>\n Avoid demeaning, discriminatory, harassing, hateful, or physically\n threatening behavior, speech, and imagery.\n </li>\n </ul><p>\n If the organizers determine that an event participant is behaving\n <strong>disrespectfully</strong>, the organizers may take any action they deem appropriate,\n up to and including expulsion and <strong>exclusion from the event</strong>\n without warning or refund.\n </p>\n </blockquote>\n <p>\n So what actually is \"demeaning\"?\n It's a very soft word that has no singular definition, and will mean totally\n different things depending on your background.\n </p>\n <p>\n The same applies to \"discriminatory\" and \"harassing\".\n Almost every joke discriminates some group, be it guests in a\n restaurant (German: Ober-Witze), types of animals or groups of people\n that are on the losing side of a joke.\n </p>\n <p>\n The Wikipedia definition of\n <a href=\"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harassment\">harassment</a>\n refers to common sense, which we can't rely on because of reason #4:\n </p>\n <blockquote>\n It is commonly understood as behavior that [...] embarrasses a person\n </blockquote>\n <p>\n IndieWebCamps have hacking days where people code together.\n Now when I point out some stupid bug in someone else's code,\n this might embarrass the person who wrote it.\n </p>\n <p>\n This already covers the Code of Conduct's definition of \"disrespectfully\",\n and bam, I'm kicked from the conference.\n </p>\n <p>\n Together with reason #2 (\"somebody will care\") this will eventually lead\n to overreaction:\n When someone complains based on the CoC, the organizers will know that people\n expect them to do something, because they themselves put their conference\n under the Code of Conduct.\n Common sense will be less likely to be applied in such situations.\n </p>\n\n\n <h2>Fin</h2>\n <p>\n A Code of Conduct is a set of rules to ban people.\n </p>\n <p>\n It is needed because people have so diverse backgrounds that no common sense\n exists.\n </p>\n <p>\n People with different backgrounds understand the rules differently,\n because they are soft instead of explicit.\n </p>\n <p>\n I will not attend the IndieWebCamp this year.\n </p>\n\n <a href=\"https://news.indieweb.org/en\"></a>",
"text": "I wanted to attend the\n IndieWebCamp Nuremberg this month,\n just as I did last year.\n While browsing the page for information, under \"Participating\" I saw a link\n to the \"Code of Conduct\"\n that one has to adhere to when attending the event.\n \n \n There has been much talk about CoCs in the last years, and I generally try\n to ignore such things as much as possible, just like\n CLAs\n and\n NDAs.\n But now it was that I should forced to follow one, and\n asked some questions about it in IRC.\n \n\n Levels of rules\n Why?\n \n Problems\n People feel safe\n Somebody will care\n Banning people is easier\n Common sense is not common\n \n Fin\n Levels of rules\n \n My understanding of rules in societies is that there are two levels:\n \n Law\n Common sense / good sense\n \n If you break the law, police will come and arrest or fine you.\n \n \n If you do not follow good sense, people will yell at and/or avoid you.\n \n \n So, why do we need a third level?\n A \"Code of Conduct\", which also could be called \"house rules\"?\n \n \n If you add a Code of Conduct, you think that level 1 (law) does not help\n and level 2 (good sense) is not available/adhered to.\n \n\n \n Why?\n \n In the IRC discussion,\n Rosemary Orchard\n gave a couple of reasons for a CoC:\n \n People feel safer if some rules are written down\n People know that somebody will care when they have a problem\n It is easier to ban people based on written rules\n \n At international communities/conferences, common sense is not actually\n \"common\" because of different backgrounds.\n \n Problems\n \n People feel safe\n \n Reason 1, \"people feel safe\", follows the same reasoning that states follow\n when flooding public spaces with video surveillance.\n \n \n But just feeling safe does not actually make you safe.\n Video cameras do not make your life more safe,\n neither does a Code of Conduct.\n \n\n\n Somebody will care\n \n I'd have put this under \"good sense\", but that's obviously not enough.\n \n\n\n Banning people is easier\n \n The premise is that banning someone based on some written text is easier\n than referring to some nebulous common sense.\n \n \n I did realize that in the end, every Code of Conduct only exists to\n achieve one goal:\n Make it easy to ban people from some space, be it an online community\n or a conference.\n \n\n\n Common sense is not common\n \n This seems to be an easy argument:\n Because of diverse social backgrounds, members of an international community\n cannot assume that other members share the same common and good sense.\n \n \n If you follow this reasoning, then the rules written down in a Code of\n Conduct have to be very clear, so that people with different backgrounds\n can understand them without ambiguities.\n \n \n And this is where it all breaks:\n Instead of clear and unequivocal rules, the IndieWebCamp Code of Conduct\n (and probably all others, too) is full of soft words that can be\n bent in every direction:\n \n \n Respectful behavior\n Be considerate, kind, constructive, and helpful.\n \n Avoid demeaning, discriminatory, harassing, hateful, or physically\n threatening behavior, speech, and imagery.\n \n \n If the organizers determine that an event participant is behaving\n disrespectfully, the organizers may take any action they deem appropriate,\n up to and including expulsion and exclusion from the event\n without warning or refund.\n \n \n \n So what actually is \"demeaning\"?\n It's a very soft word that has no singular definition, and will mean totally\n different things depending on your background.\n \n \n The same applies to \"discriminatory\" and \"harassing\".\n Almost every joke discriminates some group, be it guests in a\n restaurant (German: Ober-Witze), types of animals or groups of people\n that are on the losing side of a joke.\n \n \n The Wikipedia definition of\n harassment\n refers to common sense, which we can't rely on because of reason #4:\n \n \n It is commonly understood as behavior that [...] embarrasses a person\n \n \n IndieWebCamps have hacking days where people code together.\n Now when I point out some stupid bug in someone else's code,\n this might embarrass the person who wrote it.\n \n \n This already covers the Code of Conduct's definition of \"disrespectfully\",\n and bam, I'm kicked from the conference.\n \n \n Together with reason #2 (\"somebody will care\") this will eventually lead\n to overreaction:\n When someone complains based on the CoC, the organizers will know that people\n expect them to do something, because they themselves put their conference\n under the Code of Conduct.\n Common sense will be less likely to be applied in such situations.\n \n\n\n Fin\n \n A Code of Conduct is a set of rules to ban people.\n \n \n It is needed because people have so diverse backgrounds that no common sense\n exists.\n \n \n People with different backgrounds understand the rules differently,\n because they are soft instead of explicit.\n \n \n I will not attend the IndieWebCamp this year."
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I don’t know that you would want to use an external contact database, but two thoughts:
First, I’m hoping to add support for Micropub endpoints that support it so that Indigenous for iOS has the ability to “save an h-card” from a website you are on into your own nicknames cache.
Second, once you can easily save people’s h-cards into your nicknames cache, you can do like Aaron does and convert mentions to silo-specific mentions!
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"summary": "I don\u2019t know that you would want to use an external contact database, but two thoughts:\nFirst, I\u2019m hoping to add support for Micropub endpoints that support it so that Indigenous for iOS has the ability to \u201csave an h-card\u201d from a website you are on into your own nicknames cache.\nSecond, once you can easily save people\u2019s h-cards into your nicknames cache, you can do like Aaron does and convert mentions to silo-specific mentions!",
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"text": "I don\u2019t know that you would want to use an external contact database, but two thoughts:\n\nFirst, I\u2019m hoping to add support for Micropub endpoints that support it so that Indigenous for iOS has the ability to \u201csave an h-card\u201d from a website you are on into your own nicknames cache.\n\nSecond, once you can easily save people\u2019s h-cards into your nicknames cache, you can do like Aaron does and convert mentions to silo-specific mentions!",
"html": "<p>I don\u2019t know that you would want to use an external contact database, but two thoughts:</p>\n\n<p>First, I\u2019m hoping to add support for Micropub endpoints that support it so that Indigenous for iOS has the ability to \u201csave an h-card\u201d from a website you are on into your own nicknames cache.</p>\n\n<p>Second, once you can easily save people\u2019s h-cards into your nicknames cache, you can do like <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com\">Aaron</a> does and convert mentions to silo-specific mentions!</p>"
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Well the good news is because Webmention is data agnostic, while I agree microformats can be tricky, if a better solution pops up in the real world, we can easily shift to adopt it. As you said, we shouldnt go out and “try to invent a new spec” but if something makes sense and people try it out and it works, then webmention can always adjust. The webmention spec would never need to change, websites would just have to replace mf2 parsers with whatever the new parsing strategy is.
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"summary": "Well the good news is because Webmention is data agnostic, while I agree microformats can be tricky, if a better solution pops up in the real world, we can easily shift to adopt it. As you said, we shouldnt go out and \u201ctry to invent a new spec\u201d but if something makes sense and people try it out and it works, then webmention can always adjust. The webmention spec would never need to change, websites would just have to replace mf2 parsers with whatever the new parsing strategy is.",
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"text": "Well the good news is because Webmention is data agnostic, while I agree microformats can be tricky, if a better solution pops up in the real world, we can easily shift to adopt it. As you said, we shouldnt go out and \u201ctry to invent a new spec\u201d but if something makes sense and people try it out and it works, then webmention can always adjust. The webmention spec would never need to change, websites would just have to replace mf2 parsers with whatever the new parsing strategy is.",
"html": "<p>Well the good news is because Webmention is data agnostic, while I agree microformats can be tricky, if a better solution pops up in the real world, we can easily shift to adopt it. As you said, we shouldnt go out and \u201ctry to invent a new spec\u201d but if something makes sense and people try it out and it works, then webmention can always adjust. The webmention spec would never need to change, websites would just have to replace mf2 parsers with whatever the new parsing strategy is.</p>"
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Over the past few days I have again picked up the torch of fully implementing webmentions in Grav. It's a maddening pursuit, mostly because I don't really know what I'm doing (although I am getting fantastic help from the folks in the IndieWeb community). The details are pretty arcane, and although I am trying to keep a decent record of all the steps and missteps, a full write-up will have to wait. In the meantime, I'm up against all sorts of weird things that I don't fully understand. My main aim is to try and get a more consistent, more essential, set of data back about webmentions to this site. To do that, I need to persuade the plugin to use XRay, rather than the standard PHP microformat parser, which I started doing back in late May.
More this way ...
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"summary": "Over the past few days I have again picked up the torch of fully implementing webmentions in Grav. It's a maddening pursuit, mostly because I don't really know what I'm doing (although I am getting fantastic help from the folks in the IndieWeb community). The details are pretty arcane, and although I am trying to keep a decent record of all the steps and missteps, a full write-up will have to wait. In the meantime, I'm up against all sorts of weird things that I don't fully understand. My main aim is to try and get a more consistent, more essential, set of data back about webmentions to this site. To do that, I need to persuade the plugin to use XRay, rather than the standard PHP microformat parser, which I started doing back in late May.\nMore this way ...",
"url": "https://www.jeremycherfas.net/blog/tantalising-pursuit-of-webmentions",
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"content": {
"text": "Over the past few days I have again picked up the torch of fully implementing webmentions in Grav. It's a maddening pursuit, mostly because I don't really know what I'm doing (although I am getting fantastic help from the folks in the IndieWeb community). The details are pretty arcane, and although I am trying to keep a decent record of all the steps and missteps, a full write-up will have to wait. In the meantime, I'm up against all sorts of weird things that I don't fully understand. My main aim is to try and get a more consistent, more essential, set of data back about webmentions to this site. To do that, I need to persuade the plugin to use XRay, rather than the standard PHP microformat parser, which I started doing back in late May.\n\n More this way ...",
"html": "<p>Over the past few days I have again picked up the torch of fully implementing webmentions in Grav. It's a maddening pursuit, mostly because I don't really know what I'm doing (although I am getting fantastic help from the folks in the <a href=\"https://chat.indieweb.org\">IndieWeb community</a>). The details are pretty arcane, and although I am trying to keep a decent record of all the steps and missteps, a full write-up will have to wait. In the meantime, I'm up against all sorts of weird things that I don't fully understand. My main aim is to try and get a more consistent, more essential, set of data back about webmentions to this site. To do that, I need to persuade the plugin to use XRay, rather than the standard PHP microformat parser, which I started doing <a href=\"https://www.jeremycherfas.net/blog/there-s-no-success-like-failure\">back in late May</a>.</p>\n\n <p><a href=\"https://www.jeremycherfas.net/blog/tantalising-pursuit-of-webmentions\">More this way ...</a></p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jeremy Cherfas",
"url": "https://jeremycherfas.net",
"photo": "https://aperture-proxy.p3k.io/d86af7b89af940fd08d45409035f1d24a547840a/68747470733a2f2f7777772e6a6572656d79636865726661732e6e65742f757365722f706c7567696e732f61626f75746d652f6173736574732f617661746172732f7a6f6f742e6a7067"
},
"post-type": "article",
"_id": "1207456",
"_source": "202",
"_is_read": true
}
I will be giving a session at @drupalcampbe about #indieweb ! A gentle 101 intro about the mission, specs and what the #drupal module already supports. Spoiler: a lot!
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2018-10-05T10:24:51+02:00",
"url": "https://realize.be/notes/1582",
"content": {
"text": "I will be giving a session at @drupalcampbe about #indieweb ! A gentle 101 intro about the mission, specs and what the #drupal module already supports. Spoiler: a lot!",
"html": "<p>I will be giving a session at @drupalcampbe about #indieweb ! A gentle 101 intro about the mission, specs and what the #drupal module already supports. Spoiler: a lot!</p>"
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "1206204",
"_source": "213",
"_is_read": true
}
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
}
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
}