This blog is more like a trilogy than a single work, (or at least the first three parts in a series:
- Book 1 (parts 1 & 2) are all about social media - it's two parts because I took a hiatus,
- Book 2 - ownership, control and the Indieweb, setting the scene
- Book 3 - more personal, more about me and how I'm dealing with things
Book 1 was me trying to be something I wasn't, exploring an exciting time but doing so in a way that was trying to force things, trying to be the next someone else and not me, trying to be found.
Book 2 was a voyage of discovery, almost a rebellion against the whole idea of the first part. It was still, perhaps, me trying to be something else, not entirely myself but it was a definite improvement.
Book 3 takes the lessons from book 2, strips them down and gets to work. It's where I wish I always had been.
The old blog (2003 - 2008) was a mixture, very much a rough draft written by an inexperienced hand. It mixed the personal with the geeky but not in such a pretentious way. It served almost as a template for what I'm doing now. Now, however, I'm a better writer, a deeper thinker, more at ease with what I'm doing.
There are times I wish I hadn't taken breaks, hadn't moved my writing away from the blog, but then wonder if I would still be stuck writing Book 1, never progressing. I realise that, although it leaves gaps, I needed to step away to move on to the next part.
Some can claim to have blogged every day for the past 15 or 20 years and I say good luck to them, they were lucky to have found their voice early. I have had to rediscover my voice both figuratively and literally and am still finding it now, but it's mine, not an approximation or impression of anyone else.
And that is all I could ask for.
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Colin Walker",
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/28-01-2020-1003/",
"published": "2020-01-28T10:05:17+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p>This blog is more like a trilogy than a single work, (or at least the first three parts in a series:</p>\n<ul><li>Book 1 (parts 1 & 2) are all about social media - it's two parts because I took a hiatus,</li>\n<li>Book 2 - ownership, control and the Indieweb, setting the scene</li>\n<li>Book 3 - more personal, more about <em>me</em> and how I'm dealing with things</li>\n</ul><p>Book 1 was me trying to be something I wasn't, exploring an exciting time but doing so in a way that was trying to force things, trying to be the next <em>someone else</em> and not me, trying to be found.</p>\n<p>Book 2 was a voyage of discovery, almost a rebellion against the whole idea of the first part. It was still, perhaps, me trying to be something else, not entirely myself but it was a definite improvement.</p>\n<p>Book 3 takes the lessons from book 2, strips them down and gets to work. It's where I wish I always had been.</p>\n<p>The old blog (2003 - 2008) was a mixture, very much a rough draft written by an inexperienced hand. It mixed the personal with the geeky but not in such a pretentious way. It served almost as a template for what I'm doing now. Now, however, I'm a better writer, a deeper thinker, more at ease with what I'm doing.</p>\n<p>There are times I wish I hadn't taken breaks, hadn't moved my writing away from the blog, but then wonder if I would still be stuck writing Book 1, never progressing. I realise that, although it leaves gaps, I needed to step away to move on to the next part.</p>\n<p>Some can claim to have blogged every day for the past 15 or 20 years and I say good luck to them, they were lucky to have found their voice early. I have had to rediscover my voice both <a href=\"https://colinwalker.blog/losing-your-voice/\">figuratively and literally</a> and am still finding it now, but it's mine, not an approximation or impression of anyone else.</p>\n<p>And that is all I could ask for.</p>",
"text": "This blog is more like a trilogy than a single work, (or at least the first three parts in a series:\nBook 1 (parts 1 & 2) are all about social media - it's two parts because I took a hiatus,\nBook 2 - ownership, control and the Indieweb, setting the scene\nBook 3 - more personal, more about me and how I'm dealing with things\nBook 1 was me trying to be something I wasn't, exploring an exciting time but doing so in a way that was trying to force things, trying to be the next someone else and not me, trying to be found.\nBook 2 was a voyage of discovery, almost a rebellion against the whole idea of the first part. It was still, perhaps, me trying to be something else, not entirely myself but it was a definite improvement.\nBook 3 takes the lessons from book 2, strips them down and gets to work. It's where I wish I always had been.\nThe old blog (2003 - 2008) was a mixture, very much a rough draft written by an inexperienced hand. It mixed the personal with the geeky but not in such a pretentious way. It served almost as a template for what I'm doing now. Now, however, I'm a better writer, a deeper thinker, more at ease with what I'm doing.\nThere are times I wish I hadn't taken breaks, hadn't moved my writing away from the blog, but then wonder if I would still be stuck writing Book 1, never progressing. I realise that, although it leaves gaps, I needed to step away to move on to the next part.\nSome can claim to have blogged every day for the past 15 or 20 years and I say good luck to them, they were lucky to have found their voice early. I have had to rediscover my voice both figuratively and literally and am still finding it now, but it's mine, not an approximation or impression of anyone else.\nAnd that is all I could ask for."
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"_id": "8351664",
"_source": "237",
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{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Manton Reece",
"url": "https://www.manton.org/",
"photo": "https://micro.blog/manton/avatar.jpg"
},
"url": "https://www.manton.org/2020/01/27/replies-hosted-at.html",
"name": "Replies hosted at your own blog",
"content": {
"html": "<p>When I was first developing Micro.blog, I made a choice that quick replies in the timeline should be stored separately from regular blog posts. I thought that most people wouldn\u2019t want replies mixed in with their blog posts at their own domain name. I also liked that replies were simple, usually short and without images, because it makes the timeline much more readable.</p>\n\n<p>This has admittedly poked a hole in one of the most important goals of Micro.blog: owning your own content by having it at your own domain name. If someone wanted more control over their replies, they would need to use an external blog like WordPress, even though Micro.blog had great support for Webmention and cross-site replies.</p>\n\n<p>I always thought this limitation would be temporary. As I\u2019ve been finishing up my book Indie Microblogging, this trade-off with replies from the early days of Micro.blog has become untenable for me. Storing replies outside of your Micro.blog-hosted blog, even if you can export them or move to another IndieWeb-friendly platform, is too silo-like for the mission of Micro.blog.</p>\n\n<p>Today I\u2019m rolling out the first of a series of improvements to replies. You can now optionally have your replies on your own blog, with reply permalink URLs at your own domain name.</p>\n\n<p>Here\u2019s a screenshot of the option on the Account screen. The popup menu will include any blog that\u2019s hosted on Micro.blog, so you could even create a separate microblog just for replies:</p>\n\n<p><img src=\"https://www.manton.org/uploads/2020/9680978778.png\" alt=\"Replies option\" border=\"0\" width=\"619\" height=\"117\" /></p>\n\n<p>Replies get a new <code>reply</code> post type in Hugo, which is used under-the-hood for your microblog. This means they won\u2019t show up in your default feeds or home page, although you can create a custom theme to change that.</p>\n\n<p>Micro.blog adds a few Hugo parameters that can be used for reply HTML templates:</p>\n\n<ul><li><code>.Params.reply_to_url</code>: The URL for the post you are replying to.</li>\n<li><code>.Params.reply_to_hostname</code>: Just the hostname part of the reply-to URL.</li>\n<li><code>.Params.reply_to_username</code>: The username for the Micro.blog user you\u2019re replying to.</li>\n<li><code>.Params.reply_to_avatar</code>: The URL for the Micro.blog user\u2019s profile photo.</li>\n</ul><p>I\u2019ve added a new template in the Marfa theme to use these:</p>\n\n<p><img src=\"https://www.manton.org/uploads/2020/4a2c534059.png\" alt=\"Blog reply\" border=\"0\" width=\"578\" height=\"270\" /></p>\n\n<p>There\u2019s also a new page at <code>yourblog.com/replies</code> with the most recent replies. If you enable pagination under your blog\u2019s settings, that page will expand to show all your replies.</p>\n\n<p>It\u2019s still early for this feature, and for now I\u2019ve made some of these customizations only in the Marfa theme. Consider this new plumbing that you can take advantage of in your custom themes, with more improvements to follow later so this works as consistently as possible across all the built-in designs. But it is a major step to strengthen the IndieWeb principles in Micro.blog.</p>",
"text": "When I was first developing Micro.blog, I made a choice that quick replies in the timeline should be stored separately from regular blog posts. I thought that most people wouldn\u2019t want replies mixed in with their blog posts at their own domain name. I also liked that replies were simple, usually short and without images, because it makes the timeline much more readable.\n\nThis has admittedly poked a hole in one of the most important goals of Micro.blog: owning your own content by having it at your own domain name. If someone wanted more control over their replies, they would need to use an external blog like WordPress, even though Micro.blog had great support for Webmention and cross-site replies.\n\nI always thought this limitation would be temporary. As I\u2019ve been finishing up my book Indie Microblogging, this trade-off with replies from the early days of Micro.blog has become untenable for me. Storing replies outside of your Micro.blog-hosted blog, even if you can export them or move to another IndieWeb-friendly platform, is too silo-like for the mission of Micro.blog.\n\nToday I\u2019m rolling out the first of a series of improvements to replies. You can now optionally have your replies on your own blog, with reply permalink URLs at your own domain name.\n\nHere\u2019s a screenshot of the option on the Account screen. The popup menu will include any blog that\u2019s hosted on Micro.blog, so you could even create a separate microblog just for replies:\n\n\n\nReplies get a new reply post type in Hugo, which is used under-the-hood for your microblog. This means they won\u2019t show up in your default feeds or home page, although you can create a custom theme to change that.\n\nMicro.blog adds a few Hugo parameters that can be used for reply HTML templates:\n\n.Params.reply_to_url: The URL for the post you are replying to.\n.Params.reply_to_hostname: Just the hostname part of the reply-to URL.\n.Params.reply_to_username: The username for the Micro.blog user you\u2019re replying to.\n.Params.reply_to_avatar: The URL for the Micro.blog user\u2019s profile photo.\nI\u2019ve added a new template in the Marfa theme to use these:\n\n\n\nThere\u2019s also a new page at yourblog.com/replies with the most recent replies. If you enable pagination under your blog\u2019s settings, that page will expand to show all your replies.\n\nIt\u2019s still early for this feature, and for now I\u2019ve made some of these customizations only in the Marfa theme. Consider this new plumbing that you can take advantage of in your custom themes, with more improvements to follow later so this works as consistently as possible across all the built-in designs. But it is a major step to strengthen the IndieWeb principles in Micro.blog."
},
"published": "2020-01-27T11:02:15-06:00",
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"Photos",
"Essays"
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"_id": "8332255",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-26T15:09:47-0500",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/2020/01/26/indieweb-nyc-meetup-2019-11-16-wrap-up/",
"category": [
"IndieWeb",
"meetup",
"HWC",
"NYC",
"wrap-up"
],
"name": "IndieWeb NYC Meetup 2020-01-25 Wrap-Up",
"content": {
"text": "IndieWeb NYC's meetup for January 2020 met at Think Coffee on Mercer St on January 25th around 2pm.\n\n Here are some notes from the meeting!\n \n\n\n dmitri.shuralyov.com \u2014 Made even more progress on integrating IndieAuth into his site! In addition to letting people log in to his site with GitHub profile URLs (github.com/username), he has finished changes to allow folks to log into his site with their own URLs via IndieAuth. Along the way he learned a lot about and contributed to the IndieAuth spec! He wrapped up and deployed it at this meetup!\n \n\n\n martymcgui.re \u2014 Since last time, create a very minimal indieweb.nyc site for folks that want to track IndieWeb events in NYC. This was just a few week's ahead of Aaron Parecki's launch of events.indieweb.org. \ud83d\ude02 Marty plans to continue updating indieweb.nyc but now has the events there link to events.indieweb.org.\n \n\nOther topics of discussion\n\n Tiara, Matt, and Jason were missed! Jason has been involved in the IndieWeb for a while, and we're excited to have him join the NYC community!\n \n\n The new IndieWeb events site is great! Marty is looking forward to using it for future IndieWeb NYC meetups.\n \n Thanks to Tantek for pointing out a Twitter thread about webrings and Tor onion sites. Marty spent a good portion of the meetup looking through folks sites (and checking that the .onion mirror of his own site (onion link) was working.\n \n\nLeft-to-right: martymcgui.re, dmitri.shuralyov.com\n Thanks to all who came out! We will see you all again in February! Keep an eye on indieweb.nyc for the exact date, time, and location! You can subscribe to the calendar to receive automatic updates (webcal link)!",
"html": "<p><a href=\"https://events.indieweb.org/2020/01/indieweb-meetup-nyc-3Ss2mFU4CVfj\">IndieWeb NYC's meetup for January 2020</a> met at Think Coffee on Mercer St on January 25th around 2pm.</p>\n<p>\n Here are some notes from the meeting!\n <br /></p>\n<p>\n dmitri.shuralyov.com \u2014 Made even more progress on integrating IndieAuth into his site! In addition to letting people log in to his site with GitHub profile URLs (github.com/username), he has finished changes to allow folks to log into his site with their own URLs via IndieAuth. Along the way he learned a lot about and contributed to the IndieAuth spec! He wrapped up and deployed it at this meetup!\n <br /></p>\n<p>\n martymcgui.re \u2014 Since last time, create a very minimal <a href=\"https://indieweb.nyc/\">indieweb.nyc</a> site for folks that want to track IndieWeb events in NYC. This was just a few week's ahead of <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/\">Aaron Parecki's</a> <a href=\"https://aaronparecki.com/2019/12/21/4/indieweb-events\">launch of events.indieweb.org</a>. \ud83d\ude02 Marty plans to continue updating indieweb.nyc but now has the events there link to events.indieweb.org.\n <br /></p>\n<p>Other topics of discussion</p>\n<ul><li>\n <a href=\"https://tiaramiller.com/\">Tiara</a>, <a href=\"http://mfgriffin.com/\">Matt</a>, and <a href=\"https://jmac.org/\">Jason</a> were missed! Jason has been involved in the IndieWeb for a while, and we're excited to have him join the NYC community!\n <br /></li>\n <li>The new IndieWeb events site is great! Marty is looking forward to using it for future IndieWeb NYC meetups.</li>\n <li>\n Thanks to <a href=\"https://tantek.com/\">Tantek</a> for <a href=\"https://chat.indieweb.org/meta/2020-01-25#t1579945358209600\">pointing out a Twitter thread about webrings and Tor onion sites</a>. Marty spent a good portion of the meetup looking through folks sites (and checking that the <a href=\"http://schmartyp7qtjzn7.onion/\">.onion mirror of his own site (onion link)</a> was working.\n <br /></li>\n</ul><img src=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/02/93/2b/09/88626c677b4307f0f8c9ecdbcc39367d7e5ab19f69dd4235ef622dbf.jpg\" alt=\"\" />Left-to-right: martymcgui.re, dmitri.shuralyov.com<p>\n Thanks to all who came out! We will see you all again in February! Keep an eye on <a href=\"https://indieweb.nyc/\">indieweb.nyc</a> for the exact date, time, and location! You can <a>subscribe to the calendar to receive automatic updates (webcal link)</a>!\n <br /></p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Marty McGuire",
"url": "https://martymcgui.re/",
"photo": "https://martymcgui.re/images/logo.jpg"
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Preparing for #Brrrlin All Hands, reflecting on a web strategy & vision aligned with @Mozilla mission, asked #webstandards co-workers to do so too.
Some thoughts:
* people over tech (it’s not neutral)
* empower those more vulnerable, less privileged
* simple, minimal, secure, private by default
* accessible to view, author, *and* code
Previously:
* https://tantek.com/2020/009/t1/technology-force-multiplier-not-neutral
* https://tantek.com/2019/353/t1/tech-plumbing-framing-dweb-problematic
* https://tantek.com/2020/010/t2/indieweb-community-inclusive-anarchistic-punk
* https://tantek.com/2018/133/t1/mozilla-manifesto-addendum
Re-reading:
* https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/mission/
* https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/
* https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/details/
* https://www.w3.org/2001/tag/doc/ethical-web-principles/
And considering the problems with the "Contract for the Web" (https://contractfortheweb.org/) such as numerous signatories that actively violate its own principles, and profit from doing so.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-26 06:55-0800",
"url": "http://tantek.com/2020/026/t1/brrrlin-all-hands-web-vision",
"category": [
"Brrrlin",
"webstandards"
],
"content": {
"text": "Preparing for #Brrrlin All Hands, reflecting on a web strategy & vision aligned with @Mozilla mission, asked #webstandards co-workers to do so too.\n\nSome thoughts:\n* people over tech (it\u2019s not neutral)\n* empower those more vulnerable, less privileged \n* simple, minimal, secure, private by default\n* accessible to view, author, *and* code\n\nPreviously:\n* https://tantek.com/2020/009/t1/technology-force-multiplier-not-neutral\n* https://tantek.com/2019/353/t1/tech-plumbing-framing-dweb-problematic\n* https://tantek.com/2020/010/t2/indieweb-community-inclusive-anarchistic-punk\n* https://tantek.com/2018/133/t1/mozilla-manifesto-addendum\n\nRe-reading:\n* https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/mission/\n* https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/\n* https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/details/\n* https://www.w3.org/2001/tag/doc/ethical-web-principles/\n\nAnd considering the problems with the \"Contract for the Web\" (https://contractfortheweb.org/) such as numerous signatories that actively violate its own principles, and profit from doing so.",
"html": "Preparing for #<span class=\"p-category\">Brrrlin</span> All Hands, reflecting on a web strategy & vision aligned with <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/Mozilla\">@Mozilla</a> mission, asked #<span class=\"p-category\">webstandards</span> co-workers to do so too.<br /><br />Some thoughts:<br />* people over tech (it\u2019s not neutral)<br />* empower those more vulnerable, less privileged <br />* simple, minimal, secure, private by default<br />* accessible to view, author, *and* code<br /><br />Previously:<br />* <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2020/009/t1/technology-force-multiplier-not-neutral\">https://tantek.com/2020/009/t1/technology-force-multiplier-not-neutral</a><br />* <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2019/353/t1/tech-plumbing-framing-dweb-problematic\">https://tantek.com/2019/353/t1/tech-plumbing-framing-dweb-problematic</a><br />* <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2020/010/t2/indieweb-community-inclusive-anarchistic-punk\">https://tantek.com/2020/010/t2/indieweb-community-inclusive-anarchistic-punk</a><br />* <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2018/133/t1/mozilla-manifesto-addendum\">https://tantek.com/2018/133/t1/mozilla-manifesto-addendum</a><br /><br />Re-reading:<br />* <a href=\"https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/mission/\">https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/mission/</a><br />* <a href=\"https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/\">https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/</a><br />* <a href=\"https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/details/\">https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/about/manifesto/details/</a><br />* <a href=\"https://www.w3.org/2001/tag/doc/ethical-web-principles/\">https://www.w3.org/2001/tag/doc/ethical-web-principles/</a><br /><br />And considering the problems with the \"Contract for the Web\" (<a href=\"https://contractfortheweb.org/\">https://contractfortheweb.org/</a>) such as numerous signatories that actively violate its own principles, and profit from doing so."
},
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"type": "card",
"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "http://tantek.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/tantek.com/acfddd7d8b2c8cf8aa163651432cc1ec7eb8ec2f881942dca963d305eeaaa6b8.jpg"
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If you reply using micropub and webmention, the reply is on your own site; it only shows up on their site if they have webmentions enabled and approve it. The friction is under their control.
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-26T10:54:29+0000",
"url": "http://known.kevinmarks.com/2020/if-you-reply-using-micropub-and-webmention",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://bix.blog/2020/01/25/ive-changed-my.html"
],
"content": {
"text": "If you reply using micropub and webmention, the reply is on your own site; it only shows up on their site if they have webmentions enabled and approve it. The friction is under their control."
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Kevin Marks",
"url": "http://known.kevinmarks.com/profile/kevinmarks",
"photo": "http://known.kevinmarks.com/file/9255656669173b7867ab839ee6556f9e"
},
"post-type": "reply",
"_id": "8296551",
"_source": "205",
"_is_read": true
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Rebecca writes that it's nice to receive comments directly on her blog,
"... but then, comments haven't exactly disappeared. They are well and alive on Facebook and Instagram, but why does it just feel different?"
As J said recently, "we got away from visiting the sites themselves." By living in various social and other feeds we have distanced ourselves from the original source, disconnected the conversations. The convenience offered allows us to subscribe to more and more, in many cases we don't even need to visit the original site to get an RSS feed, for example - the tools will do that for us.
The more we fill our feeds the harder it becomes to revert to source, browsing so many pages is no longer an option.
With webmentions we can pipe remote comments to our own site using the power of the #indieweb (let's face it, micro.blog is essentially a commenting system for me) but even then it feels special for someone to come directly to your site.
It's not just about control and ownership of the conversation, it's a recognition of the time they have invested in you as "it takes effort for people to find their way to personal websites / blogs".
Minimum viable social actions may give an initial, instant dopamine hit but are ultimately worthless. The extra effort is so worth it.
{
"type": "entry",
"author": {
"name": "Colin Walker",
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/",
"photo": null
},
"url": "https://colinwalker.blog/26-01-2020-1052/",
"published": "2020-01-26T10:51:59+00:00",
"content": {
"html": "<p><a href=\"http://www.rebeccatoh.co/comments/\">Rebecca writes</a> that it's nice to receive comments directly on her blog,</p>\n<blockquote><p>\n \"... but then, comments haven't exactly disappeared. They are well and alive on Facebook and Instagram, but why does it just feel different?\"\n</p></blockquote>\n<p><a href=\"https://colinwalker.blog/22-01-2020-1820/\">As J said recently</a>, <em>\"we got away from visiting the sites themselves.\"</em> By living in various social and other feeds we have distanced ourselves from the original source, disconnected the conversations. The convenience offered allows us to subscribe to more and more, in many cases we don't even need to visit the original site to get an RSS feed, for example - the tools will do that for us.</p>\n<p>The more we fill our feeds the harder it becomes to revert to source, browsing so many pages is no longer an option.</p>\n<p>With webmentions we can pipe remote comments to our own site using the power of the <a href=\"https://colinwalker.blog/?s=%23indieweb\">#indieweb</a> (let's face it, micro.blog is essentially a commenting system for me) but even then it feels special for someone to come directly to your site.</p>\n<p>It's not just about control and ownership of the conversation, it's a recognition of the time they have invested in <em>you</em> as <em>\"it takes effort for people to find their way to personal websites / blogs\"</em>.</p>\n<p><a href=\"https://colinwalker.blog/putting-an-end-to-minimum-social-actions/#%23Likes,+hearts\">Minimum viable social actions</a> may give an initial, instant dopamine hit but are ultimately worthless. The extra effort is <em>so</em> worth it.</p>",
"text": "Rebecca writes that it's nice to receive comments directly on her blog,\n\n \"... but then, comments haven't exactly disappeared. They are well and alive on Facebook and Instagram, but why does it just feel different?\"\n\nAs J said recently, \"we got away from visiting the sites themselves.\" By living in various social and other feeds we have distanced ourselves from the original source, disconnected the conversations. The convenience offered allows us to subscribe to more and more, in many cases we don't even need to visit the original site to get an RSS feed, for example - the tools will do that for us.\nThe more we fill our feeds the harder it becomes to revert to source, browsing so many pages is no longer an option.\nWith webmentions we can pipe remote comments to our own site using the power of the #indieweb (let's face it, micro.blog is essentially a commenting system for me) but even then it feels special for someone to come directly to your site.\nIt's not just about control and ownership of the conversation, it's a recognition of the time they have invested in you as \"it takes effort for people to find their way to personal websites / blogs\".\nMinimum viable social actions may give an initial, instant dopamine hit but are ultimately worthless. The extra effort is so worth it."
},
"post-type": "note",
"_id": "8293411",
"_source": "237",
"_is_read": true
}
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-26T08:46:00Z",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me/mf2/2020/01/bpq5i/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/brianwisti/status/1221307488798044160"
],
"name": "Reply to https://twitter.com/brianwisti/status/1221307488798044160",
"content": {
"text": "It can also make some of it harder, too! My site is a static Hugo site, but for some of the IndieWeb stuff I either need to add client-side JS or write separate services that can run to ie send Webmentions. It definitely works, but is a bit more work as there's stuff that is and isn't static",
"html": "<p>It can also make some of it harder, too! My site is a static Hugo site, but for some of the IndieWeb stuff I either need to add client-side JS or write separate services that can run to ie send Webmentions. It definitely works, but is a bit more work as there's stuff that is and isn't static</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jamie Tanna",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me",
"photo": "https://www.jvt.me/img/profile.png"
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Photo for today’s IndieWeb NYC Meetup!
{
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"content": {
"text": "Photo for today\u2019s IndieWeb NYC Meetup!",
"html": "<a href=\"https://media.martymcgui.re/90/ac/63/84/4d6f56754094ad8373dcba649e54f210450514b33522e223def0f60f.jpg\"></a>\n\n <p>Photo for today\u2019s IndieWeb NYC Meetup!</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Marty McGuire",
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"photo": "https://martymcgui.re/images/logo.jpg"
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Does this work with IndieWeb readers and does it work without JS? (if it does work without JS it will probably work with an IndieWeb reader)
{
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"in-reply-to": [
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"content": {
"text": "Does this work with IndieWeb readers and does it work without JS? (if it does work without JS it will probably work with an IndieWeb reader)",
"html": "<p>Does this work with IndieWeb readers and does it work without JS? (if it does work without JS it will probably work with an IndieWeb reader)</p>"
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"author": {
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"url": "https://fireburn.ru/",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-24T13:49:00Z",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me/mf2/2020/01/p2hgg/",
"category": [
"homebrew-website-club"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/emilyclare181/status/1220692123432955905"
],
"name": "Reply to https://twitter.com/emilyclare181/status/1220692123432955905",
"content": {
"text": "This looks awesome, great stuff! If you want to come work on it with like minded folks, I organise #HomebrewWebsiteClub Nottingham, next event on Feb 5th https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX",
"html": "<p>This looks awesome, great stuff! If you want to come work on it with like minded folks, I organise <a href=\"https://www.jvt.me/tags/homebrew-website-club/\">#HomebrewWebsiteClub</a> Nottingham, next event on Feb 5th <a href=\"https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX\">https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX</a></p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jamie Tanna",
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Cater vegan by default (per Guardian environment article^1). Defaults matter, and changing them works (changes behavior).
Instead of making "vegan" or "vegetarian" a special meal option, flip it around, and cater vegan by default, with special meal options for dairy (milk/cream/cheese/yogurt), meat, or fish (as well as other needs / sensitivities).
Mozilla Berlin catered lunches are fairly simple, and all but one of the "normal" dishes were vegan(1,2). There was both vegetarian (with cream) and vegan salad dressings on the side. Lastly a "special meal" container had fish. Putting non-vegan additions on the side is another good technique.
Several years ago, @aaronpk and I decided we would cater vegetarian by default at IndieWebCamps we ran. He’s vegetarian, and I’m pescetarian so that worked for us. We of course ask participants to tell us if they have any additional special meals needs, turns out nearly none did / do. Changing defaults works. Most recently at IndieWeb Summit we did more than 50% vegan dishes (all vegetarian) with no complaints.
We leave it up to each city’s IndieWebCamp organizers to decide for themselves (in a very distributed decision-making BarCamp way), however I think we’re going to make at least vegetarian a suggested default for new organizers, while going with a vegan default for IndieWeb Summits in Portland.
I’ve also been (repeatedly) advocating internally at Mozilla for the company to switch to vegan catering by default for events, especially the ones where people have to sign-up with a form and indicate any dietary requirements. Hasn’t happened yet but I’m not giving up. I can say I’ve had more and more people say they think it’s a clever idea and they like it. Eventually I expect enough support that change will happen.
I admit that seeing @osbridge (Open Source Bridge) provide vegan meals by default for years definitely inspired me. Seeing a large conference do it makes you realize how doable it is.
Things like this are why personal, small group, and company choices around food, consumption, environmental impacts do make an impact. By setting a good (if bold) example, you normalize it, you remove fear, you make it that much less strange for the next person to choose to do so, for themselves, their group, or their company. Eventually maybe you help inspire a policy maker, or enough people to influence a policy maker, and can impact local city decisions, maybe state, and more.
Systemic change is possible, and it’s possible to work in parallel at all levels.
#vegan #vegetarian #caterVegan #veganByDefault #defaultsMatter #resetAllDefaults #optionalDairy #optionalMeat #optionalFish #environment ##environmental #optimist #futureOptimism #noFilter
^1 https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/may/31/avoiding-meat-and-dairy-is-single-biggest-way-to-reduce-your-impact-on-earth — just going to keep linking this.
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"text": "Cater vegan by default (per Guardian environment article^1). Defaults matter, and changing them works (changes behavior).\n\nInstead of making \"vegan\" or \"vegetarian\" a special meal option, flip it around, and cater vegan by default, with special meal options for dairy (milk/cream/cheese/yogurt), meat, or fish (as well as other needs / sensitivities).\n\nMozilla Berlin catered lunches are fairly simple, and all but one of the \"normal\" dishes were vegan(1,2). There was both vegetarian (with cream) and vegan salad dressings on the side. Lastly a \"special meal\" container had fish. Putting non-vegan additions on the side is another good technique.\n\nSeveral years ago, @aaronpk and I decided we would cater vegetarian by default at IndieWebCamps we ran. He\u2019s vegetarian, and I\u2019m pescetarian so that worked for us. We of course ask participants to tell us if they have any additional special meals needs, turns out nearly none did / do. Changing defaults works. Most recently at IndieWeb Summit we did more than 50% vegan dishes (all vegetarian) with no complaints.\n\nWe leave it up to each city\u2019s IndieWebCamp organizers to decide for themselves (in a very distributed decision-making BarCamp way), however I think we\u2019re going to make at least vegetarian a suggested default for new organizers, while going with a vegan default for IndieWeb Summits in Portland.\n\nI\u2019ve also been (repeatedly) advocating internally at Mozilla for the company to switch to vegan catering by default for events, especially the ones where people have to sign-up with a form and indicate any dietary requirements. Hasn\u2019t happened yet but I\u2019m not giving up. I can say I\u2019ve had more and more people say they think it\u2019s a clever idea and they like it. Eventually I expect enough support that change will happen.\n\nI admit that seeing @osbridge (Open Source Bridge) provide vegan meals by default for years definitely inspired me. Seeing a large conference do it makes you realize how doable it is. \n\nThings like this are why personal, small group, and company choices around food, consumption, environmental impacts do make an impact. By setting a good (if bold) example, you normalize it, you remove fear, you make it that much less strange for the next person to choose to do so, for themselves, their group, or their company. Eventually maybe you help inspire a policy maker, or enough people to influence a policy maker, and can impact local city decisions, maybe state, and more.\n\nSystemic change is possible, and it\u2019s possible to work in parallel at all levels.\n\n#vegan #vegetarian #caterVegan #veganByDefault #defaultsMatter #resetAllDefaults #optionalDairy #optionalMeat #optionalFish #environment ##environmental #optimist #futureOptimism #noFilter\n\n^1 https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/may/31/avoiding-meat-and-dairy-is-single-biggest-way-to-reduce-your-impact-on-earth \u2014 just going to keep linking this.",
"html": "<a class=\"u-bridgy-flickr-photo\" href=\"https://fastly.4sqi.net/img/general/original/476__OLF-fMNXQqw6ZCyjfb7SJKoHTnl5hByQv420HrHncQ.jpg\"></a><a class=\"u-bridgy-flickr-photo\" href=\"https://fastly.4sqi.net/img/general/original/476_pQyaijP8ac37TSHelHr7gOV_wbSYf2ZC3ehG0yiSVRM.jpg\"></a>Cater vegan by default (per Guardian environment article^1). Defaults matter, and changing them works (changes behavior).<br /><br />Instead of making \"vegan\" or \"vegetarian\" a special meal option, flip it around, and cater vegan by default, with special meal options for dairy (milk/cream/cheese/yogurt), meat, or fish (as well as other needs / sensitivities).<br /><br />Mozilla Berlin catered lunches are fairly simple, and all but one of the \"normal\" dishes were vegan(1,2). There was both vegetarian (with cream) and vegan salad dressings on the side. Lastly a \"special meal\" container had fish. Putting non-vegan additions on the side is another good technique.<br /><br />Several years ago, <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/aaronpk\">@aaronpk</a> and I decided we would cater vegetarian by default at IndieWebCamps we ran. He\u2019s vegetarian, and I\u2019m pescetarian so that worked for us. We of course ask participants to tell us if they have any additional special meals needs, turns out nearly none did / do. Changing defaults works. Most recently at IndieWeb Summit we did more than 50% vegan dishes (all vegetarian) with no complaints.<br /><br />We leave it up to each city\u2019s IndieWebCamp organizers to decide for themselves (in a very distributed decision-making BarCamp way), however I think we\u2019re going to make at least vegetarian a suggested default for new organizers, while going with a vegan default for IndieWeb Summits in Portland.<br /><br />I\u2019ve also been (repeatedly) advocating internally at Mozilla for the company to switch to vegan catering by default for events, especially the ones where people have to sign-up with a form and indicate any dietary requirements. Hasn\u2019t happened yet but I\u2019m not giving up. I can say I\u2019ve had more and more people say they think it\u2019s a clever idea and they like it. Eventually I expect enough support that change will happen.<br /><br />I admit that seeing <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/osbridge\">@osbridge</a> (Open Source Bridge) provide vegan meals by default for years definitely inspired me. Seeing a large conference do it makes you realize how doable it is. <br /><br />Things like this are why personal, small group, and company choices around food, consumption, environmental impacts do make an impact. By setting a good (if bold) example, you normalize it, you remove fear, you make it that much less strange for the next person to choose to do so, for themselves, their group, or their company. Eventually maybe you help inspire a policy maker, or enough people to influence a policy maker, and can impact local city decisions, maybe state, and more.<br /><br />Systemic change is possible, and it\u2019s possible to work in parallel at all levels.<br /><br />#<span class=\"p-category\">vegan</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">vegetarian</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">caterVegan</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">veganByDefault</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">defaultsMatter</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">resetAllDefaults</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">optionalDairy</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">optionalMeat</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">optionalFish</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">environment</span> ##environmental #<span class=\"p-category\">optimist</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">futureOptimism</span> #<span class=\"p-category\">noFilter</span><br /><br />^1 <a href=\"https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/may/31/avoiding-meat-and-dairy-is-single-biggest-way-to-reduce-your-impact-on-earth\">https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/may/31/avoiding-meat-and-dairy-is-single-biggest-way-to-reduce-your-impact-on-earth</a> \u2014 just going to keep linking this."
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-23T15:42:00Z",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me/mf2/2020/01/0hbve/",
"category": [
"homebrew-website-club"
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"content": {
"text": "I've just announced #HomebrewWebsiteClub Nottingham on February 5th https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX - just turn up, or RSVP via https://www.jvt.me/posts/2019/08/21/rsvp-from-your-website/",
"html": "<p>I've just announced <a href=\"https://www.jvt.me/tags/homebrew-website-club/\">#HomebrewWebsiteClub</a> Nottingham on February 5th <a href=\"https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX\">https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX</a> - just turn up, or RSVP via <a href=\"https://www.jvt.me/posts/2019/08/21/rsvp-from-your-website/\">https://www.jvt.me/posts/2019/08/21/rsvp-from-your-website/</a></p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jamie Tanna",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me",
"photo": "https://www.jvt.me/img/profile.png"
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-23T15:40:00Z",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me/mf2/2020/01/xyxvr/",
"category": [
"homebrew-website-club"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/JessSalisburyy/status/1220367589571997701"
],
"name": "Reply to https://twitter.com/JessSalisburyy/status/1220367589571997701",
"content": {
"text": "If you want to build / enhance your personal website, #HomebrewWebsiteClub Nottingham is a great place to get involved, next one is the February 5th https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX",
"html": "<p>If you want to build / enhance your personal website, <a href=\"https://www.jvt.me/tags/homebrew-website-club/\">#HomebrewWebsiteClub</a> Nottingham is a great place to get involved, next one is the February 5th <a href=\"https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX\">https://events.indieweb.org/2020/02/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-8IgcYeAQhIKX</a></p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jamie Tanna",
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There are also lots of #HomebrewWebsiteClub events across the world where you can come and build, or enhance, your personal website with something #IndieWeb related - we've got one in Nottingham! https://events.indieweb.org/tag/hwc
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-23T15:16:00Z",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me/mf2/2020/01/ehcqm/",
"category": [
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"indieweb"
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"content": {
"text": "There are also lots of #HomebrewWebsiteClub events across the world where you can come and build, or enhance, your personal website with something #IndieWeb related - we've got one in Nottingham! https://events.indieweb.org/tag/hwc",
"html": "<p>There are also lots of <a href=\"https://www.jvt.me/tags/homebrew-website-club/\">#HomebrewWebsiteClub</a> events across the world where you can come and build, or enhance, your personal website with something <a href=\"https://www.jvt.me/tags/indieweb/\">#IndieWeb</a> related - we've got one in Nottingham! <a href=\"https://events.indieweb.org/tag/hwc\">https://events.indieweb.org/tag/hwc</a></p>"
},
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"type": "card",
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For anyone at #NaConf looking to learn more about owning your data and the #IndieWeb, I recently did a talk about it, with a transcript available at https://www.jvt.me/posts/2019/10/20/indieweb-talk/ which will hopefully shed more light!
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"content": {
"text": "For anyone at #NaConf looking to learn more about owning your data and the #IndieWeb, I recently did a talk about it, with a transcript available at https://www.jvt.me/posts/2019/10/20/indieweb-talk/ which will hopefully shed more light!",
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"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jamie Tanna",
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-23T10:44:00Z",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me/mf2/2020/01/icaff/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://twitter.com/craigburgess/status/1220273778351099905"
],
"name": "Reply to https://twitter.com/craigburgess/status/1220273778351099905",
"content": {
"text": "Awesome to see the first event posted! In case you've not seen Aaron's post there's now a new IndieWeb events site https://events.indieweb.org/ you're more than welcome to still publish the event on eventbrite but would you also be able to publish to there as well, for IndieWeb folks to discover the event, too? Much appreciated!",
"html": "<p>Awesome to see the first event posted! In case you've not seen Aaron's post there's now a new IndieWeb events site <a href=\"https://events.indieweb.org/\">https://events.indieweb.org/</a> you're more than welcome to still publish the event on eventbrite but would you also be able to publish to there as well, for IndieWeb folks to discover the event, too? Much appreciated!</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jamie Tanna",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me",
"photo": "https://www.jvt.me/img/profile.png"
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-23T10:38:00Z",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me/mf2/2020/01/an68d/",
"category": [
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"in-reply-to": [
"https://lobste.rs/s/ilv3l1/whatever_happened_semantic_web#c_sdnehe"
],
"name": "Reply to https://lobste.rs/s/ilv3l1/whatever_happened_semantic_web#c_sdnehe",
"content": {
"text": "Agree that some users won't want to get stuck into it - they're likely also the users who won't be writing raw HTML for their sites.So what we're doing for them is getting Microformats2 support directly into the themes for WordPress, Jekyll, Hugo, etc, so anyone using it can benefit without necessarily doing any work!",
"html": "<p></p><p>Agree that some users won't want to get stuck into it - they're likely also the users who won't be writing raw HTML for their sites.</p><p>So what we're doing for them is getting Microformats2 support directly into the themes for WordPress, Jekyll, Hugo, etc, so anyone using it can benefit without necessarily doing any work!</p>"
},
"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Jamie Tanna",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me",
"photo": "https://www.jvt.me/img/profile.png"
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{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-23T10:27:00Z",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me/mf2/2020/01/tw4ug/",
"category": [
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"indieweb"
],
"in-reply-to": [
"https://lobste.rs/s/ilv3l1/whatever_happened_semantic_web#c_pcqphf"
],
"name": "Reply to https://lobste.rs/s/ilv3l1/whatever_happened_semantic_web#c_pcqphf",
"content": {
"text": "As shared in a separate comment in the thread, there's the Microformats2 specification (see https://microformats.io) which reduces duplication seen with some of the other Semantic Web formats.You can see an example of a parsing result at http://php.microformats.io/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jvt.me%2Fmf2%2F2020%2F01%2F2mylg%2F which produces a standardised structure for the resulting JSON, which makes interconnectivity much simpler.Us folks in the IndieWeb (https://indieweb.org) have been using it for some time with great benefit, but it's always great to hear others reactions too!",
"html": "<p></p><p>As shared in a separate comment in the thread, there's the Microformats2 specification (see <a href=\"https://microformats.io\">https://microformats.io</a>) which reduces duplication seen with some of the other Semantic Web formats.</p><p>You can see an example of a parsing result at <a href=\"http://php.microformats.io/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jvt.me%2Fmf2%2F2020%2F01%2F2mylg%2F\">http://php.microformats.io/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.jvt.me%2Fmf2%2F2020%2F01%2F2mylg%2F</a> which produces a standardised structure for the resulting JSON, which makes interconnectivity much simpler.</p><p>Us folks in the IndieWeb (<a href=\"https://indieweb.org\">https://indieweb.org</a>) have been using it for some time with great benefit, but it's always great to hear others reactions too!</p>"
},
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"type": "card",
"name": "Jamie Tanna",
"url": "https://www.jvt.me",
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Many companies publish their environmental impacts, often annual metrics and specific practices, on their websites.
Are any individuals doing this on their #IndieWeb sites?
https://indieweb.org/environmental_impact
E.g. @rhiaro has https://rhiaro.co.uk/2019/09/reflections-climate
Beyond the environmental impact of our websites themselves (see https://indieweb.org/green_computing), we can do better than corporations, e.g. with "/environment" pages on our own sites, and help inspire & teach each other.
Previously: https://tantek.com/2020/021/t1/first-flights-changes-make
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"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-22 15:25-0800",
"url": "http://tantek.com/2020/022/t3/publish-environmental-impacts-indieweb",
"category": [
"IndieWeb"
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"content": {
"text": "Many companies publish their environmental impacts, often annual metrics and specific practices, on their websites.\n\nAre any individuals doing this on their #IndieWeb sites?\n\nhttps://indieweb.org/environmental_impact\n\nE.g. @rhiaro has https://rhiaro.co.uk/2019/09/reflections-climate\n\nBeyond the environmental impact of our websites themselves (see https://indieweb.org/green_computing), we can do better than corporations, e.g. with \"/environment\" pages on our own sites, and help inspire & teach each other.\n\nPreviously: https://tantek.com/2020/021/t1/first-flights-changes-make",
"html": "Many companies publish their environmental impacts, often annual metrics and specific practices, on their websites.<br /><br />Are any individuals doing this on their #<span class=\"p-category\">IndieWeb</span> sites?<br /><br /><a href=\"https://indieweb.org/environmental_impact\">https://indieweb.org/environmental_impact</a><br /><br />E.g. <a class=\"h-cassis-username\" href=\"https://twitter.com/rhiaro\">@rhiaro</a> has <a href=\"https://rhiaro.co.uk/2019/09/reflections-climate\">https://rhiaro.co.uk/2019/09/reflections-climate</a><br /><br />Beyond the environmental impact of our websites themselves (see <a href=\"https://indieweb.org/green_computing\">https://indieweb.org/green_computing</a>), we can do better than corporations, e.g. with \"/environment\" pages on our own sites, and help inspire & teach each other.<br /><br />Previously: <a href=\"https://tantek.com/2020/021/t1/first-flights-changes-make\">https://tantek.com/2020/021/t1/first-flights-changes-make</a>"
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"type": "card",
"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "http://tantek.com/",
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Fragmention should also explicitly forbid (with "MUST NOT" language) use of fragmentions that start with a "/" character, thus allowing for hashslash (#/) routing URLs like Matrix/Riot URLs: https://riot.im/develop/#/room/#freenode_#indieweb:matrix.org
{
"type": "entry",
"published": "2020-01-22 13:22-0800",
"url": "http://tantek.com/2020/022/t1/",
"in-reply-to": [
"https://github.com/indieweb/fragmention/issues/5"
],
"content": {
"text": "Fragmention should also explicitly forbid (with \"MUST NOT\" language) use of fragmentions that start with a \"/\" character, thus allowing for hashslash (#/) routing URLs like Matrix/Riot URLs: https://riot.im/develop/#/room/#freenode_#indieweb:matrix.org",
"html": "Fragmention should also explicitly forbid (with \"MUST NOT\" language) use of fragmentions that start with a \"/\" character, thus allowing for hashslash (#/) routing URLs like Matrix/Riot URLs: <a href=\"https://riot.im/develop/#/room/%23freenode_%23indieweb:matrix.org\">https://riot.im/develop/#/room/#freenode_#indieweb:matrix.org</a>"
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"author": {
"type": "card",
"name": "Tantek \u00c7elik",
"url": "http://tantek.com/",
"photo": "https://aperture-media.p3k.io/tantek.com/acfddd7d8b2c8cf8aa163651432cc1ec7eb8ec2f881942dca963d305eeaaa6b8.jpg"
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"type": "entry",
"url": "https://github.com/indieweb/fragmention/issues/5",
"name": "issue 5 of GitHub project \u201cfragmention\u201d",
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