Reminder that it's a #Hacktoberfest themed #HomebrewWebsiteClub Nottingham tomorrow! I hope to see you there at 1730 for some #FreeSoftware and #OpenSource work! https://events.indieweb.org/2020/10/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-hacktoberfest-edition--UHGfScpJfzyp
Like, I want:
Lwa to have a solid Web (centralized and not) presence. I’d love for it to a fusion of something like Lighthouse, Superfeedr and itself with a native mobile app that can be used to experiment on additions to things like Micropub and Microsub in one spot. Initially, I wanted to make everything granular but it’s just generally easier to avoid heavy context switching if I just smash it together for now with a sense of concern separation.
Koype to get to micro.blog’s level. I made a random statement to Manton that I’ll have Koype Hub up and running as a “competitor” (I like testy comrade better, lol). That would be a combination of both Lwa working in tip top shape and Koype Hub so one can just “register” and it’ll provision them with some sane defaults.
The more I think about it, I want to make open and flexible forms of something like Wordpress and Tumblr in one place.
I really need to just focus on the things that ‘serve’ (interest) me and those around it. I feel like I was slacking this year regarding IndieWeb/fedi/p2p stuff and I’m just a bit grumpy about progress.
I think I figured out how to bridge something like SSB into the IndieWeb. In short, a n-count hub, one for each user, that handles the work of following and subscribing to people in the space as well as handling messages from the IndieWeb into the SSB space.
I have ideas on how this might work. I need to sit down and finish what I have built for the fusion of Lwa and Lighthouse so I can make this simple. The goal, by the way, with the new Lwa is to take all of the logic for Webmentions and fold it into that service. That way, people can get a in-built reader for their mentions. I might aim to handle authorization of feeds as well. Perhaps also a button to handle registration with things like Twitter and Mastodon via Bridgy.
The “Adjust CSS” slider on this delightful homepage is an effective (and cute) illustration of progressive enhancement in action.
Strong same:
I’m glad I have this site to play with things, almost all web development and ‘front-end’ stuff leaves me cold these days. It’s all so process driven, so full of unnecessary complexities and dependencies, it’s as if the entire industry wants you to forget you can write HTML by hand and upload it somewhere and it’s a working website. It’s complexity for complexity’s sake, like what accountancy software companies did to the tax code: “Oh this is too complex you need to pay us lots of money to sort it out.” Annoying. I can see some resistance to it and there are still people making blogs and playing around with stuff, so hopefully the professional professionals will calm the fuck down at some point.
In a scary turn of events, it's already October! But that means it's #Hacktoberfest, which is super exciting - reminder that it's #HomebrewWebsiteClub Nottingham on Wednesday which will be Hacktoberfest themed - I hope to see you there for some Free and Open Source contributing! https://events.indieweb.org/2020/09/homebrew-website-club-nottingham-hacktoberfest-edition--dTrYgmFEBZff
I’ve just reinstalled some IndieWeb support to this blog, let’s see how it works out.
Also, hello again to folks on Micro.blog! 🙂
wearsmanyhats.micro.blogYou might not think this is a big deal, and maybe it’s not, but I love the idea behind the indie web: a people-focused alternative to the corporate web. Seeing everything you’ve ever linked to in one place really drives home how much of the web’s content, made by individuals, is under corporate control and identity.