WebFinger
Official documentation and tester for WebFinger information. Note that Mastodon has some non-official ways to allow incoming requests, like https://mastodon.social/@box464 or @box464@mastodon.social (without acct:)
I'm kind of amazed the Verge actually says something positive about #IndieWeb philosophies. https://www.theverge.com/2023/10/23/23928550/posse-posting-activitypub-standard-twitter-tumblr-mastodon
This is a really good article about #IndieWeb - owning your identity and data on the Internet
#webrings watch No. 21
Yu-Gi-Oh! #webring
https://whimwitch.neocities.org/ygoring/
It's time to d-d-d-d dive into this card game / anime inspired clique. The owner, Whim, is a legitimate fan and avid webmaster. Consider giving both a visit!
#yugioh #tabletop #anime #trading #indieweb #smallweb #webdev #html #code #programming #web
I enjoyed reading this interview with Jim Nielsen, much as I enjoy reading Jim’s blog. He says:
The best part of blogging is what you discover and learn experientially along the way.
That chimes with what Matthias says in the first issue of his new newsletter:
On your personal site, getting it wrong is not a bug, it’s a feature. It’s a chance to start small, take first steps, learn, edit, and improve. It’s an invaluable opportunity to evolve and to grow.
@darrenpmeyer Self-hosted blog on a domain you own with an #RSS feed is the best way. Please no Medium or sub stack, etc... Bonus points for having #IndieWeb capabilities (https://indieweb.org). What useful social features does Medium, etc.. offer? Those platforms mostly just put annoying barriers to me actually reading the content so imo, not good.
Pretty cool seeing POSSE getting traction on The Verge, of all places:
The next big social network is just the Web
Jeremiah Lee
Schöner kann man das Fediverse nicht beschreiben ❤️
Thanks @Jeremiah
My ever-growing, gigantic list of #infosec blogs, with sections for indie, commercial, aggro and more!
https://shellsharks.com/infosec-blogs
The post currently features 3300+ unique infosec-related blogs/sites and has a downloadable, importable .opml file for use in your RSS aggregator of choice.
If you have a blog or site you want included in the list or know of one that is missing, feel free to let me know!
Trying to figure out a good setup for photos on my blog (https://jonas.brusman.se).
The current setup based on Git LFS on Netlify is cumbersome and doesn’t allow me to post new photos from my phone with something like Tina CMS.
Suggestions are welcome!
#eleventy #11ty #staticsite #netlify #photoblog #gitlfs #tinacms #ssg #webdev #indieweb
#webrings watch No. 20
Generation Lissa #webring
https://genlissa.neocities.org/
Time for a blast from the past! Did you start making websites in the late 90s/early 00s and are still here, making personal websites or blogs? Then @darnielle has the clique for you! Join today!
#90s #retro #blog #indieweb #SmallWeb #webdev #html #code #programming #web
Over a year ago, I decided to change the trajectory of my newsletter. Before October 2022, I used Substack as a free way to inform my subscribers of new blog poss. Then, I realised that Substack could be much, much more. And the possibilities filled me with excitement.
Now, a year later, I can say that the enthusiasm is deflated, though still there. My conclusion is that to succeed on Substack, you need to put in a lot of work like any other platform. I’m fine with the work, but I also realise that a lot of it could still be out of your control and are influenced by encroaching social media-like algorithms on Substack, the dominant demographic on the platform and your social media klout.
Below are my observations, and feel free to chime in the comments if this has and has not been your experience.
I’ve also been kind of reluctant to let so much of my content live somewhere other than on my website. It doesn’t matter that Substack is a great platform, and that I can move my content off it whenever I want. It doesn’t matter that I can monetize my content here. It’s still not my platform, and I have no control over the rollout of new features, visual changes, monetization policies, et.c. Some people have complained to me that I’m being too pushy trying to get them to pay for a subscription. Well, it’s not me doing the pushing, it’s Substack. It’s all automated and beyond my control. And ultimately, what matters the most to me in my business in control and autonomy. – Bye, Substack
So, there you have it. Substack gives me mixed emotions. On the one hand, I’ve been able to increase my subscriber base thanks to it. On the other hand, it gives me a lot of pressure at the same time. I’m not sure what to make of it! Except that I have way more fun on Mastodon and on my blog than on Substack and it’s making me wonder if I should leave it like some Substackers have.
https://elizabethtai.com/2023/10/22/what-i-learned-from-one-year-of-substack/
#BeingAWriter #blogging #indieweb #Internet #socialmedia #Substack #writing
Instead of doing work for my web development class, today I've been reading articles and watching videos about digital gardens, obsidian, and personal websites. Oops?
I've redesigned my blog and switched to #Eleventy!
It was getting quite painful to use #Jekyll, I wanted automatic thumbnail generation and more control. By switching to Eleventy, I've been able to replace my mess of scripts and template code with much simpler JS. It also unlocks new possibilities - such as backlinks and customisations to the markdown parser
@dave I’ve been looking for a way to share my reading list on my (#indieweb) blog!
Are you aware of a way to codify them? An OPML feed with a particular tag? Specific micro format codes? (Perhaps it bakes into microsub?)
Is there a list of clients that support the “subscribe” set of features you describe? (Beyond “import”)
Would love any thoughts you have 😊
Microformats Parser
A way to validate the microformat attributes in a set of HTML or an entire page.
And to be clear this is to store PDFs, images, and similar documents.
Something that interacts well with ActiveStorage would be nice, given that this is for Rails project.
Among the alternatives I've noticed:
- https://www.fastly.com/pricing
- https://wasabi.com/cloud-storage-pricing/
- https://bunny.net/pricing/
Fastly seems a bit too big for my needs, and there's also CloudFlare which seems too big as well.
Curious about your experience with smaller CDN services.