A new instance means a new introduction. Hi, I'm RDK! I'm a blind Apple entusiast. I write primarily about indie apps, workflows, accessibility, and much more on my blog from the perspective of a screen reader user.
You will also find several categories, such as blogging and weeknotes.
#introduction #accessibility #apps #indieWeb #blogging #writing
It seems like these days everyone wants to train their AI on your content. Not surprising that more and more creators start looking for better ways to share their work. Read our latest guide and learn how to join #IndieWeb and #ownyourdata: https://buff.ly/3S2NOPM
feito mais um puxadinho no meu site
lhes apresento a página whats up? https://guites.dev/whatsup/ , fazendo uma chupeta no rss da bolha
Por cierto, dejo un artículo que publiqué hace más de un año en el blog, uno de los primeros y más grandes. En él hacía algunas reflexiones sobre la sociedad, su dinámica y la salud mental teniendo en cuenta la tecnología y la vida digital. Ahí ya hacía referencia a Kaczynski o al psiquiatra Thomas Szasz.
Una sociedad ansiosa y deprimida
https://thecheis.com/2023/04/01/una-sociedad-ansiosa-y-deprimida/
How are people getting into the Small Web and related movements these days (aside from fediverse)?
I missed the whole Yesterweb thing and just finished reading their website.
Is Neocities still a common platform for progressive netizens? Should I just self host? Are we going back to web rings? What about Gemini browsers?
Please help, lol.
What are things looking like for 2024/2025?
After months of trying to find time to participate in the IndieWeb Carnival, I finally managed to eek out a post for the July topic of ‘Tools’. So check out what I wrote about the tools I use as a UX designer in Instruments for Empathy.
If someone were to ask me what tools I use to do my job, the answer might surprise some of you. Even 20 years deep into this field, I still encounter misunderstandings about what UX designers actually do. Some think our work revolves around creating wireframes and user flows or making things look aesthetic, but it goes much deeper than that.
UX design is about understanding human behavior, motivations, and needs. It’s most certainly not about the software or gadgets we use but how we use those technologies to meet those motivations and needs.
As a UX designer, I rely heavily on tools that help me gain insight and understanding of people. These tools typically fall into several broad categories, and they consistently and relentlessly change. What remains constant, however, is the goal of our work - to empathize with users and create solutions, through design, that truly address their pain points and enhance their experiences.
The tools I use can be segmented into those we use for research, facilitation, capturing conversations, analyzing data, and communicating concepts and ideas.
1. Research
Research is how we gain empathy, understand behavior and make sense of what people’s needs and desires are. The two biggest tools needed here are:
Expanding Knowledge
In the realm of Research, we focus on gaining empathy and understanding user behavior. Research tools help us uncover the needs and desires of our users, allowing us to design with intention and clarity. What’s most useful here are tools that keep me informed of new methods, processes, other research and ways to manage that knowledge.
Recruitment
Finding the right people to talk to and to share their experiences ensures our research studies are both relevant and insightful.
Capturing Conversations & Behavior
2. Facilitating Conversations
Beyond tools, the right mindset is essential. Facilitation skills ensure that research sessions are productive and that participants feel safe to share their honest opinions and experiences.
3. Analysis and Insight
4. Presenting Findings & Concepts
Sometimes you have to create something in order to communicate your ideas. Often times it’s a drawing, diagram, prototype, presentation or report.
5. Validation
6. Leveling Up
I always want to be better. The three biggest tools I have to continue to level up in addition to anything that’s mentioned here are:
In Conclusion
Don’t fall in love with the tools, fall in love with what you’re using those tools to accomplish.
This post was written as part of the July 2024 IndieWeb Carnival, hosted this month by James. I really like to utilize deadlines. As of posting this, it’s still July somewhere in the world. Thank’s for inviting the participation and to those with the original idea.
the 32-bit cafe is hosting our 5th (!!) community code jam, running from august 4th-17th!
our theme this time is *back to school*! any style of webpage (blog post, image gallery, coding experiment, etc.) is welcome to be submitted to this code jam, as long as it centers around a topic you either know a lot about, want to learn about, or are actively learning! teach us about new things through your submissions!
join us, a lot of folks are excited about this one!
https://32bit.cafe/~xandra/events/codejam5/
#smallweb #codejam #32bitcafe #indieweb #personalweb #webevent #webdev #cozyweb #internet #html #css #js
Oh! Dang! Many thanks to Kristof for pointing out a glaring oversight in my recent updates to make the IndieWeb Webring 🕸️💍 more deterministic:
https://kiko.io/notes/2024/The-fun-of-randomness-in-a-Webring/
I forgot to give the “random site” feature its own link!
It’s back! You can now visit 🕸️💍.ws/random to go to a random active site on the ring.
It’s also linked on the landing page of the webring.
For best results, add it to your bookmarks! 🔖🕸️💍🎲
Now that I moved from Neocities to Bear for blogging, I’m hoping to post more frequently.
For someone with a plain old static website who literally just drags and drops the files to a plain old web server using my file browser, all of this #indieweb stuff seems so complicated!
On https://bookstacks.app, I replaced #Django ImageKit with barebones code to create thumbnails when images are uploaded. Pages with lots of thumbnails are now NOTICEABLY faster. It boggles my mind that this isn’t a solved problem. Images and CDNs (DigitalOcean Spaces in this case) and SPEED!
So, as you all know, I stay in the #IndieWeb and love reading RSS feeds and such! To be honest, I love my RSS feeds a billion times more than I love Mastodon and the Fediverse. For ages, I've been reading https://marcorogers.com/ and I can't remember how I even found his website in the first place, but I also just found him on the Fedi! I mean, not to put a spotlight on him or anything, but I love stumbling across people on social media that I've been reading for months via RSS feed. It's like I'm walking through a town and suddenly I see someone from afar and think, they wrote about cats last year and I loved it! @polotek
How do we keep the web open while keeping our work out of large language models? Should we even worry about it?
#AskMastodon #indieweb #blogging