đ Webring Wednesday #2: Cult of Usakumya đ
If you love frills, lace, and the whimsical charm of lolita fashion, the Cult of Usakumya webring is calling your name! đ§žâš This delightful webring is a haven for lolitas of all substyles, bringing together fashion enthusiasts who want to showcase their coordinates, share their personal sites, and connect with fellow frilly friends across the web.
Much like the Small Web itself, lolita fashion is all about creativity, self-expression, and standing out from the crowd. Whether youâre into sweet, gothic, classic, or even old-school lolita, this webring welcomes you with open arms!
đ Check it out: https://ophanimkei.com/you/usakumya
Are you part of the Cult of Usakumya, or do you have fond memories of lolita fashion forums and personal blogs? Feel free to drop your favorite lolita-related website in the comments! đđ
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@sovereignweb @indieweb @neocities @smallweb @webdev @blog @webdesign
#Indieweb #NekoWeb #Neocities #Nostalgia #Oldweb #Smallweb #Sovereignweb #Webdesign #Webdev #Webrevival #Webring
đ Webring Wednesday #1: Billâs PC đ
This week on Webring Wednesday, weâre checking out Billâs PC, a fun little corner of the web dedicated to PokĂ©mon fans. đčïž Whether youâre into classic Game Boy games, PokĂ©mon Go, the TCG, or the latest titles, this webring is for everyone with a dedicated Pokemon space on their site! This is a great way for PokĂ©mon lovers to meet other fans on the Small Web, connect, share their fandom, and celebrate all things PokĂ©mon. âš đ Check it out! https://bills-pc.neocities.org/
đĄ Whatâs your all-time favorite PokĂ©mon game or character? Let us know!
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@sovereignweb @indieweb @neocities @smallweb @webdev @blog @webdesign
#Indieweb #NekoWeb #Neocities #Nostalgia #Oldweb #Pokemon #Smallweb #Sovereignweb #Webdev #Webrevival #Webring
đ§Ą Tuesday Tips #5: đ§Ą Why You Should Own Your Online Space (and How to Start Today)
Letâs get one thing straight: having your own corner of the internet is not just for techies, artists, or people with too much time on their hands. Itâs for you. Yes, youâwith your odd hobbies, your half-finished journal entries, your overthinking, your bad puns, your brilliance. You deserve a space thatâs yours, where youâre not being watched, monetized, or squeezed into a template made by a company that sees you as a number.
And letâs be honest: the internet kind of feels like a giant shopping mall these days. You can hang out, sureâbut itâs usually in someone elseâs space, under someone elseâs rules, and youâre constantly being watched, tracked, and served ads youâre 93% sure you said out loud in a private conversation.
But hereâs the good news: you donât have to live in the mall. You can build your own weird little house on the web. Paint the walls neon green. Hang up digital fairy lights. Play ambient frog sounds. Whatever you wantâbecause itâs yours. Owning your online space is about reclaiming a little bit of digital freedom. A place to plant your flag. To say, âHere I am. This is mine.â
This article is a call to arms (or at least to keyboards): itâs time to own your online space. And no, you donât need to be a tech genius or code wizard to get started. Letâs dive in.
The Problem with Borrowed Space
Right now, most people exist online through borrowed platforms: Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, X (formerly known as Twitter), YouTube, etc. These are free to useâbut you pay in other ways. Algorithms decide who sees what. Accounts can disappear overnight. And youâre building your digital life on rented land. Social media platforms might feel like home, but really, youâre just crashing on a billionaireâs couch. Sure, itâs comfy and familiar and thereâs always a party going on, but at any moment, the host could kick you out, change the rules, or suddenly decide that your favorite snack is banned. When you rely on social media alone, youâre kind of at the mercy of tech landlords. Want to post a link? Hope it doesnât get buried. Want to share a thought? Better make it catchy or controversial enough to survive the scroll. And donât even get me started on data privacy.
When you build your own siteâwhether itâs a blog, a personal page, a digital garden, or a collection of your favorite playlistsâyouâre not at anyoneâs mercy. Youâre setting up your own little house on the web. You choose the furniture, the wallpaper, the music playing in the background. And if you want to take a sledgehammer to the whole thing and start over? You can. Because itâs yours.
Unlike social media, your site wonât randomly vanish because someone flagged your joke about raccoons as âsuspicious behavior.â
So, What Does It Mean to Own Your Online Space?
Thereâs something weirdly powerful about having a space thatâs fully under your control. You start thinking differently. You stop trying to perform for likes or tailor everything to fit an algorithm. Youâre not trying to go viral. Youâre trying to make something that feels true. And that changes everything. You let your thoughts breathe. You let yourself experiment. Writing a blog post on your own site doesnât feel like shouting into the voidâit feels like writing in a cozy notebook that just happens to have a door open in case someone else wants to read.
Owning your online space means having a place on the internet that you control completely. That could be:
Itâs a corner of the web where you make the rules, you decide the vibe, and you get to exist outside the noise of social media. When youâre not worried about how your content will âperform,â you start creating in a way thatâs a little more honest. Maybe a little messier. But real.
Why Bother?
Hereâs why itâs 100% worth it:
And letâs be honest: the modern internet is a surveillance nightmare. Every tap, scroll, click, pauseâitâs all being recorded. Your online behavior is constantly fed into machines that exist to sell you things. Or worse, manipulate your emotions for âengagement.â
When you run your own site, you donât need trackers. You donât need cookies (unless theyâre literal cookies). Youâre not harvesting dataâyouâre just making stuff. You get to choose what information to collect (if any), and who sees it. No shady data mining. No selling your soul for a sliver of reach. Itâs not just about avoiding adsâitâs about refusing to be turned into a product.
Social media gives you a profile. A little rectangle to summarize your entire existence. A name, a picture, maybe a few links. But who you areâyour thoughts, interests, sense of humor, bad takes, brilliant insightsâthat barely fits in a bio.
Your own site is like your room. You can put posters on the wall. Leave your laundry on the floor. Paint the ceiling bright yellow if you want. Itâs where your digital self can be fully, gloriously you. Not a brand. Not a product. Not a carefully managed online persona.
Weâre so used to being boxed in by platforms that we forget how expansive the web used to be. But when you build something from scratch, even a tiny something, you realizeâyou can be as weird, bold, chaotic, soft, or contradictory as you want. And no one can stop you. Owning your online space is a quiet kind of rebellion. A way of saying: âNo, I donât want to live inside a feed. I want to make something thatâs mine.â And yeah, it might not get you thousands of followers overnight. But it might help you find your people. The ones who stick around. The ones who see you.
How to Start Today (No, SeriouslyâToday)
If the idea of setting up a personal site sounds like something only people in hoodies and hacker movies do, donât worry. You donât need to be Neo from The Matrix to do this.
Hereâs a super chill beginner path:
1. Pick Your Platform
There are plenty of easy, beginner-friendly tools that make starting a website simple:
Most of these are free, and some with limitations until you upgrade, though you shouldnât need advanced features just starting out anyways. This is a âdip your toes inâ experience! Once you pick your chosen platform, start experimenting with it! Try building your first page. Mess around with different buttons, discover and learn what everything does. Soon youâll be well on your way to creating something spectacular.
2. Choose a Domain (Optional But Empowering)
A domain is your web address (like yourname.com). Itâs not required to start, but having one makes your site feel officialâand itâs easier to share.
Domains usually cost around $10â15/year. Try something short, memorable, and personal. You can buy one through providers like Namecheap or Go Daddy.
3. Set Up Your Home Base
Once youâve got your platform and (maybe) a domain, itâs time to build. Start small. Donât overthink it. Some ideas for your first few pages:
If you need more inspiration, be sure to check out my 54 page ideas post.
4. Make It Yours
Add colors you love. Use silly gifs. Write in your voice. Add a moodboard. This is your corner of the internetâthere are no rules except your own.
The goal isnât perfectionâitâs presence. Let your site evolve as you do.
5. Keep Showing Up
Your website isnât something you launch once and forget about (unless you want it to be). Itâs a living space and a place you should enjoy coming to regularly. Check in with it. Tidy it up. Add something new every now and then. Make it a space you love working on and enjoy being in.
Like a garden, it gets better the more you tend it.
Final Thoughts: You Belong Here
The web isnât just for brands, influencers, or tech pros. Itâs for people like you. People with stories, art, opinions, weird little jokes, dreams, playlists, favorite links, and digital lives that deserve more than just borrowed space.
So go onâplant your flag. Build your weird digital house. Start messy. Start small. Just start.
Your space is waiting.
P.S. If you do make a site, Iâd love to see it! Leave a comment, share your link, and join the lovely folks making the sovereign web feel like home again.
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@sovereignweb @indieweb @neocities @smallweb @webdev @blog @webdesign
#Indieweb #NekoWeb #Neocities #Smallweb #Sovereignweb #Webdesign #Webdev #Webrevival
đ§Ą Tuesday Tips #4: đ§Ą 50 Reasons to Build a Personal Website Instead of Relying on Social Media
So youâve been thinking about making a personal website, huh? Maybe youâre feeling a little burned out from ad bombardments, or just social media in general lately. Good news: youâre not alone. Thereâs a growing group of people carving out cozy corners of the internet that are completely their own. We call it the Sovereign Web (many might also know it as the Indie Web or Small Web), and itâs honestly kind of magical.
Still not sure if youâre ready to dive in? Here are 50 reasons why building a personal website beats relying on social media. (Warning: may cause spontaneous domain name purchases.)
1. Itâs yours. Like, actually yours.
When you post on social media, youâre essentially renting space. Your content can be removed, shadowbanned, or buried at any time without warning. With your own site, youâre the landlord, the designer, and the content creator all rolled into one. Itâs digital ownership in its purest form.
2. No weird algorithm whispering.
Social media is a game of guessing what the algorithm wants. One day, it loves video. The next, it punishes you for posting too much. With a personal website, what you post is what people see; no weird magic tricks required.
3. No ads.
Unless you choose to put them there. Your website doesnât need to shout at visitors to buy toothpaste or download the latest app. It can just be a calm, ad-free oasis of you.
4. Zero doomscrolling.
You know the drill. You go on to post something and 45 minutes later youâre deep into a thread of rage. Your personal site? No feed, no drama. (You can create a blog feed though via RSS if you want to!)
5. You can make it look exactly how you want.
Want a sparkly cursor? A cozy vintage theme? Maybe a floating cat gif? Go for it. Your site is your canvas, and there are no design police.
6. You get to be weird.
Weird is welcome. In fact, itâs encouraged. Build a shrine to your favorite childhood cartoon or create a digital bookshelf of every novel youâve ever loved. There are no rules here.
7. Youâll learn cool stuff.
Even if youâre starting with zero knowledge, making a website teaches you thingsâHTML, CSS, design, structure, creative writing. Itâs the kind of learning that feels like playing.
8. You can make it feel like a digital home.
Social profiles are rented apartments. Your website? A house you get to decorate, organize, and live in. It becomes a familiar, comfortable space that reflects you.
9. No oneâs watching your every move.
Unlike social media platforms, which track everything you do to serve you ads, your website can be a surveillance-free zone. Visitors can hang out without being followed around the internet afterward.
10. Youâre not competing for likes.
Thereâs no like button on your site (unless you want one). So youâre free to post what you love, not what will perform best in a popularity contest.
11. You set the vibe.
Want lo-fi music autoplaying in the background? Go for it. Want every page to start with a motivational quote or your catâs daily wisdom? Itâs all up to you. Your site, your mood.
12. It can evolve with you.
Unlike a locked-down profile, your personal site can grow, change, and shift over time. Turn your blog into a portfolio. Make your old art gallery a recipe archive. Itâs a living space.
13. No random feature changes.
Remember when Instagram tried to become TikTok overnight? Yeah. Your website isnât going to suddenly switch up on you because a CEO changed their mind. Stability, baby. You make the rules.
14. You decide what stays up.
Posts donât disappear unless you want them to. No mysterious removals. No content warnings slapped on your grandmaâs casserole recipe.
15. You wonât get locked out.
Unless you forget your password (write it down!), you canât get banned from your own website. No more waking up to âyour account has been suspendedâ emails.
16. You control the narrative.
Algorithms love to de-contextualize things. Your website gives you the full story. A place to explain, explore, and express on your own terms.
17. People visit because they want to.
They didnât stumble in while scrolling. They came to see you. That kind of intentionality makes every visit feel a little more meaningful.
18. You can make timeless content.
Instead of disappearing into a sea of tweets, your thoughts can live forever on a well-organized blog post or static page. Evergreen content has a real home on the web.
19. It helps you build your digital legacy.
Someday, people will want to know who you were. Your website is a time capsule. A treasure map. A story of who you are in your own words.
20. You can connect without the chaos.
Guestbooks, comment sections, or even email forms let people reach out without the noise of DMs, trolls, or spam bots.
21. No character limits.
Got a lot to say? Say it. Youâre not confined to 280 characters or forced to cut down your thoughts to fit a format. Write a sentence or an essayâyour site doesnât care.
22. You can build your own community.
With a little creativity, you can add forums, guestbooks, chat boxes, or webrings. Create a cozy club of like-minded folks without relying on corporate platforms.
23. Itâs immune to social media shutdowns.
When a platform dies or gets bought out and ruined (*cough* Twitter), your site doesnât flinch. Itâs still there, waiting for visitors.
24. You can express yourself fully.
From color schemes to quirky fonts and animated gifs, youâre not boxed into a single identity photo and bio. Let your personality spill into every page.
25. There are no trolls unless you invite them.
You can moderate comments or remove them entirely. Unlike public platforms, you donât have to tolerate abuse, spam, or bad vibes.
26. You get to experiment freely.
Try a new blog format, embed a mini-game, host a digital pet. You can play and break things and rebuildâall without anyone watching.
27. It gives you creative freedom.
Poetry, zines, recipes, fiction, rants, longform essays, audio diariesâwhatever you make, thereâs space for it.
28. Your content wonât be buried.
On social media, your posts vanish/become irrelevant within hours. On your site, people can discover things you wrote years ago just as easily as something from yesterday.
29. You can showcase your work beautifully.
Whether youâre a photographer, writer, or crocheter, your site can act as a curated gallery. Show off what youâre proud of without it being surrounded by chaos.
30. Itâs a great place to archive.
Old blog posts, artwork, digital journalsâyour site becomes a place to store your memories, milestones, and the things that matter most to you.
31. You can link out to cool stuff.
Unlike platforms that try to trap you inside their walls, your website can point people to other places you love, including friendsâ sites, resources, or secret gems.
32. Youâre not a product.
Social media thrives on turning users into data. Your website doesnât track or manipulate you. Itâs just⊠yours. Thatâs it! Thereâs no catch.
33. It doesnât interrupt you.
No notifications. No infinite scroll. Just a peaceful little world that sits quietly until you decide to update it.
34. Youâll meet kindred spirits.
People who find personal websites often do so intentionally. Theyâre curious, thoughtful, and usually pretty lovely. Great ingredients for real connection.
35. You can revisit and reflect.
Years later, reading your old posts can feel like a time machine. Your site becomes a living archive of your thoughts, dreams, and progress.
36. It makes you more mindful.
Without the instant gratification loop of likes and retweets, you might find yourself thinking more deeply about what you post and why.
37. Itâs free of FOMO.
Youâre not constantly seeing other peopleâs highlight reels and comparing your behind-the-scenes. Your site focuses on you, not everyone else.
38. You can go slow.
No need to keep up with trends or daily posts. Update when you feel like it. Take a break. Come back refreshed. Your site will still be there.
39. You can use your own domain.
Having yourname.com just feels cool, right? Itâs like planting a flag in your own corner of the internet.
40. You donât have to chase followers.
Instead of playing the growth game, you can focus on making cool stuff. The people who find you will be the ones who genuinely care.
41. It encourages intentionality.
Because updates arenât instant, youâll likely spend more time crafting your content. That care shows, and it makes your site feel special.
42. You can build your own tools.
Want a mood tracker? A mini wiki? A spell-crafting generator? You can code or embed whatever tools you dream up.
43. Itâs surprisingly fun.
Thereâs joy in creating just for the sake of it. Tinkering with layout, colors, and content can feel like digital gardening.
44. Youâre contributing to a better web.
Every personal website weakens the monopoly of Big Tech. Youâre helping build a diverse, vibrant, human-centered internet.
45. Itâs nostalgic in the best way.
Remember the early internet when people made fansites and blogs and shared links just because? That energy is still alive on the sovereign web.
46. You can go offline anytime.
Want a break? Just stop updating. No pressure. No guilt. The web will wait.
47. Youâll have a creative outlet.
Even if you donât consider yourself an âartist,â a website gives you a space to express and explore yourself.
48. Itâs easier than ever.
You donât need to be a tech wizard. Tools like WordPress, mmm.page, Straw.page or Carrd make it super beginner-friendly.
49. You can inspire others.
Your little corner of the internet might be exactly what someone else needed to see. You never know who youâll touch.
50. Because you deserve a space thatâs 100% you.
No ads. No algorithms. No noise. Just a place where you get to be yourself, unapologetically and fully. The internet needs more of thatâand more of you.
So, Why Wait?
The internet doesnât have to be a loud, crowded mall where everyoneâs shouting for attention. It can be a quiet cabin in the woods, a secret garden, a tiny cafĂ© glowing with string lights where you share your thoughts, dreams, art, and self with whoever wanders in.
Building your own personal website isnât just about escaping the chaos of social mediaâitâs about coming home to a space that reflects you. Your humor, your quirks, your passions, your pace. Itâs a chance to slow down and make something meaningful. Something that doesnât ask you to perform, compete, or conform.
And hereâs the beautiful part: you donât need to be a tech wizard. You donât need to have a niche or a âbrand.â You just need to be curious, a little bit brave, and willing to make something for yourself. The rest? That comes with timeâand itâs honestly kind of magical to watch it all unfold.
So go ahead. Plant your flag. Build your nest. Start small, dream big, and know that every pixel you place is a step toward reclaiming your presence online.
Weâll be here cheering you on, one cozy corner of the web at a time. đ»
When youâre ready to get started, head over to the Resources page! There are tons of helpful links to help you start building your personal space on the web. âšđż
See you there!
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@sovereignweb @indieweb @neocities @smallweb
#Blog #Indieweb #NekoWeb #Neocities #Smallweb #Sovereignweb #Webdesign #Webdev #Webrevival
đ§Ą Tuesday Tips #3 đ§Ą | 25 Ways to Make Your Website More Personal & Unique
Your Website, Your Digital Home
Your website is more than just a collection of pages; itâs your digital home. It should reflect you, your interests, and your personality. But with so many sites out there, how do you make yours stand out?
Here are 25 ways to make your website feel more personal, unique, and personalized to you!
đš Design & Aesthetics
1. Custom Color Palette â Pick colors that resonate with your personality and aesthetic.
2. Unique Typography Choices â Use a mix of fonts that match your vibe.
3. Handwritten or Doodle Elements â Add personal sketches or notes.
4. Custom Cursor â Let visitors use a fun, themed cursor on your site.
5. Personalized Favicon â A tiny but powerful detail that makes your site feel complete.
6. Themed Layouts for Different Pages â Make each page visually distinct but cohesive.
7. Custom Backgrounds â Textures, gradients, or even a personal photograph.
8. Retro or Experimental CSS Styles â Go wild with unique styles that make your site stand out.
9. Create a Custom Hand-Drawn Logo â Instead of a standard logo, try sketching one yourself for a unique touch.
10. Add Subtle Animations â Small hover effects, background animations, or cursor trails can bring your site to life.
11. Play With Layering Elements â Overlap images, text, and shapes for a more dynamic look.
12. Design a Personalized Loading Screen â A custom loading animation or message adds a fun detail visitors will remember.
13. Add Your Own Handwriting as a Font â Convert your handwriting into a web font for a truly personal touch.
14. Design a Seasonal Theme Switcher â Let visitors toggle between different seasonal or mood-based color palettes.
đ Content & Personality
15. Create a Behind-the-Scenes Page â Show how your website was built, share your thought process, or include fun bloopers.
16. Add a âThe Making Ofâ Section â Share drafts, sketches, or early concepts behind your creative works.
17. Include a Personal Dictionary of Words You Love â A list of favorite words, phrases, or slang you frequently use.
18. Design a âThings That Make Me Happyâ Page â A simple, uplifting page filled with personal joys.
19. Show Your Progress on a Learning Goal â Track and share your journey in learning a new skill, language, or hobby.
đŸ Interactivity & Engagement
20. Add a Clickable Mood Indicator â Let visitors see your current mood with an emoji or phrase that changes over time.
21. Create a Dynamic Banner That Updates Automatically â Display different messages depending on the time of day or special occasions.
22. Add a âWhat Iâm Listening Toâ Widget â A live-updating display of your current favorite song or playlist.
23. Embed a Poll or Voting Feature â Let visitors vote on fun topics or help you make creative decisions.
24. Introduce a Mini Personality Quiz â Something quirky like âWhich of my favorite books/movies are you?â
25. Make an âAsk Me Anythingâ Page â An interactive page where visitors can submit questions for you to answer.
Closing: Make It Yours!
Your website should be you in digital formâfun, unique, and engaging. Whether you add just one or all 25 ideas, the most important thing is to have fun and make it your own.
If you try any of these ideas, let me know! Iâd love to see what you create!
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Source: https://sovereignweb.thecozy.cat/blog/uncategorized/%f0%9f%a7%a1-tuesday-tips-3-%f0%9f%a7%a1/
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@sovereignweb @indieweb @neocities @smallweb
#Indieweb #NekoWeb #Neocities #Nostalgia #Oldweb #Smallweb #Sovereignweb #Webdesign #Webdev #Webrevival
đ§Ą Tuesday Tips #2 đ§Ą | Escape the Algorithm: Master RSS & Atom Feeds
Hey all! For this weekâs Tuesday Tips, I wanted to share my RSS / Atom Feed masterpost with you all! If youâve ever wanted to create your own ânews feedâ for your website that people can actually follow you on via their RSS / Atom reader apps, Iâm going to teach you how to do it!
If learning about RSS / Atom feeds interests you, head over to my blog post here for the full read.
Happy Tuesday!
Source: https://sovereignweb.thecozy.cat/blog/uncategorized/%f0%9f%a7%a1-tuesday-tips-2-%f0%9f%a7%a1/
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@sovereignweb @indieweb @neocities @smallweb
#Atom #Indieweb #NekoWeb #Neocities #Nostalgia #Oldweb #Rss #Rssfeed #Smallweb #Sovereignweb #Webdesign #Webdev #Webrevival
Felt vulnerable, might delete later.
(Not really, I like writing like this)
#indieweb
https://angrybunnyman.com/a-strange-beautiful-improbable-thing/
Today's our 9th birthday! đ„ł
To celebrate, we've just launched the Gaymers+ #Webring!
If you're an #LGBTQ creator with a #Gaming website, JOIN TODAY and let's take back the web! đȘ
https://www.criticalchicken.com/webring
#IndieWeb #Gaymer #Gaymers #LGBTQ #LGBT #Pride #VideoGames #WebDev #Webrings #OldWeb #SlowWeb #RetroWeb #Neocities
speaking of personal websites
(especially if you're plural and you're several to post on your website), do you have a CMS/static site generator/other you could advise us&? we& can't really design beautiful websites, but we&'d still like to try so ideally not something too opinionated. if it's hard to use it's not a problem, we&'ll manage
ââ
#blog #personalwebsite #indieweb #plurality
Far more people engage with my website via feed reader than email. Chalk one up for RSS. #indieweb
Far more people engage with my website via feed reader than email. Chalk one up for RSS. #indieweb
Syndicating with json feed
I got really excited about json feeds after reading about it in the Echo Feed docs. Using 11ty to build out the feed was super silly easy. Iâm now taking full advantage of syndicating features in Echo Feed. #Indieweb
https://benjamin.parry.is/collecting/thoughts/2025/06/syndicating-with-json-feed/
Volviendo sobre el tema de la #indieweb , recomiendo que escuchéis este podcast, para aclarar conceptos y fundamentos
Web Reactiva: WR 117: IndieWeb para novatos
PĂĄgina del episodio: https://www.spreaker.com/episode/wr-117-indieweb-para-novatos--20622363
Archivo de medios: https://api.spreaker.com/download/episode/20622363/web_reactiva_117.mp3
My lack of cuisine knowledge could actually be an asset to you. As I ask you what's in Kerrygold, that'll give you the perfect opportunity to sit and think about the knowledge of food and food ingredients that I simply don't have and have never had access to. This will enhance your critical thinking skills, guaranteed. https://sightlessscribbles.com/posts/20250609/ #Money #Vacation #Blog #Blogging #IndieWeb
W is for <del>Wiki</del> Web.
Demain Ă 15h, jâai la joie de mâassocier Ă Vincent Peugnet pour rĂ©pondre Ă lâinvitation dâInachevĂ© dâimprimer. La discussion sâappuiera sur W https://w.club1.fr, tournera autour du web indĂ©pendant, ses imaginaires et ses outils bricolĂ©s.
https://inacheve-dimprimer.net
Merci @julientaq, @arthurperret, @antoinentl !
In this guide, we will develop a Raycast plugin that allows us to create a note that will be published not only on our page, but also syndicated to Mastodon and/or Bluesky.
#getkirby #indieweb #posse #IndieConnector #raycast
https://maurice-renck.de/en/learn/built-with-kirby/raycast-kirby-posse
I'm moving accounts!
After a ridiculous 18 hours of sheer stubbornness and determination, I have finally managed to federate my website. đ This will also resolve the double hashtag issue I've been battling the past couple months.
If you like the content I have to share here and want to continue supporting this marketing campaign under a new name and renewed mission, please consider following / refollowing me over on my new account: @aevisia
#update #sovereignweb #indieweb #smallweb