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Liked https://beko.famkos.net/2019/11/25/indiewebcamp-berlin-2/

IndieWebCamp Berlin 2

Visited Berlin / Germany for the #IndieWebCamp to learn more about the #IndieWeb. We changed plans last minute and went by train to the camp when we found out about the new and kinda cheap #FlixTrain from Stuttgart to Berlin.

Tram station in Berlin

The #IWC itself has been a blast. The location was the office grounds of Mozilla Berlin and we were even offered a tour to take a good look at it (and it’s coffee machines).

The group was a very mixed bunch from various places. Some even took planes over the ocean to visit the camp on the continent. It’s nice to put faces on people I only knew from reading so far and I’m grateful for this chance.

Tantek �elik speaking

The first day was all about getting to know the people. Organizer Tantek �elik invited everyone to speak up and introduce themselves and their websites so we got a lot of examples of itches already scratched with #IndieWeb principles.

We also learned about the OptOutTools project from the keynote speaker Teresa Ingram with the bold claim to work on AI capable of detecting misogyny online. It’s browser extention is designed like an ad-blocker or personal firewall where the user can decide how much of offending text may be displayed (or even none at all). Undetected phrases can be added to the filter to train it even more as well.

This resulted in a lof of discussion about intented and unintended side effects and how and in what ways speech will change and how people will try to break it. Detecing e.g. hate speech by AI is a goal even FB was (officially) not able to tackle so far. I’m very curious if and how this succeeds so I’ll keep an eye on their GIT repositories.

Learning about RFC 6920

Parallel other talks were held in various rooms. This way I learned about the proposed RFC 6920 on Naming Things with Hashes or a quick introduction to #microformats held by David Shanske. There were also some less technical discussions. Two teenagers attented to the camp as well so we had a talk about what’s in for them on the #IndieWeb and we learned about TikTok dances. Some did their very first TikTok dance this day. So perhaps we’ll soon see a #POSSE or #PESOS provider for #TikTok.

The evening was all about finding food for a group of ~15 people. That wasn’t an easy task. Berlin is an ever changing city and all restaurants were packed or gone for good. The online informations are sparse on this and way to often badly out of date. We were about to give up on this when we found a really small store that switches to some sort sort of food place in the evenings usually only visited by the local neighbourhood. They threw a bunch of tables together for us and somehow we all squeezed into it. Such a cozy and friendly place. I loved it and that night became a really short one for us.

The next day was about getting things done – a hard task beeing sleep deprived from the travels and short nights before.

While some just offered assistance others had more pratical goals in mind. This ranged from setting up a new #IndieWeb enabled blog to hacking on gallery systems, location visualisation or in my own case on my #POSSE provider for Okuna.io.

It’s really nice to see how other people work and get their projects done. Everybody has some very personal workflow here and I enjoy peeking over people’s sholders and catch a glimse of this.

In the end everybody got a chance to show what was achieved or learned. I got my prototype for backfeeding reactions going and used the chance to show this to the audience off the record without the cameras going. Okuna is still in closed beta so I’m sensitive on this topic. As mentioned I always have some invites to give away. I’d love to see more IndieWeb users on Okuna as well. I’ll need lab rats testers for my bridge soon anyway =

That was a great weekend and we met some awesome people at the camp. Of course we also snatched a bunch of new stickers and we ate as much candy from the stashes @MozillaBerlin as we could. Always fun to let the inner Geek run wild on such events =

Posted 6 years ago by
B
Liked 6 years ago

Liked https://www.instagram.com/p/B47KdrCDeg4/

Introducing Peach and Puffin, our new kitten pals. We've had them for a week and they are off the scale ADORABLE eeeee

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Liked https://roytang.net/2019/11/indieweb/

Indieweb Updates and Thoughts

I mentioned before that I was looking into indieweb stuff. There’s a whole wiki of information about it if you’re into that sort of thing, but also here’s a recent post which kind of serves as an overview. I have some comments on the content of this post, more on that later.

Indieweb things I’ve already implemented on this site:

  • have a personal domain (since 2006)
  • microformats (h-card and h-feeds and h-entrys), though I would have to be using some sort of microformats reader to make sure everything there is hunky-dory (no concrete plans for this yet)
  • webmention support, via webmention.io. Of course, I’m not actually interacting with anyone else on the indieweb yet, so this is mostly experimental and untested.
  • POSSE (partially): blog posts are syndicated to Twitter and Mastodon, but I’m also still posting content on those platforms (and to Instagram)
  • owning my content: (almost) all posts I make to other social media channels now get backfed into the archive on this site

Things I hope to be able to implement (no timetable):

  • POSSE (full) - currently for notes and photos I still mostly post using Twitter and Instagram because their native posting features are more convenient (especially on mobile) compared to my current workflow of “push a markdown file to git”. This is largely contingent on me implementing the next item:
  • A web interface for posting to the site. A web interface should be sufficient convenient for mobile use. Optionally using the next item:
  • Micropub. I’m still iffy whether I really need the protocol. It could be handy in certain situations.
  • I’ve also been digging into ActivityPub lately. My hope is to eventually have this site itself serve as an ActivityPub server, such that one would be able to follow me on Mastodon via something like [email protected]. Similar to how Aaron Parecki has done it. I’ve already done some exploratory work on this but it might be a ways off (low priority I guess.)
  • Archive Mastodon posts into this site (this is kinda ironic for some reason)
  • Automatic sending out of webmentions

# Anyway, back to the post I linked above. My main criticism for the indieweb movement at the moment is that I don’t see a path to mass adoption, especially for the purposes of moving people away from silos like Facebook. Maybe that’s not really one of the goals. My main issue is with two of the principles outlined in the post above (read the post again for more details):

  • “Make What You Need / Scratch Your Itch”
  • “Use What You Make / Dogfood”

The thing about these concepts is that there is a lot of work involved and there are significant barriers to entry for getting involved. I mean, most people aren’t going to (won’t be able to) bother with the first step (getting your own domain), much more be able to “make what you need”. It’s ok for people like me who are comfortable with the highly technical and have a bunch of free time, but for the average person it seems unlikely.

I can imagine there might be created a service that supports most of the Indieweb features and can easily be adopted by the mass market, although that has a lot of its own challenges as well, and it’s kind of like replacing one kind of silo with another? At least it would be a more open silo I guess? I think micro.blog already supports the indieweb stuff, but I haven’t yet looked too closely into that.

I am still moving forward with the indieweb stuff, and I am hopeful that it manages to coalesce into something that can challenge the way the modern internet works, but that may be a long way off. As far as I can tell, adoption is not yet very widespread, and AFAICT the main people driving the effort with their Homebrew Website Clubs are in Western countries. It’s even possible that I’m the first in the Philippines looking into this Indieweb stuff. :)

Posted 6 years ago by
Roy Tang
● Categories: #tech life #meta #changelog
Liked 6 years ago

Liked https://social.johanbove.info/2019/11/08/alltogetherio-is-starting-to-look-really-good

Alltogethernow.io is starting to look really good!

Replied to https://alltogethernow.io

Visit https://alltogethernow.io and log in using your Web-Sign-In capable and micropub enabled site and you get a very functional, well performing and complete interface to read your aperture feeds and interact with posts and publish your own content.

#indieweb

Replied 6 years ago by
Johan BovΓ©
● Categories: ##indieweb ● Also on:
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Liked https://twitter.com/prof_goddess/status/1192592903010504704

=i

I honestly can’t believe the amount i’ve learned in this last year... πŸ‘©πŸΎβ€πŸ’» if y’all know of any software developer positions (full-stack) available starting January, hit yah girl up! This former Art History major, just built an e-commerce site, top to bottom πŸ€— #tech #art

— πŸ‘©πŸΎβ€πŸ’» Professor Goddess (@prof_goddess) November 8, 2019
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Liked https://twitter.com/momodraws/status/1191360007570436097

Momo on Twitter

A little tribute to a series I have been watching since day 1 in 1998! I was ten years old at the time and didn’t know what I was seeing! 21 years later I am still a big fan and havent missed one episode. Keep it up @SouthPark ❀️ pic.twitter.com/8Fu3JJ5XU4

— Momo (@momodraws) November 4, 2019
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Liked https://www.jhsheridan.com/officially-indieweb/

Liked 6 years ago

Liked https://bruno-simon.com/

Creative developer

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Liked https://michaelspellacy.com/webmention-support-added/

Webmention Support Added

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Michael Spellacy
October 25, 2019

I finally got around to adding webmention support to this site, which is simple to do through a third-party service called webmention.io.

Essentially, I can now engage with other websites in the same manner one might engage with other users on a social media platform, but instead of the siloed, walled garden experience within an app, like Twitter, I can communicate and engage with other sites that also support webmentions and can even carry on conversations with users on several social media platforms, which is wicked cool. I really like the #indieweb scene.

Next up, I need to display webmentions on articles and notes I publish. Andy Bell went through this journey already, so I will try to read up on it some more and implement soon.

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Grant Richmond
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