Replied to https://twitter.com/davemillar/status/1136058396183056384

Ah ok, I think you have RelMeAuth setup but you also need to set your authorization endpoint like: <link rel="authorization_endpoint" href="https://indieauth.com/auth">

Replied to https://twitter.com/davemillar/status/1134486398709436417

Hmm having a look manually I can't see your authorization endpoint. How is it set up?

Replied to https://twitter.com/rich_cahill/status/1129309834246070273

I've been looking for a reason to get into that sort of stuff professionally after doing some personal projects

Replied to https://twitter.com/lyallbruce/status/1128948926466449408

That one has been around for years! Think it's the computer security conference

Replied to https://miklb.com/blog/2019/05/15/4937/

That's great! I've thought about doing something similar with my indieweb projects. Best of luck!

Replied to https://quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com/2019/02/14/help-save-mozdevnet-protect-the-open-web-stop-the-mdn

I get the idea and don't totally disagree, but I think there are a few misconceptions in here.

Just because a project is made in react does not automatically mean it will have unreadable html, it can generate any html markup and can even be rendered on the server, meaning the user doesn't need JavaScript enabled on their device. My site - while not in great shape - is 100% react and fully readable (although minified by default).

And react is also built upon web standards, it works all the way back to IE9.

But of course there are plenty of valid concerns related to how MDN will use react, and what Facebook might decide to do with react in the future.

Replied to https://miklb.com/blog/2019/02/13/4730/

Ninjaforms is definitely the nicest I've tried

Replied to https://p83.nl/posts/1068

Ha, that is awesome! Are you using it for home automation of some sort?

Replied to https://twitter.com/KennyLowe/status/1092437401639813120

They're back! πŸ•ΈπŸ’.ws

Replied to https://twitter.com/digitalWestie/status/1088820138999250944

Telegram is definitely bigger than signal, and arguably the best messaging app out there in terms of features, but from what people say the security potentially isn't that great by default and arguably WhatsApp is more secure. Then signal is probably the best security wise but the feature set isn't the same and nobody apart from nerds uses it.