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Feeds from people participating at the IndieWebCamp Düsseldorf, May 2025.

A public list by dan.

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

You can use the light-dark function in your :root CSS variables

Last weekend, I attended State of the Browser 2025, a conference all about browsers and the web 1. Niya gave a talk called “To light-dark() or Not To light-dark()” in which she introduced the light-dark function. This function allows you to specify different colours for a val...

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

the joy of

seeing pink blossoms from the train. talking coffee with a barista — of speaking about origins and tasting notes. striking up conversation with people while waiting in line. imagination, and of daydreaming. reading text in a foreign language — maybe even a foreign alphabet — and being able to understand what you have read. seeing people sit outside in the evening, enjoying desserts or drinks or food. seeing something from an entirely new perspective. walking by the river on a sunny morning. And of all the memories I have there. watching a barista focus as they pour latte art. the question “do you want a refill?” when my coffee cup is empty. arriving at the platform just as a Tube has pulled in. spotting a quaint bookstore. gazing out a train window on a sunny day where there is barely a cloud in the sky. looking up to the sky after sunset and seeing the moon.

Latest notes Supports Webmention

March 31st, 2025

The 2025 WebAIM Million report has been published. Some decreases in accessibility issues, but much still hasn't improved, sadly. https://webaim.org/projects/million/

Daniel Pietzsch Verified Updates instantly via WebSub Supports Webmention Valid

Here’s Terry B’s highlights following Monstertrack 2025 winner Emma Missale on her fixed-gear no-breakes bike through New York. You can also watch the full race, if you have two hours to spare.

Daniel Pietzsch Verified Updates instantly via WebSub Supports Webmention Valid

🎬 Don't Torture a Duckling

Movie poster for “Don't Torture a Duckling”.
This review may contain spoilers. Tap or click to view.

Not too much gore here - although the ending is hilariously excessive in that regard. It's more of a murder mystery. And it has indeed quite a lot of great ideas and encourages you to solve it yourself. Good one. But: Catholics again 🙄. And what's up with that slow-motion water in that aquarium?

Daniel Pietzsch Verified Updates instantly via WebSub Supports Webmention Valid

🎬 Conclave

Movie poster for “Conclave”.
This review may contain spoilers. Tap or click to view.

A mystery thriller set in the Vatican. And all the gossiping cardinals are no better than ordinary men. Well, apart from the newly elected pope. And then this ending. Catholics 🙄.

Matthias Ott Valid

What a beautiful, outstanding performance by Augustin Hadelich. 🎻😌
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_3da0fPLQs

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

Lavender coffee

Starbucks is running a promotion for their spring lavender coffee drinks. Earlier this week, I was in a Starbucks that had lavender plants resting in a glass pot with coffee beans at the base of the pot. I’m not sure what to say exactly about this, but it did make me smile so I thought I should share it on my blog. Lavender flowers in a glass pot with coffee beans at the base. The glass pot is at the counter in the Starbucks. P.S. I always get confused spelling lavender. I sometimes write lavendar with an “a”. P.P.S. Somewhat unrelated, but “Lavender Haze” is a great Taylor Swift song.

Matthias Ott Valid

😬

https://www.spiegel.de/international/world/hegseth-waltz-gabbard-private-data-and-passwords-of-senior-u-s-security-officials-found-online-a-14221f90-e5c2-48e5-bc63-10b705521fb7

Matthias Ott Valid

Gemini says I should ”replace ’dumb information recycling machine’ with more neutral terms: This avoids unnecessarily aggressive language and focuses on the functional aspects of the technology.”
😉

Daniel Pietzsch Verified Updates instantly via WebSub Supports Webmention Valid

🎬 The Art of Destruction

Movie poster for “The Art of Destruction”.

I never listened to Destruction all that much. But I had a great evening at this premier at the cinema with friends, the film crew and a few beers (and a whole bunch of other metalheads). Entertaining movie about a sympathetic band and how difficult it was during the pandemic for a band that usually plays around 150 gigs per year.

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

Adding “subscribed via” to the Artemis bookmarklet

I often subscribe to blogs I like after reading one or two of their blog posts. When I see the blog in my web reader, it sometimes takes a second for me to remember what posts inspired me to subscribe to the website. Artemis has a bookmarklet that, when clicked, takes you to...

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

Web readers and RSS readers

I think the term “RSS reader” needs revisiting. I much prefer “web reader.” The term “RSS reader” is protocol-first — RSS — rather than use case first. To understand what “RSS reader” means, you need to know what RSS is and why it matters. Designing tools for everyone, not j...

Latest notes Supports Webmention

March 20th, 2025

Enjoyed meeting at the Digital Accessibility Centre today for our annual audit of GOV.UK. Learning how users with various disabilities use and test websites was truly insightful. Strongly reaffirms the importance of advocating for a culture of accessibility, not merely striving for compliance.

Tantek Çelik Updates instantly via WebSub Supports Webmention Valid

“Tell me, what are words for?” They are for blogging!Earlier today during an informal espresso live stream in the #indieweb cafe, Spotify was playing an auto-generated daylist, something like “romantic 80s tuesday morning”, and the 1982 song “Words”¹ by the band Missing Perso...

Daniel Pietzsch Verified Updates instantly via WebSub Supports Webmention Valid

I started sorting out my blog posting workflow again. Ever since the Git-based CMSes stopped working, I posted considerably less. I’m using Jekyll to build this site; and creating a file, adding all the frontmatter, making a Git commit and pushing the repo is just too much overhead for me.

So now I have started to automate all those above steps. For now, this works on iOS/iPadOS for my Notes. I currently start writing in the Drafts app; then I can trigger one Shortcut which handles everything else for me via the Working Copy app. And Gitlab CI builds the page as usual.

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

Artemis changelog #5

Below is a summary of new features added to Artemis, the calm web reader I maintain. Search your subscriptions You can now search all of the posts published in the feeds of websites to which you are subscribed. To search your feeds, go to your Account page and click “Search ...

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

Announcing Artemis Link Graph, a new way to explore the web

Artemis Link Graph is a web extension that lists the web pages authored by people you follow that link to the page you are viewing. Here’s an example of the extension in action, showing the links to the Bear Blog home page from blogs I follow: The Bear Blog homepage with th...

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

Bookmarklet to show all rel= links on a page

rel= links describe the relationship between the web page a link is on and the resource the page is linking to. For example, rel=alternate is used to say that there is an alternate representation of a web page available at another URL. This may be an RSS or JSON feed, or some...

Matthias Ott Supports Webmention
• Matthias Ott

An Internet Archive Plugin for Craft CMS 5

Now that the Webmention plugin is finally Craft 5 compatible after last week's update, I jumped at the chance and updated another plugin I had once written for my personal site. The Internet Archive plugin automates the archiving of your posts to the Wayback Machine. Each ti...