FeedCity logo

FeedCity

People and blogs involved with and about the IndieWeb community, the fediverse, and/or the open web in general.

A public list by feedcity.

Ben Werdmuller Supports Webmention
• Ben Werdmuller

Seeking trans-friendly employers who sponsor visas

Nobody should have to move to another country to be themselves. However, I’ve spoken to multiple people who feel they need to move away from the US in order to avoid harms caused by the new administration’s executive orders that target trans people. Exactly how to do this i...

Chris Aldrich Updates instantly via WebSub Supports Webmention Valid
• Chris Aldrich

Typed index card that reads: 2025-01-07 Crazy winds kicked up this morning around 5:30AM and woke up both Sonia and I early. I went out briefly around 6:00 A to batten down the hatches and move the car out from under the tree. Evie was already up and working on her math homework. I'm really proud of her for this as well as going to bed at a reasonable time last night. The trip to school wasn't too bad this morning, though I did have to navigate around a Christmas thee that had blown into the middle of the street. Winds are supposed to be bad all day long. I'm sort of worried about going to class tonight at UCLA, but I suspect that winds there probably aren't as bad based on what Sonia has said about her drive into the office earlier
We were allowed back into our neighborhood over the weekend and were excited to find our poor wind battered and smoke damaged house still standing. Naturally I brought back a daily typewriter, but it was eerie to see what I’d last typed on it two weeks ago just before we had to evacuate.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

I often think of this post on leaky abstractions by Joel Spolsky whenever I’m unraveling multiple layers of code, trying to debug a performance problem. As programmers we get lazy and build up complex systems that hide problems. I’m usually good at spotting this, but not always.

Tantek Çelik Updates instantly via WebSub Supports Webmention Valid

My Seek 2024 Year in Review:* 141 new species observed, of those, the top three kinds:  * 79 plants  * 20 insects  * 16 fungi* 56 challenge badges earnedJune was the month I observed the most new species in 2024, followed by March, and then July.Seek also gave ...

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Cold day in Austin, might see some snow tonight. Working on server fixes and performance. We also submitted Strata 1.2 for iOS to Apple for review, so hopefully that’ll hit the App Store soon, with Android to follow later this week.

Scripting News Valid

In the last days of Trump's first term, I had a nice little web app that told you how much time remained in his term. It was a one-line change to make it work again, which, sigh, is necessary now.

Scripting News Valid

BTW, actually the term social web is probably too big a compromise. The "web" part is the only part that's imho useful. The sad part is that "social" means "we removed most of the features of the web." Why? Some vague sense that people would write too much if given the space. Or link too much. Or edit too much. Or be too emphatic. It's worse than Disneyfied -- at least at Disneyland you get actors, and color and rides, and bland food with tons of sugar and fat. But there is some fun and nutrition. In the social web, it's just memes and slogans. Not even much room for a metaphor. There's so much more to say about being human.

Scripting News Valid

I just wrote a review for Industry in Bingeworthy, but it doesn't have a text editor. It farms the job off to WordLand, which shoots the text back to Bingeworthy when the user publishes. So the text is on both BW and WP. And through WordPress it has a presence on the web. This is the goal, writing exists on its own, but can be shared in all the contexts it makes sense in, but it lives primarily in your blog, your home base. That's why WordPress is so important in the scheme of things. It's a consensus, this is where a lot of people are blogging in 2025. And there's a lot of unexplored interop. This may not make total sense at this time, but soon, I hope to be able to point back at this post, and say it was the first time something important worked.

Scripting News Valid

Twitter, in hindsight

There's a great scene in No Country For Old Men, where a character is facing imminent death, but he's arguing with the character who will kill him, who asks if all your great ideas led to this (his death) how good were the ideas (paraphrasing).

Along those lines.. If Twitter was such a great idea but it led to the death of democracy (for now at least) maybe it wasn't such a great idea. Maybe when we try to reboot we should try something realllly different.

As they say -- Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

Manuel Moreale — Everything Feed Valid
• Manuel Moreale

Photography

Even though I’m not a photographer I always enjoyed the act of capturing moments using a camera. These days my photos live primarily here on the blog—they even have a dedicated RSS feed—but also on my separate photos archive. I’m very casual when it comes to taking pictures,...

Scripting News Valid

Pam McQuesten, dear friend

Sad news: Longtime friend Pam McQuesten passed away on January 1 after a brief illness. I knew Pam in Silicon Valley, as we were starting up Living Videotext in 1983. Our office was on Elwell Court in Palo Alto, just off 101, near the golf course and airport. Pam was managi...

Scripting News Valid

It was their job

A few random observations posted on Bluesky in the early morning hours.

5:09AM: "Biden had one job to do, and he didn’t do it."

5:17AM: "The NYT had one job to do, and they didn’t do it."

5:21AM: "The NYT is the saddest excuse for the leading news org of the most significant democracy in human history. They flushed it down the fucking toilet. They, like the Washington Post, deserve to die in darkness."

7:39AM: "Being impartial about last year’s election was not an option for the NYT. It was democracy’s Pearl Harbor. We will never forget or forgive what they did."

Editor's note: Soon, I will do all my writing in one place, and these kinds of snapshots will be easier to assemble.

Adactio Supports Webmention Valid

Elektra

I’ve been reading lots of modern takes on Greek classics. So when I saw that there was going to be a short of run of Sophocles’s Electra at Brighton’s Theatre Royal, I grabbed some tickets for the opening night. With Brie Larson taking on the title role in this production, ...

Ben Werdmuller Supports Webmention
• Ben Werdmuller

The next four years

The last time this man was in power we wound up with one of the largest civil rights movements ever conducted in the United States. There is so much light; so much bravery; so much fairness and equity and rebellion in so many. Those are the people I believe in. That's what I'm holding onto.

People who seek to strip the identities of vulnerable people, to deport people and break up families, to prevent people from loving another consenting adult, to reform the world in the name of their religion or their nationality — these people are small. They are ugly. They will not be here for long.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Trump’s second term — which apparently started a day early — is going to be a series of mismanaged, real crises and completely dumb, fake issues. Gonna try to ignore both. 🇺🇸

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

ByteDance was been trying so hard to sell TikTok and they just ran out of time. Thankfully, Trump is going to extend the deadline, giving TikTok more time to find a buyer! Whew. I’m sure TikTok will be sold real soon now. 🤪

Scripting News Valid

Steve Jobs: “When you’re a carpenter making a beautiful chest of drawers, you’re not going to use a piece of plywood on the back, even though it faces the wall and nobody will ever see it. You’ll know it’s there, so you’re going to use a beautiful piece of wood on the back. For you to sleep well at night, the aesthetic, the quality, has to be carried all the way through.”