Ready to plant, along Mopac. š±
People and blogs involved with and about the IndieWeb community, the fediverse, and/or the open web in general.
Ready to plant, along Mopac. š±
Thursday session
Linkrot is always a problem for the web, but please letās not purposefully destroy our own content when itās easy to keep it going. John Gruber on 538 shutting everything down:
Why not keep the FiveThirtyEight site up and runningāāāat least for a while, if not in perpetuity? It costs practically nothing to run a website serving a static/archived website. I donāt get it. It betrays a profound level of disrespect for the work that the site hosted.
Web isn't just a brand, it's also a noun and a verb. "I web you."
New Kabin Crew belter in the gaff, likeāgreat gas altogether, like!
clearleft.com/thinking/anchoring-insights-key-learnings-from-research-by-the-sea
This was a day of big conversations, but also one of connection, curiosity, and optimism.
Seeing it all laid out like this really drives home just how much was packed into Research By The Sea.
Throughout the day, speakers shared personal reflections, bold ideas, and practical insights, touching on themes of community, resilience, ethics, and the evolving role of technology.
Some talks brought hard truths about the impact of AI, the complexity of organisational change, and the ethical dilemmas researchers face. Others offered hope and direction, reminding us of the power of community, the importance of accessibility, and the need to listen to nature, to each other, and to the wider world.
Seth Godin blogs about making the most of a second chance with customers:
If a customer service call goes wrong, or if a new employee is stumbling, this is the moment to escalate and get the second impression just right. It shows that we can recover, that weāre listening, and that the relationship is worth something to us.
Ben Werdmuller
⢠Ben Werdmuller
This looks like a really interesting proposal for allowing developers more control over styling inputs. Based on the work being done the customisable select element, it starts with a declaration of appearance: base.
Chris Aldrich
⢠Chris Aldrich
Ben Werdmuller
⢠Ben Werdmuller
Chris Aldrich
⢠Chris Aldrich
Iāve finally broken a small barrier and am now ranked as typewriter hunter #115 on the Typewriter Database. I have a few machines that should arrive soon which in combination with doing some repairs and uploading some data should help me finally break into the top 100.
Listening to the Decoder episode with Panos Panay, Iām almost convinced that what Amazon is trying with Alexa+ will work. Everyoneās expectations are so low with voice assistants. If they actually pull it off, it will be impressive.
Parker Ortolani blogging about the new MacBook Air. I hadnāt even thought about the color until now:
For the first time in 24 years, since the introduction of the first white iBook, Apple has a blue laptop again. While the new MacBook Airs are most certainly a āspec bump,ā they make for a pretty good one.
When I ask a personal question on one of the AI bots, all of a sudden on Facebook I'm getting ads about what I asked about. It could be a coincidence, but it's happened a few times, on more than one system. And I'm a paying customer on all of them.
Interesting new post from OpenAI about safety. About humans being in control:
Our approach to alignment centers humans. We aim to develop mechanisms that empower human stakeholders to express their intent clearly and superviseā AI systems effectively - even in complex situations, and as AI capabilities scale beyond human capabilities.
This is probably my biggest concern, AI agents running without human supervision and executing tasks that are beyond what we even know how to do. There are many positive benefits to AI, but there are also some things we shouldnāt attempt.
Wednesday session
Tapbots is working on a Bluesky client, called Phoenix. On making it a separate app, they say:
While there may be some conveniences of an app that supports multiple social media protocols, we believe the experience will be much better overall if we keep them separate. We do plan to provide a way to cross-post between them so you donāt have to write duplicate posts.
This is fine, but I think eventually more people will just post to their own blogs and not have to manage separate apps or accounts.