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

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Adactio Supports Webmention Valid

Close to the metal: web design and the browser

goodinternetmagazine.com/close-to-the-metal-web-design-and-the-browser/

It seems like the misguided perception of needing to use complex tools and frameworks to build a website comes from a thinking that web browsers are inherently limited. When, in fact, browsers have evolved to a tremendous degree

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Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

I’m rooting for The Browser Company folks, because it’s good to have competition in browsers, but their messaging has been all out of order. They could’ve quietly maintained Arc without making a big deal about it. Also, wait until Dia is available so people focus on the new stuff. (Posted with Arc.)

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Letting go of Core Intuition has created a podcast void in my work. Today, I just posted a new episode of Timetable. Just 2 minutes, remembering how to podcast. Tomorrow I’ll have another new episode — an interview with Vlad Prelovac.

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

the joy of

the joy of: Evening conversations with friends. Making someone laugh while waiting for a coffee. Hearing a song that you haven’t heard yet written by an artist whose music you love. Someone waiting and holding the lift door open for you. Being reminded about an old project while chatting with a friend. Seeing art in surprising places. Humming a song you love. Hearing the birds sing on a warm spring day. The first coffee of the day. Hearing someone say “have a great day!” Seeing a fuschia-coloured car. Eating a good cookie.

Adactio Supports Webmention Valid

Introducing: Webbed Sites (Webbed Briefs)

briefs.video/videos/introducing-webbed-sites/

I heard you like divs…

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Adactio Supports Webmention Valid

The Who Cares Era | dansinker.com

dansinker.com/posts/2025-05-23-who-cares/

AI is, of course, at the center of this moment. It’s a mediocrity machine by default, attempting to bend everything it touches toward a mathematical average. Using extraordinary amounts of resources, it has the ability to create something good enough, a squint-and-it-looks-right simulacrum of normality. If you don’t care, it’s miraculous.

In the Who Cares Era, the most radical thing you can do is care.

In a moment where machines churn out mediocrity, make something yourself. Make it imperfect. Make it rough. Just make it.

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Ben Werdmuller Supports Webmention
• Ben Werdmuller

The Substack Election

[Lauren Egan at The Bulwark] If I was Substack, this is exactly what I'd be doing. But then again, if I was Substack, I wouldn't have paid Nazis to post on my network. "The company sees an opportunity. Its employees have been meeting with congressional staff...

Ben Werdmuller Supports Webmention
• Ben Werdmuller

The Substack Election

[Lauren Egan at The Bulwark]

If I was Substack, this is exactly what I'd be doing. But then again, if I was Substack, I wouldn't have paid Nazis to post on my network.

"The company sees an opportunity. Its employees have been meeting with congressional

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

Colour

The joy of looking out the window and seeing a beautiful sunset. The sun has set at the intersection of two hills. I am not sure I have seen the sun set at exactly this angle, at this time. A colorful pink hue paints the nearby sky — some clouds on the periphery have a faint lavender tint. The birds are singing. I feel relaxed. I tried to take a picture but my phone can’t express the colours. The world is too pretty.

Adactio Supports Webmention Valid

When evaluating any technology I understand why it’s important to ask “how might this benefit me” but it’s more important to first ask “how might this harm others”.

When evaluating any technology I understand why it’s important to ask “how might this benefit me” but it’s more important to first ask “how might this harm others”.

ArtLung Supports Webmention Valid
• Joe Crawford

Morning sesh at OB

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

Game: Name that naked typewriter

A typewriter stripped down with all the exterior panels, keys, and identifying portions removed. We only see the internal mechanical portions remaining.
Just for fun, let’s see who can come closest to a make, model and year for this lovely typewriter I’ve got on the bench this week for restoration. Please, no more than two guesses per player.  Answer to be posted Friday.

IndieNews English Supports Webmention
serverless.industries/people/christian.html

Webring: A ring of websites

serverless.industries/2025/05/27/webring.en.html

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Micro.blog 3.5 for iOS

We just released a new version of Micro.blog for iOS that adds two improvements:

  • Redesigned the reply pane to be smaller, with a new username bar for adding or removing people from your reply. Non-modal so you can scroll the timeline behind it.
  • Added a new publishing progress pane, to give better status of what’s going on with a new blog post.

Here are a couple screenshots showing the changes:

Screenshot of the Micro.blog iOS app interface with the timeline and a reply section, featuring a vibrant photo of a sunset, and another screenshot showing a progress bar.

We’re wrapping up the Android version too. Hope to submit it to Google for approval later this week.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

The Browser Company has a long post about why they’re working on Dia instead of Arc. On how chatbots and browsers will merge:

Our tabs aren’t expendable, they are our core context. That is why we think the most powerful interface to AI on desktop won’t be a web browser or an AI chat interface — it’ll be both. Like peanut butter and jelly.

Scripting News Valid

I asked ChatGPT to review my archive on the Knicks and to summarize my feelings about the team over the years. This is what they said. "Your sentiments toward the New York Knicks over the years appear to be a blend of enduring loyalty, cautious optimism, and occasional frustration. Your writings reflect a deep-rooted connection to the team, celebrating their victories and expressing hope during promising times. At the same time, you don't shy away from critiquing management decisions or expressing disappointment during less successful periods. This combination suggests a passionate fan who remains committed to the Knicks, appreciating their highs and thoughtfully analyzing their lows."

Scripting News Valid

The Knicks are playing the Pacers tonight. Very pivotal. If the Knicks win, it becomes a best of three series, and two of the three games are played at home. Not necessarily so great for the Knicks, they do well on the road. The players say it has something to do with being able to focus on the game and not on family, that came from Mikal Bridges.

Adactio Supports Webmention Valid

Uses

I don’t use large language models. My objection is to using them is ethical. I know how the sausage is made. I wanted to clarify that. I’m not rejecting large language models because they’re useless. They can absolutely be useful. I just don’t think the usefulness outweighs...

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Great article on The New Yorker about The Rehearsal:

The first season of “The Rehearsal” seemed to exhaust all possibilities for the conceit that acting—the science of the artificial—could provide a prophylactic for life. It did not. The second season is, somehow, even more berserk than the first, but it’s also more disciplined and coherent.

Do not read this if you haven’t seen season 2. It spoils everything in the show.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

John O’Nolan celebrates 12 years of Ghost. Congrats to the team! Amazing success, and the revenue is an inspiration for much smaller platforms like Micro.blog to aspire to:

Fast forward to 2025 and I still have no idea what I’m doing, but we’ve come a long way nevertheless. What started as little more than an idealistic open source pipedream has blossomed into a business with $8M/year in annual recurring revenue and a full-time team of 34.