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

A public list by feedcity.

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

Yellow library index card with red lines and typed book details for Principles of Indexing and Filing.

Scripting News Valid

It's kind of weird for me to be hanging out around WordPress, but I like it. They've been very welcoming. It's kind of like I imagine it would be for Ward Cunningham to be working with Wikipedia. It may not have been everything he wanted from wiki's but it might be the best ...

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Reviewing EU servers. Can’t believe it has been over half a year since we set those up. Adding a new server today. 🇪🇺

Manuel Moreale — Everything Feed Valid
• Manuel Moreale

Nic Chan

This week on the People and Blogs series we have an interview with Nic Chan, whose blog can be found at nicchan.me. Tired of RSS? Read this in your browser or sign up for the newsletter. The People and Blogs series is supported by Robert Birming and the other...

Manuel Moreale — Everything Feed Valid
• Manuel Moreale

Following up on input diet

Always nice to get emails from people sharing their thoughts on this topic. Looks like I’m not the only one feeling this way, and a few weeks back Jeremy wrote a post touching a very similar topic. It also made me smile seeing him mention Henry David Thoreau in his post beca...

Matt Mullenweg Valid
• Matt

Kanye’s Back

In case you missed it, Kanye has started apologizing for the event he went through. I didn’t comment on it publicly when it happened because it seemed so strange to me that such a beautiful soul, who had created so much life-changing music with so much love, could express such hate. I’ve had close friends … Continue reading Kanye’s Back

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

From earlier today, McKenna Park in Denton. 🌳

A sunny park scene featuring a lush green lawn and several tall trees under a clear blue sky.

Scripting News Valid

Some pre-dinner testing. That was correctly recognized as a new item.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Finally got my local Android build setup working again. Had to nuke everything. This has been really holding me up on testing and bug fixes.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Now that I have two whole videos of me talking to the camera, time to make a Videos page for my blog. Having a place for anything is actually an encouragement to do more of that thing.

Scripting News Valid

Here's what I'm doing. I want to get all my blog posts together in one place. I still want to use Electric Drummer to write stuff for scripting.com, there's a whole system built around it being where it is. But, I want all the posts on scripting to also appear on the daveverse site, so that they first version of my discourse module can be simple to create, debug and use. So I've got the first half working, I've got a script that hooks in via WebSockets to FeedLand and is notified every time Scripting News updates. It mirrors the updates to a site on WordPress (for testing) and once it works, I'll have it send the stuff to Daveverse. That part remains to be done. Not sure if it'll be a desktop app or a server-based app. But now I need a break. ;-)

Adactio Supports Webmention Valid

Reimagine the Date Picker – David Bushell – Web Dev (UK)

dbushell.com/2025/11/10/pikaday/

This is a superb way to deprecate a little JavaScript library. Now that you can just use HTML instead, the website for Pikaday has been turned into a guide to choosing the right design pattern for your needs. Bravo!

Pikaday is no longer a JavaScript date picker. Pikaday is now a friendly guide for front-end developers. I want to push developers away from the classic date picker entirely. Especially fat JavaScript libraries.

adactio.com/links/22246

Adactio Supports Webmention Valid

Alchemy - Josh Collinsworth blog

joshcollinsworth.com/blog/alchemy

I am interested in art—we are interested in art, in any and all of its forms—because humans made it. That’s the very thing that makes it interesting; the who, the how, and especially the why.

The existence of the work itself is only part of the point, and materializing an image out of thin air misses the point of art, in very much the same way that putting a football into a Waymo to drive it up and down the street for a few hours would be entirely missing the point of sports.

adactio.com/links/22247