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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.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Lack of depth

Manu Moreale reflecting on a Mastodon post that attempted to simplify the world into effectively good and bad people: I keep thinking about this tweet because to me it embodies one of the core issues I have with general social media discourse: the lack of depth. This fits ...

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

My default AI for coding help is GPT-5.2 in Codex on “high”. It is very good. But just when I think they’ve mostly solved hallucinations, ChatGPT gets a couple easy fact-checks wrong. As models get more efficient and cheaper, I expect more users to be routed to longer thinking to address this.

Scripting News Valid

The rebirth of the web in 2026

In 2026 and beyond, web devs will build on WordPress as if it were as crucial a part of the web infrastructure as the web browser or server, but performing a different but essential function that has been missing for the weird reason that few web developers know it is there.

This has been one of the big problems in tech as journalism beyond rewriting press releases has been gone for a couple of decades. No way to get news out about new developments. We have to fix that too, btw. ;-)

Yours in support of the largely forgotten freedom of the world wide web.

Dave

David Shanske Supports Webmention
David Shanske

Jewish Museum of Florida

Visited the Jewish Museum of Florida today. The original synagogue was built in 1929, and the second, built in 1936 and now form the museum opened in 1995. I came here to take the Jewish Walking Tour of Miami Beach. Which I had taken before in 2015…with the same tour guide. It’s a nice walk around Miami Beach, enjoying art deco architecture and having historic sites pointed out.

Scripting News Valid

BTW. Why video "podcasts" will never replace audio-only podcasts. Two reasons. 1. There are places where your eyes aren't available to watch a video, like when you're driving a car. 2. Listening to audio only is different from both audio and video. Audio forces your mind to fill in the blanks, which taps into the listener's creativity. No way to say one is better than the other, but they are different. I watch plenty of video, at home or on a train, but I also like to listen to podcasts when I'm walking or driving, riding in a bus or subway, or waiting in line somewhere.

Scripting News Valid

So maybe I should do a Waste of a Blog award. Just kidding.

Scripting News Valid

I generally am not a podcast reviewer, that is I don't review individual podcasts, except when I'm choosing one for Blogger of the Year, as I'm thinking of doing this year. But there's a whole class of podcasts that I am prepared to love that do it just plain wrong. Current ...

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

“Life is made up of meetings and partings. That is the way of it.” — Kermit in The Muppet Christmas Carol 🎄

Going through more of my mom’s things, still miss her every day. And thinking of my dad often too, even though it has been many, many years now.

Manuel Moreale — Everything Feed Valid
• Manuel Moreale

On simple solutions

Every now and again, a post I read on Mastodon weeks ago pops back into my head. It said: We should keep the bigots out and let all the good normal folks in. It does sound simple, doesn’t it? Everything is such a shitshow. Why don’t we simply keep the bad ones out and let ...

Scripting News Valid

Here's the transcript of the conversation. One thing it is not good at is being reliable at saving transcripts. I find a lot of times people can't read it. Reminds me, this is the kind of thing Firefox could be excellent at. Give it a way for an app to say hey the user asked for a transcript. Here it is. Save it where they're expecting to find it. No reason the browser can't have a JavaScript accessible API, or is there some rule they can't add functionality to their APIs?

Scripting News Valid

ChatGPT is getting smarter. Just did a project, where I was setting up a playground just to ask ChatGPT how to get it to do what I want. Because CSS is impossible imho for me to ever understand, it has mastered it, and was able to answer the question I brought before I asked it. It got it right. I asked how did you figure out that's what I came here to ask you about?? It gave me an exact technical reason. If we keep going this way soon we're going to wonder at the human hubris to think we could develop systems that could in any way equal to the systems it can develop. We've been thinking about this eventuality for my whole life, now it's here.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Kicking myself for deployment mistakes as we wind down for the holidays. We have a few big things planned for early next year. I probably should stop working on new things until then, but can’t resist. Also got new iOS and Android bug fixes submitted today.

Manton Reece Supports Webmention Valid

Careless blunder while deploying a security improvement today, which caused posts created from the native apps to go into an outdated saved articles list for a short time. To minimize the fallout, I’ve restored them to drafts in your Posts list. You can post again or use the draft. Very sorry.

James' Coffee Blog Supports Webmention
James' Coffee Blog

The indie web in 2030

In 2030, my greatest hope for the indie web is that it is a place where people feel free to create, to experiment, and to always be able to ask – and act on the answers to – the question “what do I want this place to be?” To enable this, the indie web must be open both techn...

Scripting News Valid

Early afternoon blogging

2019 on Facebook: People are too judgmental, which is a shame because in the end, which is coming soon enough for all of us, your opinion of other people doesn’t matter. Sorry if I’m telling you something you don’t already know. On the other hand, we can't help but be judgm...

Scripting News Valid

When I was a kid we went to a bungalow colony in upstate NY, around where I live now. I was less than 10 years old, so were my friends. We used to do things together that the adults didn't know about. There was an abandoned house we used to hang out in, mostly open to the elements. We also played in a graveyard and talked about what the families whose names were on the headstones were doing. Having dinner maybe? Listening to the Mets on the radio? (No TV in the mountains.) So the thought had occurred to us at that point in life that behind doors there were things happening that we could only imagine. I guess what you learn later is that your imagination is almost certainly wrong.