I'm doing some really excellent work on WordLand II, which is almost starting to get useful. We should be doing a lot more than writing posts next year. It's helping that a few of us are using Instant Outlines in Drummer to coordinate work. I work so much better this way, but it's not something you can do on your own.
People and blogs involved with and about the IndieWeb community, the fediverse, and/or the open web in general.
NetNewsWire is moving away from Slack:
The switch to Discourse means conversations will be preserved and they will be able to benefit people for years to come. And we get to use an open web app that’s also open source.
Speech to text has gotten so good that the difference between “pretty good” and “perfect” is noticeable. I only use Siri when in the car. Laughing at how it transcribed “Redis set” to “red sat”. (Also, how do people use Apple Notes without good versioning? Yikes.)
Cool write-up of building a custom Micro.blog posting frontend with Claude. Next year I wonder if these kind of built on-the-fly custom pieces of software will become more common.
Manuel Moreale — Everything Feed
• Manuel Moreale
What did I read this year
Finished reading: Making History by K. J. Parker. Neat idea, I was pulled into the narration. Wonder if it could’ve been an even longer full novel. 📚
Music in 2025
Chris Aldrich
• Chris Aldrich
Chris Aldrich
• Chris Aldrich
Filing Index Cards with a C-Line Document Sorter
ArtLung
• Joe Crawford
I got in the ocean today after several day drought. I caught some waves and I found a plastic Christmas ornament in the gutter. Of course I saved it. I am a scavenger and a survivor.
Manuel Moreale — Everything Feed
• Manuel Moreale
A moment with a sunset
No matter how busy life is, there's always time to admire a beautiful sunset.

Thank you for keeping RSS alive. You're awesome.
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Coffee and breakfast in Louisiana. Quick trip to see family, then back to Texas. ☕️
"I don't have time for this." That might be the name of a podcast. I just ended one with that exact phrase, and it totally fits the way I feel about these rambling diatribes by the time I'm about to sign off.
Good night!
Good night!
Fediverse predictions
When you're buying a house, the most important thing to check is the roof. Get two inspections. Get three. A house with a good roof will keep you dry. A house with a shitty roof isn't really a house is it?
Books I read in 2025
Why we love Pluribus
This came up on Kottke. I'm going to try commenting on other old school blogs more. Want to see if we can reboot the original sphere as a way of priming a new one.
We love Pluribus because it has all the features that we find irresistible.
- AppleTV.
- The makers of two previous huge hits.
- An unsung and much loved star in the last hit.
- An intriguing sci-fi plot.
- It’s pretty good adventure type thriller in the first episodes that settles into a slower sexy love story.
- A clever final scene in the final episode.
- A typical long wait for the next season.
But all this is incidental, what really matters is that we’re all involved, have opinions, and thank goodness it doesn’t actually matter like the other stuff we debate.
I rated Common Side Effects as Loved, the second highest rating on Bingeworthy.
The biggest contribution ChatGPT et al could make to software development, beyond what it has already done, which is enormous -- is help us come up with a new general purpose programming language which is a lot easier for human programmers to work with, esp over time. I work in one of the most complex environments imaginable -- browser apps talking to server apps in JavaScript. We could do so much better. And now we have a partner that knows all about all our languages, unlike any human being on the planet. Instead of having a lot of disconnected bubbles, it would be great if programmers could come together on a new language that make it easier for us to manage lots of software projects.

