Notes prepared by Claude.ai. It makes mistakes, like where it was recorded, but gets the story remarkably well.
A solo Dave Winer podcast, recorded over breakfast in a parking lot in Kingston, NY.
The episode starts with something Dave read from Dries Buytaert, the founder ...
Notes prepared by Claude.ai.
In this episode, Dave returns to a theme he's been circling for years: the social web's central failure isn't a lack of features, it's the locked doors. Platforms like Twitter, Facebook, Spotify, and Amazon build genuinely useful tools, but they'...
Voicemail to NakedJen: AI, RSS, and Creative Possibility
As before I asked Claude.ai to do the show notes, from its point of view. I added links. As always if you really want to know what I said you have to listen. :-)
Dave Winer left a voicemail for his longtime friend NakedJen making the case that now is the moment to start play...
As before I asked Claude.ai to do a synopsis, from its point of view. I added a link to Brent's post and a postscript. As always if you really want to know what I said you have to listen. :-)
Dave opens by riffing on a post by Brent Simmons, who described feeling, for the fi...
As before I asked Claude.ai to do a synopsis. I corrected one factual error (informing it, waiting for a new version, not correcting the writing). And I think it may have missed the big points of both, but I will respect its opinion. As always if you really want to know what...
As with previous podcasts I asked Claude.ai to write the show notes based on a machine-generated transcript. It makes mistakes, so you have to listen to the podcast if you want to know what I really think. But it's pretty good, and will help search engines find this.
Dave W...
As with previous podcasts I asked Claude.ai to write the show notes based on a machine-generated transcript. It makes mistakes, so you have to listen to the podcast if you want to know what I really think. But it's pretty good, and will help search engines find this. Additio...
As with the previous podcast I asked Claude.ai to write the show notes. It makes mistakes, so you have to listen to the podcast if you want to know what I really think. This time it wrote it in the first person, not third person which I would have preferred. At the end I hav...
As with the previous podcast I asked Claude.ai to write the show notes. It chose to write it in the third person, which is great with me. It even filled in the first name of Jack Smith, when I couldn't remember it in the podcast, so in some ways the show notes are more infor...
I asked Claude.ai to do the show notes -- something I really don't enjoy or have time for. So if this doesn't adequately describe the podcast, blame the AI. ;-)
There's tired frustration among web developers who remember Firefox's heyday. This podcast is for those who experi...
Boastful story of Frontier and how it relates to today
I recorded this 23 minute podcast on October 31.
I didn't publish it then, but I figured at some point I would.
It's the story of how a product like Frontier comes into existence.
I had done this before, in 2020, in an oral history I did for a book a friend was writing. T...
A short podcast about Sarah Kendzior being banned from Bluesky, and why this shouldn't be like any other such event.
We should learn, that systems like Bluesky depend on moderation, and they don't have a clear business model, and they've grown very large, and they can't afford to hire moderators who understand the difference between a line from a powerful song, and a threat.
If we want a literate web, and I desperately want that myself, it has to be made in a different way.
That's what this short podcast is about.
And to Sarah, if you hear this, I love your work. You've done here what you usually do so well, you've shown us the truth. Keep on truckin! Dave Winer
I'm in the homestretch on the next release of WordLand. This version has approximately twice as many features as the last one. Because, like Radio UserLand from long ago, it does both reading and writing. But the UI is different. It's patterned after all the twitter-like pro...
When I started blogging, early on, I had a different system for discourse.
Here's how it worked:
1. First each post would go out via email to a group of eleven people. I was cc'd.
2. The group was randomly chose each time, so you might not know anyone in your group, or you ...
I'm starting to roll up the user interface of the new product, and so it's time to start talking about the features that are coming, and also let's talk about the mistakes we made last time, almost always caused by people not working with each other, and let's not do it this time. If you care about this stuff and you're a developer, please have a listen. This is a good time for us to start really working together. All I can do is put out the invitation, it's up to others to show up.
I cover a lot of territory in this podcast, I don't have time to write it all up. I have however asked Google to make a transcript of it. Maybe that will help. ;-)
And if you're a developer and have ideas about this, why not write a blog post about it and send me a link. That's the first step in really booting up the blogosphere -- actually using it.
I wrote a blog post last week about WordPress and the open web, and what I want to do there. It's the first time I've laid out in one place my plan for rekindling the open web, with my new editor providing a really easy way to write for the open web that does not otherwise e...
I recorded this podcast in New Orleans on December 16, 2005. I had just spent three days there, visiting New Orleans and the Gulf coast of Mississippi, post Katrina.
I've always been fascinated by the evolution of cities, here was a chance to see a city that I was familiar ...
My house has a view of a pond, which is endlessly interesting, year-round, through all seasons.
And we have all the seasons here in the Catskill Mountains.
Yesterday, I spied a large bird in the pond, so I grabbed my binoculars, and I'll tell the rest of the story in the podcast, don't want to spoil the surprise! :-)
Dave Winer explores his frustrations with ChatGPT's tendency to overcomplicate simple programming tasks. What should be a straightforward request for pagination code—a standard feature in virtually every application—becomes an exhausting back-and-forth where the AI insists o...
On Thursday I wrote: "It would be interesting if Pocket Casts had an API. I would love to be able to one-click subscribe to a podcast in my feed reader. I mention Pocket Casts because it's the podcast client I use on my phone, but I would obviously like to see them all suppo...
I've been thinking a lot about Harvard lately, and a revealing podcast interview with the top editorial person at Wired.
Elon Musk wasn't over-exposed, he burned out. If he hadn't saluted like a Nazi, boasted about putting USAid in a wood chipper, pranced around on stage with a chainsaw, and done so much damage to the US government, we still don't know how much, he could have chilled out, sold a fleet of Teslas to Trump, and gone on to his next adventure. We would have all been glued to our sets.
Twitter elected a president in 2016. We looked the other way. Jan 6 failed, we went back to sleep for four years and woke up in a way we never have.
Big change was coming, and now it has arrived at the door of Harvard. A university that was home to the American Revolution.
"Behave like a computer. That's where we start."
ChatGPT is not a programming partner, it's a very fantastic improvement over search engines. That's reality.
Having used ChatGPT and various other AI tools for over two years now, and using it in my programming work every day...
I listened to an Evan Osnos podcast interview with Katie Drummond. Osnos is a reporter at the New Yorker, Drummond is the top editor at Wired.
Summary: AI is not just hype — it’s a transformative breakthrough on the scale of past revolutions like the web and personal computing. But journalism risks missing the story by filtering it only through billionaires or old frameworks. What’s needed is realism, openness, and listening to a wider range of voices.
PS: Sorry for the abbreviated show notes. Technical difficulties prevented me from iterating over it last night.
WordCamp Canada is doing a great job of creating a little community around my keynote there in October.
I have some experience running blogging conferences, I did the first ones in the US starting in 2003 called BloggerCon.
In a lot of ways I want to see if we can reboot the...
Fleshing out an idea I presented on Scripting News on July 11.
Next time there's a Big Beautiful Bill, let's set up a ChatGPT project or equivalent to injest new versions of the bill as they come out, and quickly alert us to issues, and also suggest ways to frame it for the ...
I wanted to do a brief podcast to explain how WordLand came to be, and what I learned on my exploration of WordPress.
This, for me, was like time travel. They had picked up on a lot of what we were doing in the 90s and early 00s, and even though I was alive while this was ha...
Today is a good day to talk about where the Democrats should go.
The Democratic Party tolerates no dissent. If you don't toe the line, you're next in line for destruction. I'm not kidding.
This episode of my at-least-monthly podcast explains why Cuomo is the right choice fo...
I've been tuned in for the NBA playoffs this year, as I am every year, but especially this time because my team the NY Knicks have made it to the Eastern Conference Finals. The series is now 3-2 in favor of the Indiana Pacers. Last night's game was a must-win for the Knicks,...