Just released php-mf2-shim v0.2.2. New in this version: improved twitter.com parsing, now scrapes h-card and h-entries from profile pages #microformats #indieweb
Just released php-mf2-shim v0.2.2. New in this version: improved twitter.com parsing, now scrapes h-card and h-entries from profile pages #microformats #indieweb
.@julien51 URLs are worth caring about, data formats shouldn’t make them worthless. #microformats #indieweb
v0.2.0 update to php-mf2 (BREAKING CHANGES) contains lots of goodness, including
mf2
→ Mf2
)Go get it now from Packagist, or try it out at pin13.net/mf2
Congratulations Aaron Parecki on implementing real-time #indieweb comments in #p3k using #webmention, websockets, redis, node.js and PHP. Very impressive indeed :)
Weave: get the full #indieweb story seamlessly on twitter.com.
A cross-browser add-on which expands truncated POSSE tweet copies of indieweb content in the Twitter UI.
Install now for Firefox, Opera, Safari or Chrome.
@github any chance you could add #microformats2 h-entry and #indieweb comment markup to issue pages?
Want to easily send webmentions from the command line, or from bash/python scripts? @vrypan made a neat little package to do just that: github.com/vrypan/webmention-tools
pip install webmentiontools
webmention-tools urlinfo http://waterpigs.co.uk/1000
webmention-tools send source target
@benhowdle @trailedapp congrats on the launch! Great that you’re encouraging people to own their comments. Have you come across indiewebcamp.com at all, especially the work we’re doing on cross-site replying, webmentions and reply-contexts? E.G. this post is a reply on my own site to one of your tweets :)
“…disruptive technologies don’t start out better than established technologies, as would seem intuitive, they start out worse. But for all their faults in comparison with entrenched, established competitors, there’s something radically different that opens whole new opportunities, and makes them disruptive.”
— para-meta-quoted from Not Real Programming
I’m aware the d-word is taboo, but I can’t help but think this perfectly describes #indieweb and #indieauth, as well as the reactions many people have to them.
@mapkyca nice brainstorming, loving the idea of #microformats2 key discovery for private content! (I publish a link to my PGP key on my homepage, if you want to test it out :)
Have you had a look at PuSH v0.4? It’s way simpler than old PuSH and is no longer strongly tied to RSS/ATOM content.
Note also that the “argh my little site got popular and is dying” thing can be solved even with your simpler system, by making the endpoint an external service. Woo hypermedia discovery over well-known URLs!
Supported sessions.mozillafestival.org/proposals/this-is-the-homepage-youre-looking-for, #indieweb MozFest session (although personal domains > github.io subdomains)
Want to scare a silo? Make a browser extension.
Then, maybe get banned for your trouble :/
.Jeremy Keith @shanehudson @indiewebcamp et al: php-mf2 is now dependencyless, go forth and build stuff with #microformats! Thanks to Aaron Parecki for writing the URL resolution code.
Really liking the way Jeremy Keith adds a webmention sending form to his journal entries — makes it super easy for people to send webmentions if they haven’t automated it yet. #indieweb
myOpenID.com is dead. OpenID is dead. Long live Web Sign-In. #indieweb #indieauth
I got an email saying the service will end on 2014-02-01, but the site appears to be down already. janrain.com, the company who apparently ran myOpenID, is also down, so I can’t find a “goodbye” post. Here’s the notification email:
I wanted to reach out personally to let you know that we have made the decision to end of life the myOpenID service. myOpenID will be turned off on February 1, 2014.
In 2006 Janrain created myOpenID to fulfill our vision to make registration and login easier on the web for people. Since that time, social networks and email providers such as Facebook, Google, Twitter, LinkedIn and Yahoo! have embraced open identity standards. And now, billions of people who have created accounts with these services can use their identities to easily register and login to sites across the web in the way myOpenID was intended.
By 2009 it had become obvious that the vast majority of consumers would prefer to utilize an existing identity from a recognized provider rather than create their own myOpenID account. As a result, our business focus changed to address this desire, and we introduced social login technology. While the technology is slightly different from where we were in 2006, I’m confident that we are still delivering on our initial promise – that people should take control of their online identity and are empowered to carry those identities with them as they navigate the web.
For those of you who still actively use myOpenID, I can understand your disappointment to hear this news and apologize if this causes you any inconvenience. To reduce this inconvenience, we are delaying the end of life of the service until February 1, 2014 to give you time to begin using other identities on those sites where you use myOpenID today.
Speaking on behalf of Janrain, I truly appreciate your past support of myOpenID.
@helloanselm some of us @indiewebcamp-ers have been working on independent event hosting and cross-site RSVPs, check out indiewebcamp.com/event — potential to manual-POSSE to services like lanyrd too
Aral Balkan there’s some excellent+useful constructive criticism in there! I think you’re still misunderstanding the problem being solved and why indieauth evolved to work the way it does, as the solutions you suggest are in fact a big part of the problem. We wrote up a collaborative point-by-point response to your article here: indiewebcamp.com/On_Evolving_IndieAuth_Followup, which hopefully explains things better than I did previously.
One Indie Web Camp UK spot left, then we move to waiting list. Get in there quick, it’s going to be great: indiewebcamp.com/2013/UK
@scottjenson referring to the truncation? I know what you mean, I made the conscious decision to ignore the length of truncated copies of my content as I didn’t want what felt like an unnecessary limitation of Twitter limiting my self-expression.
Others (Tantek Çelik in particular) care more about the quality of their POSSEd notes, and build UIs which inform them when their notes go over tweet- or retweet-safe lengths. This is one of the places diversity of implementations helps us experiment without having to argue about stuff :)
One interesting alternative is to spread the content of notes which are too long for a tweet over several tweets, but that leads to all sorts of weird directionality changes, potential for them to be interrupted, extra permalinks, etc.