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Aaron Parecki

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Thursday, December 29, 2016

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bicycle
1 hr 15 min
 
11.6 miles
 
bicycle
  • 9:39pm
    Asleep
    5:55am
    Awake
    7h 59m
    Slept
    51m
    Awake for
    Portland, Oregon, USA
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 5:55am -08:00
  • A good pager (cweiske.de)
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 6:20am -08:00 #ui #web
  • http://stream.boffosocko.com/2016/indiescripter-i-think-youve-probably-got-a-pretty-good-start
    Aaron Parecki
    This is such a great writeup! Thanks for chiming in!
    Portland, Oregon, USA
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 6:25am -08:00
  • Chris Aldrich http://stream.boffosocko.com/profile/chrisaldrich
    @indiescripter I think you've probably got a pretty good start on the IndieWeb philosophy. And an even better start in that you're writing your thoughts on your own website first and then syndicating them to silos like Twitter. I think that part of what you're missing about being able to reply to Aaron's original post is that his site both sends and accepts a new web protocol known as Webmention (http://indieweb.org/webmention). Thus on his original post, you'll see that I've "liked" it by making a post on my own site (http://stream.boffosocko.com/2016/liked-aaron-pareckis-100-days-of-indieweb-147eda7b83), and then in the background sending a webmention from my server to his to notify him about it. He can then decide whether or not to accept and/or display it (in this case mine appears next to his star icon at the bottom of the post). For the likes and comments/replies on his post, you can hover and find the permalinks for all of the responses on other people's originating sites. I'm sure yours would have shown up too, but I suspect that your site isn't sending webmentions yet, so his site is unaware that your post exists. I'm sure he'll have seen the Twitter response you gave though. I know Aaron also often syndicates copies of his posts to Twitter. There's another IndieWeb related service known as Brid.gy which bootstraps webmentions onto Twitter (in addition to other social silos) so that replies or comments to the copy that got syndicated to Twitter also send copies to the original post. In this case, he only syndicated it to news.indieweb.org, so it was less simple for you to have interacted with his post because there wasn't a Twitter version for you to interact with. You'll find that within the broader community that different members will support varying levels of functionality (based mostly on what they're interested in), so someone like Tantek (tantek.com) will post on his own site and syndicate to Twitter, but he doesn't yet display webmentions. You can, however, post your replies to him on your own site and syndicate them to Twitter (perhaps using Brid.gy publish?) to reply to his syndicated copy on Twitter where he'll see the notification of your reply. You yourself serve as another example as you don't (yet?) offer a comment field on your own post. Perhaps you may never, but that's your choice. (I'll mention incidentally that many static website owners are using Aaron's Webmention.io for sending/receiving webmentions, see also: https://indieweb.org/webmention.io.) I think that a lot of the goal is to not only have fun with what you're doing on your own website, but do things which you find interesting/useful for yourself. Are you interested in locations/check-ins [http://indieweb.org/location]? Reading related posts [http://indieweb.org/read]? Maybe other types of status updates [http://indieweb.org/posts]? Always work on your own itches [http://indieweb.org/itch] first. Just be careful, because lurking in IRC or browsing the IndieWeb wiki for a while and seeing what others are working on or doing can make you very "itchy". Though the reverse is true that seeing what others have done (even how silos have done things in the past) can make it easier for you to build it not only better, but perhaps more quickly. Perhaps the CMS or language you're using is being used by others in the community [http://indieweb.org/projects]? This may make it easier for you to go farther/faster by using their opensource code, or perhaps make it better by contributing some of your own thoughts/feedback/code? Keep up the search, and let us know if we can be of further help/assistance.
    Portland, Oregon
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 9:46am +00:00 (liked on Thu, Dec 29, 2016 6:25am -08:00)
  • The sorry state of the programming world as of the end of 2016 AD | dorinlazăr.ro (dorinlazar.ro)
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 6:33am -08:00 #web
  • http://indiescripter.com/articles/reply-aaron-parecki-2016-12-29.html
    https://twitter.com/indiescripter/status/814363314012569601
    Aaron Parecki
    @indiescripter Thanks for the explanation! It's great to hear this feedback from people new to #indieweb.

    Your point about your expectation of being able to like or comment on the post directly on my website is interesting. I took the comment box off of my website a long time ago, with no regrets. I like that it encourages people to write replies in a space of their own. (Ideally on their own website, but at the very least from their own Twitter account).

    However, it would be interesting to see what would happen if I let people "like" posts directly on my website, even if they don't have their own website yet. Maybe I'll do that for one of the 100 days!
    Portland, Oregon, USA
    2 likes 2 replies
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 7:02am -08:00 #indieweb
  • Day 9: Webmention form #100DaysOfIndieWeb

    I finally brought back the Webmention form on my website! At the bottom of my posts, you'll see a Webmention form now!
    continue reading...
    1 like 1 reply 4 mentions
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 9:27am -08:00 #100daysofindieweb #indieweb #webmention
  • http://stream.boffosocko.com/2016/aaronpk-wait-a-second-did-you-already-do-just-that
    Aaron Parecki
    I decided to make that my project for today! You're not crazy :-)
    Portland, Oregon, USA
    1 reply
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 9:30am -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    at Grand Central Baking Company
    Portland, Oregon • Thu, December 29, 2016 2:47pm
    45.547692 -122.673579
    🍞
    Portland, OR, United States
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 2:47pm -08:00
  • Ride
    2.34mi
    Distance
    14:27
    Duration
    2:52pm
    Start
    3:06pm
    End
    Portland, Oregon
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 3:06pm -08:00
  • Ride
    0.56mi
    Distance
    4:55
    Duration
    6:09pm
    Start
    6:14pm
    End
    Portland, Oregon
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 6:14pm -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    Day 9. I don't really know what I was going for here. I had this tune in my head on the bike ride home from downtown this evening. This one only took an hour or so to jot down, since I wasn't going for any particular sound. The animation kind of sums it up. #100daysofmusic #100daysproject #the100dayproject
    Portland, Oregon
    6 likes 4 replies 223 mentions
    Thu, Dec 29, 2016 8:51pm -08:00 #100daysofmusic #100daysproject #the100dayproject
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Hi, I'm Aaron Parecki, Director of Identity Standards at Okta, and co-founder of IndieWebCamp. I maintain oauth.net, write and consult about OAuth, and participate in the OAuth Working Group at the IETF. I also help people learn about video production and livestreaming. (detailed bio)

I've been tracking my location since 2008 and I wrote 100 songs in 100 days. I've spoken at conferences around the world about owning your data, OAuth, quantified self, and explained why R is a vowel. Read more.

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