83°F

Aaron Parecki

  • Articles
  • Notes
  • Photos
  • Steve Ivy   •   May 30

    Calling all blog/CMS nerds: many of our systems have an idea of a “day” worth of content: archives, dialy digests, etc. My question is: what defines the current “day”? Is it from my perspective as the author? The reader’s? What about email digests?

    Aaron Parecki
    I've decided a "day" is my day, local time. That means if I travel to another timezone, the day might change in weird ways. You can see some of the side effects of this on my day archive pages when I've traveled across the date line. Some days are super long, others have almost no posts.
    Portland, Oregon • 65°F
    Sat, May 30, 2020 1:48pm -07:00
Posted in /replies using monocle.p3k.io

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.

  • Director of Identity Standards at Okta
  • IndieWebCamp Founder
  • OAuth WG Editor
  • OpenID Board Member

  • 🎥 YouTube Tutorials and Reviews
  • 🏠 We're building a triplex!
  • ⭐️ Life Stack
  • ⚙️ Home Automation
  • All
  • Articles
  • Bookmarks
  • Notes
  • Photos
  • Replies
  • Reviews
  • Trips
  • Videos
  • Contact
© 1999-2025 by Aaron Parecki. Powered by p3k. This site supports Webmention.
Except where otherwise noted, text content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
IndieWebCamp Microformats Webmention W3C HTML5 Creative Commons
WeChat ID
aaronpk_tv