84°F

Aaron Parecki

  • Articles
  • Notes
  • Photos

Thursday, December 10, 2020

← Older → Newer
  • 11:19pm
    Asleep
    6:49am
    Awake
    7h 30m
    Slept
    21m
    Awake for
    Portland, Oregon, USA
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 6:49am -08:00
  • Chris Fonte https://twitter.com/FONTE935   •   Dec 10
    @aaronpk Have you used this thing? http://cinerails.com/xstreambay-xt-extreme/. Featured in this guy's video: https://youtu.be/STQVZsRjNWo
    Aaron Parecki
    I saw that but I haven't got a hold of one yet! Looks pretty cool
    Portland, Oregon • 39°F
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 8:45am -08:00
  • danny elhaj https://twitter.com/comedyrainman
    the word β€œbed” is shaped like a tiny bed
    Portland, Oregon • 39°F
    Wed, Dec 9, 2020 4:10pm +00:00 (liked on Thu, Dec 10, 2020 8:54am -08:00)
  • iJustine https://twitter.com/ijustine
    πŸŽ§πŸŽΆπŸ΄β€β˜ οΈπŸ–€
    Portland, Oregon • 39°F
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 2:19pm +00:00 (liked on Thu, Dec 10, 2020 8:55am -08:00)
  • Scott Jenson https://twitter.com/scottjenson   •   Dec 10
    #indieweb folks. there are a ton of self hosted commenting systems. But what about a "universal comment" system? Where all of my comments, on any site I use, are just links back to my server. I own/host all of my comments. I'm assuming this has been discussed?
    Aaron Parecki
    This sounds like what Webmention enables. This tweet for example is actually a copy of my reply to you that I've posted to my website. It works directly from site to site too of course.
    Portland, Oregon • 40°F
    4 likes 6 replies
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 9:10am -08:00
  • Scott Jenson https://twitter.com/scottjenson   •   Dec 10
    Excellent thanks. What would be the 'next step'? If we could get social networks to have the tweets/comments ONLY be a link to your website what does that buy us? I appreciate the solution you have but it's about working within the current siloed approach
    Aaron Parecki
    There are at least two social networks that use webmentions natively: https://micro.blog and https://pine.blog

    As for the current siloed approach, that's exactly what we're doing right now, many of us with https://brid.gy
    Portland, Oregon • 40°F
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 9:29am -08:00
  • Scott Jenson https://twitter.com/scottjenson   •   Dec 10
    Excellent thanks. What would be the 'next step'? If we could get social networks to have the tweets/comments ONLY be a link to your website what does that buy us? I appreciate the solution you have but it's about working within the current siloed approach
    Aaron Parecki
    If you're talking about what existing silos can do to play better with the open web, there's no reason they can't also support webmentions natively
    Portland, Oregon • 40°F
    1 reply
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 9:30am -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    Contributions from: Austria, Canada, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Netherlands, Portugal, United Kingdom, United States
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 2:01pm -08:00
  • Thread by @StanTwinB on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App (threadreaderapp.com)
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 3:27pm -08:00 #uber #engineering #objc #swift #ios
  • Lee Zavitz https://twitter.com/ZavitzLee
    Mic wasn’t turned on. Time to refilm
    Portland, Oregon • 42°F
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 9:19pm +00:00 (liked on Thu, Dec 10, 2020 3:39pm -08:00)
  • Using an environment variable (from `.env` file) in custom Twig function in Symfony 4 - Stack Overflow (stackoverflow.com)
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 4:52pm -08:00 #symfony #env
  • Thomas https://twitter.com/pnwthomas   •   Dec 11
    This just seems to be buying a domain and hosting your own site instead of, for example, posting content on Medium or some other site. Am I missing something?
    Aaron Parecki
    yes that, plus using your website as a home for other kinds of online content as well! This tweet for example is actually first posted on my website, and the Twitter version is just a copy of it https://indieweb.org/POSSE
    Portland, Oregon • 41°F
    3 likes
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 6:08pm -08:00
  • πŸŒŒπŸŒ΅πŸ›ΈBretπŸœπŸ‘¨‍πŸ‘©‍πŸ‘§πŸš™ https://twitter.com/bcomnes   •   Dec 11
    Has anyone tried a password auth system that standardizes on some front-end hashing strategy, so that the API never sees/touches the plain text version of the password?
    Aaron Parecki
    It's one of the oldest tricks in the books πŸ™ƒ
    Portland, Oregon • 41°F
    3 replies
    Thu, Dec 10, 2020 9:16pm -08:00
← Older → Newer

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

  • πŸŽ₯ YouTube Tutorials and Reviews
  • 🏠 We're building a triplex!
  • ⭐️ Life Stack
  • βš™οΈ 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