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Aaron Parecki

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  • Ben Acker https://twitter.com/nvcexploder
    @aaronpk details his setup here: https://twitter.com/aaronpk/status/1201290841177776128

    It's a good one, and what I'm moving closer too. Right now I've got an Ecobee setup, a BUNCH of Phillips Hue lighting, and self-built HomeBridge devices that do weird crap like making cricket sounds.
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 5:07pm +00:00 (liked on Wed, Jan 22, 2020 9:08am -08:00)
  • nystudio107 https://twitter.com/nystudio107
    Yep, a fair point Aaron, I agree!
    Portland, Oregon • 45°F
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 5:00pm +00:00 (liked on Wed, Jan 22, 2020 9:01am -08:00)
  • nystudio107 https://twitter.com/nystudio107   •   Jan 22
    Correct, but spun off as a neutral standard, as has happened for many of the technologies that we're using today.

    Regardless, Google is consuming only JSON-LD going forward for some types of structured data, so it'll end up being a choice you have to make at some point.
    Aaron Parecki
    Like I said already, only if you care about SEO. If SEO is your goal, you do what Google says. There's plenty of uses of structured data outside of that (including the tools that I use to read and post to Twitter) which are easier done using Microformats
    Portland, Oregon • 45°F
    2 likes
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 8:58am -08:00
  • nystudio107 https://twitter.com/nystudio107   •   Jan 22
    This implies http://schema.org is invented by Google; it isn't.

    "Since April 2015, the W3C http://Schema.org Community Group is the main forum for schema collaboration, and provides the public-schemaorg@w3.org mailing list for discussions."

    http://schema.org/docs/about.html
    Aaron Parecki
    Literally on http://schema.org... "Founded by Google, Microsoft, Yahoo and Yandex..." and look at the names on their about page too. Even if it's not created exclusively by them (which I never said), that looks an awful lot like an oligopoly to me anyway.
    Portland, Oregon • 45°F
    2 replies
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 8:54am -08:00
  • Aaron Bradley https://twitter.com/aaranged   •   Jan 22
    What Google sayx. And Bing. And Yahoo. And Yandex.

    But if all you care about is SEO by all means use what you perceive as the flavor of the day. But if you also care about a robust, developer-friendly, serialization format for linked data then JSON-LD is there for you.
    Aaron Parecki
    Frankly "linked data" is not a priority for me. There's plenty of useful structured data that is not LD, and tbh most developers who use JSON-LD don't even know about the LD part, they just copy the examples and wonder why they have "@context" everywhere
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 8:43am -08:00
  • nystudio107 https://twitter.com/nystudio107   •   Jan 22
    Unless I'm missing something, this chart is lacking 2017, 2018, 2019, as well as 2020. Google is strongly recommended JSON-LD usage today, and has been since 2016-ish.

    And there are a number of rich snippets that _only_ work as JSON-LD.

    https://developers.google.com/search/docs/guides/intro-structured-data
    Aaron Parecki
    Yes, read the linked post, it's from 2016
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    4 replies
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 8:41am -08:00
  • Aaron Bradley https://twitter.com/aaranged   •   Jan 22
    I know that you're a huge microformats fan Kevin, but among other things: 1) they're not remotely expressive enough for contemporary structured data requirements; 2) they're HTML-bound, meaning you can't provide data like this https://developers.google.com/actions/media/how-to/create-a-feed
    Aaron Parecki
    If all you care about is SEO then do whatever Google says to do this year and you're fine. Today that's JSON-LD, tomorrow it's ???? I need to update this chart for 2020 but as we see, history keeps repeating itself. https://aaronparecki.com/2016/12/17/8/owning-my-reviews#historical-recommendations
    Portland, Oregon, USA
    1 like 2 reposts 4 replies
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 8:35am -08:00
  • Aaron Bradley https://twitter.com/aaranged   •   Jan 22
    I know that you're a huge microformats fan Kevin, but among other things: 1) they're not remotely expressive enough for contemporary structured data requirements; 2) they're HTML-bound, meaning you can't provide data like this https://developers.google.com/actions/media/how-to/create-a-feed
    Aaron Parecki
    You might be surprised what you can do with Microformats...

    https://aaronparecki.com/2018/03/12/17/building-an-indieweb-reader

    Even this tweet originated from my own website using tools built on Microformats.
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    3 likes 2 reposts 1 reply
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 8:31am -08:00
  • Brian Fitzpatrick https://twitter.com/therealfitz
    Wow. Just got a giant "Fuck you for buying a bunch of our shit in the early days" email from @Sonos.

    /cc @internetofshit
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    Tue, Jan 21, 2020 4:23pm +00:00 (liked on Wed, Jan 22, 2020 7:48am -08:00)
  • K. Mike Merrill https://twitter.com/kmikeym   •   Jan 22
    Like Netflix I also use my own private internal measurement that I only occasionally release for stats and yesterday I had 87,000,000,000 views on my website. https://buff.ly/30HVBXk
    Aaron Parecki
    the guy that runs your website must be really good
    Portland, Oregon • 45°F
    1 like
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 7:10am -08:00
  • Hardening Refresh Tokens (leastprivilege.com)
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 6:49am -08:00 #oauth #security
  • Aaron Parecki
    Contributions from: Japan, Netherlands, Singapore
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 6:20am -08:00
  • Henrique Dias https://hacdias.com/   •   Jan 22

    Hey Aaron! What software/library are you using to generate those maps with your location? Can they be considered heat maps? And what about the animated video?

    Aaron Parecki
    It's all a giant pile of PHP code I wrote ages ago, it's not even map-projection-aware it just plots on a 2D canvas. The animation is basically a timelapse of a bunch of frames of that same script played in a row.
    Portland, Oregon • 45°F
    1 reply
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 5:25am -08:00
  • 10:24pm
    Asleep
    5:19am
    Awake
    6h 55m
    Slept
    15m
    Awake for
    Portland, Oregon, USA • 46°F
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 5:19am -08:00
  • Aaron Parecki
    Contributions from: Japan, Singapore
    Tue, Jan 21, 2020 11:16pm -08:00
  • 📷 PhotoJoseph 🎥 https://twitter.com/photojoseph
    life goals… I showed my wife pieces of my latest video and she was actually impressed. 😯 https://youtu.be/UuCPuqcAH94
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 3:37am +00:00 (liked on Tue, Jan 21, 2020 10:11pm -08:00)
  • Swarm https://swarmapp.com/
    Welcome back! You haven't checked in to Lucky Labrador Tap Room since June '11.
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    Tue, Jan 21, 2020 6:42pm -08:00 (liked on Tue, Jan 21, 2020 10:11pm -08:00)
  • Train
    2.53mi
    Distance
    9:13
    Duration
    9:56pm
    Start
    10:06pm
    End
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    Tue, Jan 21, 2020 10:06pm -08:00
  • Lillian Karabaic https://twitter.com/anomalily
    I literally did this for my 30th birthday, only it was a $1000 budget because I'm cheap and was a multi-city spy-themed scavenger hunt on public transit. There was a rooftop message only readable from the aerial tram, and a secret karaoke bus. We had tacos.
    Portland, Oregon • 47°F
    Wed, Jan 22, 2020 4:29am +00:00 (liked on Tue, Jan 21, 2020 10:04pm -08:00)
  • Train
    2.49mi
    Distance
    8:38
    Duration
    9:46pm
    Start
    9:55pm
    End
    Portland, Oregon • 46°F
    Tue, Jan 21, 2020 9:55pm -08:00
older

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
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