Right on! Yes, I’m thinking the CC attribution license is the one that I’ll use. Great idea about selling a downloadable pack, I hadn’t thought of anything like that. I’m also looking into things like Patreon or the “buy me a coffee” thing.
And frankly, this whole idea is inspired by folks like yourself, who build things with code and share them with the world! I code, but my stuff (for now) is only good enough for my own purposes. On the other hand, I’m a highly skilled musician and I create a lot of new musical and audio content! I’m going to give this a shot and see how it goes. Watch this space (chrisbeckstrom.com) for updates! In the meantime, most of my musical output is already available at chrisbeckstrom.bandcamp.com, a lot of it available as free downloads.
@aaronpk Oh awesome, I will almost certainly be there.
I would, uh, RSVP except.... um maybe my goal for the event will be to figure out how to RSVP to events
@aaronpk Heh. As we used to say at the MMORPG company I used to work at: if it's on the client, assume it's compromised.
Yes! I have been thinking about this a lot as well. Having hosted lots of IndieWeb events on my site (including HWC Baltimore and some of my improv shows), I increasingly feel like those event pages belong somewhere on the web associated with those communities.
I will of course keep my own RSVPs, photos, and recap write-ups on my site, but would gladly syndicate them to the community event page. If the event page supports IndieWeb building blocks like microformats2 and webmention, I wouldn’t even have to do anything special for them to show up there!
Been hacking away on a new IndieWeb project called Fortress! It’s meant to be a way to simplify sign-in support for IndieWeb-compatible services (think Monocle or http://indiebookclub.biz/). You can check it out at fortress.black.af. [Here’s my site’s scan](https://fortress.black.af/demo?url=https%3A%2F%2Fjacky.wtf%2F]. I expose a lot of info!