Yeah, exactly. On timeline can you provide both a before AND after token? You definitely would want to be able to specify both in the "timelineCounts" method.
Yeah, exactly. On timeline can you provide both a before AND after token? You definitely would want to be able to specify both in the "timelineCounts" method.
Excellent. I think the "unread counts" property is useful based on common reader approaches. So I think that is definitely valuable, I can see a lot of people wanting to use that. For my use-case, my unread status will likely be based on if the updated property has been "updated".
I'm gonna have to think about this further because there are three options I could do. Regardless of the option I use, Indigenous' default will always be based on if new posts have come in. However, there are some additional features I might implement:
I think I'm leaning towards that last approach:
Tomorrow I’m sending out a special edition of my newsletter, The Monthly Review. This one will collect personal annual reviews for 2017. There’s still time to sign up for the newsletter (Or hit me up if you want to share your review!)
@aaronpk WebSub stoked my curiousity, so I tried both Wordpress plugins for it but neither seem to support discovery per the websub.rocks publisher test. Wondering if that's typical (i.e. we have to manually edit templates to include discovery links) or it's just my set-up?
@aaronpk Hey, any plans on updating Overland in App Store with the new 'current' location property?
@aaronpk maybe PowerNap™ was active and the MacBook wasn’t in standby?
My trick to make my 2017 annual review blog post easier to write was to create the draft immediately on publishing my 2016 review. I added little bits to it all year and just polished it off in Dec. I’ve already done the same for 2018.
@canion This looks really interesting! Thanks for sharing.
@aaronpk A starred article is a private favorite — generally it means something you want to come back to later for some reason. It’s common to have a special pseudo-feed that shows just starred articles, so a user can find them all easily.
I haven’t worked with current syncing system APIs much yet: my experience is mainly with NewsGator and Google Reader APIs, both now defunct. I vastly preferred NewsGator’s API, because it was designed as a syncing system, where Google Reader’s API was designed for Google, and was never publicly documented or supported, and didn’t work very well for apps like Evergreen (there were lots of ambiguous cases).
