jackjamieson2 / yarns-microsub-server

Yarns is a Microsub server that runs as a plugin on your WordPress site.
GNU General Public License v2.0
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Indigenous for Android: objects of type string can't be converted to objects from Yarns #53

Closed jackjamieson2 closed 5 years ago

jackjamieson2 commented 5 years ago

mentioned by @dshanske on IRC:

https://chat.indieweb.org/wordpress/2019-01-14#t1547490192549500 13:23 GWG By the way, Indigenous for Android is complaining objects of type string can't be converted to objects from Yarns

dshanske commented 5 years ago

@swentel What is Indigenous expecting?

swentel commented 5 years ago

Hmm hard to tell from that error string alone to be honest. I assume it's in the timeline ? There are a couple of properties which expect an object:

Hope that helps debugging it more.

jackjamieson2 commented 5 years ago

Thanks @swentel,

I'll see if I can figure it out. Thinking out loud there are two possibilities if it's the timeline: 1) If the timeline always fails, no matter what feeds are included, then the issue may be in the 'paging' object or a more general issue. 2) If the timeline only fails for specific feeds, then it's possible that objects like 'author' or 'content' are empty, in which case maybe they're sent as empty strings.

This week is mostly a writing week for me, but I'll try to get some time to test this out tomorrow or Thursday.

swentel commented 5 years ago

Feel free also to just upload a json dump here, I can quickly put that in development environment and catch the error in my adb debug output, that might be faster :)

jackjamieson2 commented 5 years ago

Thanks, that's great - I'll still wait to test it on my end so I can narrow down whether it's all timeline requests or if it depends on the content. Will test it with an android phone, which means I have to wait to borrow one from my office tomorrow since I'm not there today

jackjamieson2 commented 5 years ago

Sorry for my delayed response - Ended up being focused on writing and teaching and put all my Yarns work aside for a few days.

It looks to me that every timeline request fails with this error.

Here's a JSON dump of a typical timeline returned from Yarns:

{
  "items": [
    {
      "category": [
        "read",
        "social-stream",
        "business-strategy",
        "donald-j-trump",
        "empathy",
        "goodwill",
        "government-shutdown",
        "the-golden-rule"
      ],
      "bookmark-of": "http:\\/\\/fortune.com\\/2016\\/09\\/30\\/donald-trump-stiff-contractors\\/",
      "read-of": {
        "type": "entry",
        "url": "http:\\/\\/fortune.com\\/2016\\/09\\/30\\/donald-trump-stiff-contractors\\/",
        "name": "Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors",
        "summary": "Fortunately, the practice is not common in business.",
        "post-type": "article"
      },
      "type": "entry",
      "url": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/donald-trump-why-us-law-makes-it-easy-to-stiff-contractors-fortune\\/",
      "name": "\\ud83d\\udc53 Donald Trump: Why US Law Makes It Easy to Stiff Contractors. | Fortune",
      "published": "2019-01-20T22:02:21-08:00",
      "updated": "2019-01-20T23:36:19-08:00",
      "author": {
        "name": "Chris Aldrich",
        "photo": "https:\\/\\/secure.gravatar.com\\/avatar\\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg",
        "url": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/",
        "type": "card"
      },
      "content": {
        "text": "Read Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors (Fortune)Fortunately, the practice is not common in business.\nI came across this article while thinking about how Trump\\u2019s stiffing workers and contractors seemed similar to his handling of the government shutdown.\nAfter reading this, it almost seems to me that with the government shutdown Trump is \\u201cselling out his goodwill\\u201d in a political sense the same way he\\u2019s sold out the goodwill of his own businesses.\nSeeing both of these things juxtaposed is another very stark reminder that he seems to have no empathy for anyone at all. This article seems to have called out the same thing long ago.\nIn practice this [selling out goodwill] rarely happens, for two reasons.\nFirst, most business people, despite what some people think, have integrity, a heart, and a conscience.\n[\\u2026]\nFortunately, you don\\u2019t see that too often. That\\u2019s because most business people, like most other Americans, are fundamentally decent people. They believe in, and practice, the Golden Rule. Syndicated copies to:",
        "html": "<section class=\"response u-read-of u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Read<\\/span> <a href=\"http:\\/\\/fortune.com\\/2016\\/09\\/30\\/donald-trump-stiff-contractors\\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors<\\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Fortune<\\/span>)<\\/em><\\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">Fortunately, the practice is not common in business.<\\/blockquote><\\/section><p>I came across this article <a href=\"https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/tigers-do-not-change-their-stripes\\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">while thinking about how Trump\\u2019s stiffing workers and contractors seemed similar to his handling of the government shutdown<\\/a>.<\\/p>\n<p>After reading this, it almost seems to me that with the government shutdown Trump is \\u201cselling out his goodwill\\u201d in a political sense the same way he\\u2019s sold out the goodwill of his own businesses.<\\/p>\n<p>Seeing both of these things juxtaposed is another very stark reminder that he seems to have no empathy for anyone at all. This article seems to have called out the same thing long ago.<\\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"annotation p-annotation-of\"><p>\nIn practice this [selling out goodwill] rarely happens, for two reasons.<br>\nFirst, most business people, despite what some people think, have integrity, a heart, and a conscience.<br>\n[\\u2026]<br>\nFortunately, you don\\u2019t see that too often. That\\u2019s because most business people, like most other Americans, are fundamentally decent people. They believe in, and practice, the Golden Rule.\n<\\/p><\\/blockquote>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\">\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\\/\\/www.reading.am\\/p\\/57Yo\\/http:\\/\\/fortune.com\\/2016\\/09\\/30\\/donald-trump-stiff-contractors\\/\"> <\\/a><\\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\\/\\/twitter.com\\/ChrisAldrich\\/status\\/1087252255957409792\"> <\\/a><\\/li>\n<\\/ul>\n<\\/div>"
      },
      "summary": "Read Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors (Fortune)Fortunately, the practice is not common in business.\nI came across this article while thinking about how Trump\\u2019s stiffing workers and contractors seemed similar to his handling of the government shutdown.\nAfter reading ...",
      "post-type": "bookmark",
      "_id": 3082,
      "_is_read": false,
      "_permalink": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/donald-trump-why-us-law-makes-it-easy-to-stiff-contractors-fortune\\/"
    },
    {
      "category": [
        "annotation",
        "reply",
        "social-stream",
        "creativity",
        "learning",
        "responses",
        "teaching",
        "thought-spaces",
        "trust",
        "vulnerability"
      ],
      "in-reply-to": "https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/",
      "type": "entry",
      "url": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-cathie-leblanc-2\\/",
      "name": "\\ud83d\\udcd1 The Vulnerability of Learning | Cathie LeBlanc",
      "published": "2019-01-20T21:26:53-08:00",
      "updated": "2019-01-21T00:45:41-08:00",
      "author": {
        "name": "Chris Aldrich",
        "photo": "https:\\/\\/secure.gravatar.com\\/avatar\\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg",
        "url": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/",
        "type": "card"
      },
      "content": {
        "text": "Replied to The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)\nWhen I received Chris\\u2019s comment, my first response was that I should delete my post or at least the incorrect part of it. It\\u2019s embarrassing to have your incorrect understandings available for public view. But I decided to leave the post as is but put in a disclaimer so that others would not be misled by my misunderstandings.\nThis experience reminded me that learning makes us vulnerable. Admitting that you don\\u2019t know something is hard and being corrected is even harder. Chris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine? Could I be more gentle? How often have I graded my students\\u2019 work and only focused on what they did wrong? Or forgotten that feeling of vulnerability when you don\\u2019t know something, when you put your work out for others to judge? This experience has also reminded me that it\\u2019s important that we as teachers regularly put ourselves into situations in which we authentically grapple with not knowing something. We should regularly share our less than fully formed understandings with others for feedback. It helps us remember that even confident learners can struggle with being vulnerable. And we need to keep in mind that many of our students are not confident learners.\\u00a0\\u00a0\\u2767\nI\\u2019m reminded here of the broad idea that many bloggers write about sooner or later of their website being a \\u201cthought space\\u201d or place to contemplate out in the open. More often than not, even if they don\\u2019t have an audience to interact with, their writings become a way of thinking out loud, clarifying things for themselves, self-evolving, or putting themselves out there for potential public reactions (good, bad, or indifferent).\nWhile writing things out loud to no audience can be helpful and useful on an individual level, it\\u2019s often even more helpful to have some sort of productive and constructive feedback. While a handful of likes or positive seeming responses can be useful, I always prefer the ones that make me think more broadly, deeply, or force me to consider other pieces I hadn\\u2019t envisioned before. To me this is the real value of these open and often very public thought spaces.\nFor those interested in the general idea, I\\u2019ve been [bookmarking\\/tagging things around the idea of thought spaces I\\u2019ve read on my own website](https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/tag\\/thought-spaces\\/). Hopefully this collection helps others better understand the spectrum of these ideas for themselves.\nWith respect to the vulnerability piece, I\\u2019m reminded of an episode of The Human Current I listened to a few weeks back. There was an excellent section that touched on building up trust with students or even a class when it comes to providing feedback and criticism. Having a bank of trust makes it easier to give feedback as well as to receive it. Here\\u2019s a link to the audio portion and a copy of the relevant text. Syndicated copies to:",
        "html": "<section class=\"h-cite response p-in-reply-to \"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Replied to<\\/span> <a href=\"https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">The Vulnerability of Learning<\\/a> by <a href=\"https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\\/\\/i1.wp.com\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/wp-content\\/uploads\\/2018\\/06\\/profile.jpg?resize=150%2C150\" alt=\"Cathie LeBlanc\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Cathie LeBlanc<\\/a><em> (<span class=\"p-publication\">Desert of My Real Life<\\/span>)<\\/em><\\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\"><p>When I received Chris\\u2019s comment, my first response was that I should delete my post or at least the incorrect part of it. It\\u2019s embarrassing to have your incorrect understandings available for public view. But I decided to leave the post as is but put in a disclaimer so that others would not be misled by my misunderstandings.<br>\r\nThis experience reminded me that learning makes us vulnerable. Admitting that you don\\u2019t know something is hard and being corrected is even harder. Chris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine? Could I be more gentle? How often have I graded my students\\u2019 work and only focused on what they did wrong? Or forgotten that feeling of vulnerability when you don\\u2019t know something, when you put your work out for others to judge? This experience has also reminded me that it\\u2019s important that we as teachers regularly put ourselves into situations in which we authentically grapple with not knowing something. We should regularly share our less than fully formed understandings with others for feedback. It helps us remember that even confident learners can struggle with being vulnerable. And we need to keep in mind that many of our students are not confident learners.\\u00a0\\u00a0<a title=\"click to see this annotation in situ\" href=\"https:\\/\\/hyp.is\\/IbcchB09EemEPDvd3wd0mA\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">\\u2767<\\/a><\\/p><\\/blockquote><\\/section><p>I\\u2019m reminded here of the broad idea that many bloggers write about sooner or later of their website being a \\u201cthought space\\u201d or place to contemplate out in the open. More often than not, even if they don\\u2019t have an audience to interact with, their writings become a way of thinking out loud, clarifying things for themselves, self-evolving, or putting themselves out there for potential public reactions (good, bad, or indifferent).<\\/p>\n<p>While writing things out loud to no audience can be helpful and useful on an individual level, it\\u2019s often even more helpful to have some sort of productive and constructive feedback. While a handful of likes or positive seeming responses can be useful, I always prefer the ones that make me think more broadly, deeply, or force me to consider other pieces I hadn\\u2019t envisioned before. To me this is the real value of these open and often very public thought spaces.<\\/p>\n<p>For those interested in the general idea, I\\u2019ve been [bookmarking\\/tagging things around the idea of thought spaces I\\u2019ve read on my own website](https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/tag\\/thought-spaces\\/). Hopefully this collection helps others better understand the spectrum of these ideas for themselves.<\\/p>\n<p>With respect to the vulnerability piece, I\\u2019m reminded of an <a href=\"http:\\/\\/www.human-current.com\\/episode-082-the-complexity-chaos-of-creativity\\/\">episode of <cite>The Human Current<\\/cite><\\/a> <a href=\"https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/08\\/episode-082-the-complexity-chaos-of-creativity-human-current\\/\">I listened to<\\/a> a few weeks back. There was an excellent section that touched on building up trust with students or even a class when it comes to providing feedback and criticism. Having a bank of trust makes it easier to give feedback as well as to receive it. Here\\u2019s a <a href=\"http:\\/\\/hwcdn.libsyn.com\\/p\\/0\\/c\\/2\\/0c2e5a4377419e30\\/082_Jon20Kolko.mp3?c_id=20485978&cs_id=20485978&destination_id=280210&expiration=1548050165&hwt=c9a47bb5703602f53c287fce3b5eaafe#t=1595\">link to the audio portion<\\/a> and a copy of the <a href=\"https:\\/\\/hyp.is\\/L-l_qh03Eemqow9FJNYNYQ\\/static1.squarespace.com\\/static\\/54f8c6cee4b0e25f5b1af40c\\/t\\/5ba27cb90e2e72a6a0e64302\\/1537375418029\\/082_The+Complexity+%26+Chaos+of+Creativity%2C+with+Jon+Kolko.pdf\">relevant text<\\/a>.<\\/p>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\">\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\\/\\/chrisaldrich.wordpress.com\\/?p=55683539\"> <\\/a><\\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\\/\\/hypothes.is\\/a\\/IbcchB09EemEPDvd3wd0mA\"> <\\/a><\\/li>\n<\\/ul>\n<\\/div>"
      },
      "summary": "Replied to The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)\nWhen I received Chris\\u2019s comment, my first response was that I should delete my post or at least the incorrect part of it. It\\u2019s embarrassing to have your incorrect understandings available for publi...",
      "post-type": "reply",
      "_id": 3084,
      "_is_read": false,
      "_permalink": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-cathie-leblanc-2\\/"
    },
    {
      "category": [
        "education",
        "read",
        "social-stream",
        "creativity",
        "learning",
        "responses",
        "teaching",
        "thought-spaces",
        "trust",
        "vulnerability"
      ],
      "bookmark-of": "https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/",
      "read-of": {
        "type": "entry",
        "url": "https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/",
        "name": "The Vulnerability of Learning",
        "author": {
          "photo": "https:\\/\\/i1.wp.com\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/wp-content\\/uploads\\/2018\\/06\\/profile.jpg?resize=150%2C150",
          "name": "Cathie LeBlanc",
          "type": "card"
        },
        "summary": "Listening to the students talk about feeling unsure and vulnerable when they first encountered open educational practices made me think about my own learning. As a mid-career academic who has changed jobs and even disciplines, I am a confident learner. I have received lots of praise and other kinds of positive reinforcement for my ability to learn new things. If you have read previous posts on my blog, you might know that I am really interested in developments in the IndieWeb movement and am trying to write about some of my experiences with using IndieWeb tools to build my own web site. I\\u2019ve been building my own sites for years and so I have a lot of confidence in my ability there as well. Working on the IndieWeb stuff has been challenging because there\\u2019s a lot of new language and new concepts as well as some aspects of web development that I have not engaged with before. I often feel vulnerable when I write my posts about the IndieWeb because my understanding of how everything works is emerging. In other words, I don\\u2019t get it all yet but I\\u2019m still writing publicly about my work.",
        "post-type": "article"
      },
      "type": "entry",
      "url": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-desert-of-my-real-life\\/",
      "name": "\\ud83d\\udc53 The Vulnerability of Learning | Desert of My Real Life",
      "published": "2019-01-20T21:14:24-08:00",
      "updated": "2019-01-21T00:22:09-08:00",
      "author": {
        "name": "Chris Aldrich",
        "photo": "https:\\/\\/secure.gravatar.com\\/avatar\\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg",
        "url": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/",
        "type": "card"
      },
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        "text": "Read The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)Listening to the students talk about feeling unsure and vulnerable when they first encountered open educational practices made me think about my own learning. As a mid-career academic who has changed jobs and even disciplines, I am a confident learner. I have received lots of praise and other kinds of positive reinforcement for my ability to learn new things. If you have read previous posts on my blog, you might know that I am really interested in developments in the IndieWeb movement and am trying to write about some of my experiences with using IndieWeb tools to build my own web site. I\\u2019ve been building my own sites for years and so I have a lot of confidence in my ability there as well. Working on the IndieWeb stuff has been challenging because there\\u2019s a lot of new language and new concepts as well as some aspects of web development that I have not engaged with before. I often feel vulnerable when I write my posts about the IndieWeb because my understanding of how everything works is emerging. In other words, I don\\u2019t get it all yet but I\\u2019m still writing publicly about my work.Syndicated copies to:",
        "html": "<section class=\"response u-read-of u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Read<\\/span> <a href=\"https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">The Vulnerability of Learning<\\/a> by <a href=\"https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\\/\\/i1.wp.com\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/wp-content\\/uploads\\/2018\\/06\\/profile.jpg?resize=150%2C150\" alt=\"Cathie LeBlanc\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Cathie LeBlanc<\\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Desert of My Real Life<\\/span>)<\\/em><\\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">Listening to the students talk about feeling unsure and vulnerable when they first encountered open educational practices made me think about my own learning. As a mid-career academic who has changed jobs and even disciplines, I am a confident learner. I have received lots of praise and other kinds of positive reinforcement for my ability to learn new things. If you have read previous posts on my blog, you might know that I am really interested in developments in the IndieWeb movement and am trying to write about some of my experiences with using IndieWeb tools to build my own web site. I\\u2019ve been building my own sites for years and so I have a lot of confidence in my ability there as well. Working on the IndieWeb stuff has been challenging because there\\u2019s a lot of new language and new concepts as well as some aspects of web development that I have not engaged with before. I often feel vulnerable when I write my posts about the IndieWeb because my understanding of how everything works is emerging. In other words, I don\\u2019t get it all yet but I\\u2019m still writing publicly about my work.<\\/blockquote><\\/section><div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\"><li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\\/\\/www.reading.am\\/p\\/57Yd\\/https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/\"> <\\/a><\\/li><\\/ul>\n<\\/div>"
      },
      "summary": "Read The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)Listening to the students talk about feeling unsure and vulnerable when they first encountered open educational practices made me think about my own learning. As a mid-career academic who has changed jobs and...",
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      "_permalink": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-desert-of-my-real-life\\/"
    },
    {
      "checkin": {
        "name": "Starbucks Reserve",
        "url": "https:\\/\\/foursquare.com\\/v\\/4b670e59f964a52066372be3",
        "type": "card"
      },
      "syndication": "https:\\/\\/www.swarmapp.com\\/user\\/432794314\\/checkin\\/5c4547b58496ca002c83d036",
      "type": "entry",
      "url": "https:\\/\\/dougbeal.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/5930\\/",
      "published": "2019-01-20T20:16:53-08:00",
      "updated": "2019-01-20T20:16:53-08:00",
      "post-type": "checkin",
      "_id": 3073,
      "_is_read": false,
      "_permalink": "https:\\/\\/dougbeal.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/5930\\/"
    },
    {
      "category": [
        "annotation",
        "reply",
        "social-stream",
        "creativity",
        "learning",
        "responses",
        "teaching",
        "thought-spaces",
        "trust",
        "vulnerability"
      ],
      "in-reply-to": "https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/",
      "type": "entry",
      "url": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/20\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-cathie-leblanc\\/",
      "name": "\\ud83d\\udcd1 The Vulnerability of Learning | Cathie LeBlanc",
      "published": "2019-01-20T20:03:42-08:00",
      "updated": "2019-01-21T00:38:58-08:00",
      "author": {
        "name": "Chris Aldrich",
        "photo": "https:\\/\\/secure.gravatar.com\\/avatar\\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg",
        "url": "https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/",
        "type": "card"
      },
      "content": {
        "text": "Replied to The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)\nChris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine?\\u00a0\\u00a0\\u2767\nWhat a relief to hear this! The hardest part about writing my response was in possibly coming off too hard or painfully pedantic and not wanting to turn you off in your explorations. Syndicated copies to:",
        "html": "<section class=\"h-cite response p-in-reply-to \"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Replied to<\\/span> <a href=\"https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">The Vulnerability of Learning<\\/a> by <a href=\"https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\\/\\/i1.wp.com\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/wp-content\\/uploads\\/2018\\/06\\/profile.jpg?resize=150%2C150\" alt=\"Cathie LeBlanc\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Cathie LeBlanc<\\/a><em> (<span class=\"p-publication\">Desert of My Real Life<\\/span>)<\\/em><\\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\"><p>Chris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine?\\u00a0\\u00a0<a title=\"click to see this annotation in situ\" href=\"https:\\/\\/hyp.is\\/dBcDfh0xEemcD5uCKKk9qg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">\\u2767<\\/a><\\/p><\\/blockquote><\\/section><p>What a relief to hear this! The hardest part about writing <a class=\"u-in-reply-to\" href=\"https:\\/\\/boffosocko.com\\/2019\\/01\\/09\\/everything-old-is-new-again-adventures-in-the-indieweb-desert-of-my-real-life\\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">my response<\\/a> was in possibly coming off too hard or painfully pedantic and not wanting to turn you off in your explorations.<\\/p>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\">\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\\/\\/chrisaldrich.wordpress.com\\/?p=55683537\"> <\\/a><\\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\\/\\/hypothes.is\\/a\\/dBcDfh0xEemcD5uCKKk9qg\"> <\\/a><\\/li>\n<\\/ul>\n<\\/div>"
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      "content": {
        "text": "#podcon2 Origin Stories"
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        "text": "Another PodCon, another awesome poster. Some Relay hosts my be in pin form only\\ud83d\\ude09",
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        "text": "Staying on brand #PodCon2 #Indieweb"
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      "name": "State of the Indieweb in WordPress",
      "published": "2019-01-20T16:42:23-05:00",
      "updated": "2019-01-20T16:42:23-05:00",
      "content": {
        "text": "Every year, at the Indieweb Summit, we have the State of the Indieweb(it\\u2019s the year of the Reader, by the way). The head of the WordPress project gives his State of the Word. I even watched the Governor of my State give his State of the state.\nAs I go through my 2018 Year in Review, I wanted to cover the State of WordPress as it relates to the Indieweb, cover where we are and were I hope we are going.\nWhile the Block Based Editor, aka Gutenberg, had no direct effect on WordPress and its Indieweb usage, it has had a serious effect on developing for WordPress and will continue to do so in the future.\nWe\\u2019ve had several community members who have opted to move off of WordPress. But we continue to, because of the market presence of the product, attract new people. So, concerns aside about the future of the WordPress project, it makes sense for the community to continue to evolve. \\u00a0IndieAuth Endpoint for WordPress Micropub Endpoint Rewritten to use WordPress REST API Weather for Simple Location New Weather, Location, and Map Providers for Simple Location Refbacks Parse This, a post-processing and parsing library for WordPress split out and updated, now set to be used in a Microsub server Yarns Microsub in beta Support for syndication built into Syndication Links Redesign of the UIs for Simple Location and Post Kinds New code to allow the registration of custom post kinds Attempt to store microformats in mf2 json and convert to jf2 New Widgets Basic support for receiving Vouches added to Webmentions\\u2026though disabled by default Template improvements to Semantic Linkbacks to improve the settings page and new property support Additional Microformats 2\\/Indieweb Plugin friendly themes.\nThis is only a short list of things that came to mind when I read through the various changelogs.\nAll of these items reflect the coming together and polishing of a complete Indieweb experience. As we move into the end of the first month of 2019, here is what I personally am hoping to see. The release of Yarns Microsub At least one of the two theme conversions I worked on being released in the WordPress Theme Directory, giving us another option for individuals who better integration Redesign, improvement, and enhancement of the Facepiles in Semantic Linkbacks. Look at the future of Webmention and Semantic Linkbacks. Every year, there is talk of why they aren\\u2019t merged. This is partly to do with the storage design. It may be time to standardize the storage. Improve MF2 Feed to generate a compliant feed for times when the theme cannot be modified to encourage more interaction Improve documentation\nWhile I\\u2019m not hoping for it, in the longterm, whether or not we should pivot to accept a block editor world for the Indieweb plugins is a matter for debate.\nThe alternative is to leave the block editor for article posting and add a UI into Post Kinds to allow for simple note and like posting in the admin. Or use Micropub exclusively.\nBut, we will all continue to plug along. What are you looking to get out of having a WordPress site and adopting the principles of the Indieweb community this year?\n\\u00a0\n\\u00a0",
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        "text": "Great podcast subject swap"
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      "name": "Posted on 6:30 pm\n2019-01-19Kind PhotoLeave a response on",
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        "text": "Riding around",
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      "name": "On Voice and Being a Text Person",
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        "name": "Ton Zijlstra",
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      "content": {
        "text": "Donald Clark writes about the use of voice tech for learning. I find I struggle enormously with voice. While I recognise several aspects put forward in that posting as likely useful in learning settings (auto transcription, text to speech, oral traditions), there are others that remain barriers to adoption to me.\nFor taking in information as voice. Podcasts are mentioned as a useful tool, but don\\u2019t work for me at all. I get distracted after about 30 seconds. The voices drone on, there\\u2019s often tons of fluff as the speaker is trying to get to the point (often a lack of preparation I suppose). I don\\u2019t have moments in my day I know others use to listen to podcasts: walking the dog, sitting in traffic, going for a run. Reading a transcript is very much faster, also because you get to skip the bits that don\\u2019t interest you, or reread sections that do. Which you can\\u2019t do when listening, because you don\\u2019t know when a uninteresting segment will end, or when it might segue into something of interest. And then you\\u2019ve listened to the end and can\\u2019t get those lost minutes back. (Videos have the same issue, or rather I have the same issue with videos)\nFor using voice to ask or control things. There are obvious privacy issues with voice assistants. Having active microphones around for one. Even if they are supposed to only fully activate upon the use of the wake-up word, they get triggered by false positives. And don\\u2019t distinguish between me and other people that maybe it shouldn\\u2019t respond to. A while ago I asked around in my network how people use their Google and Amazon microphones, and the consensus was that most settle on a small range of specific uses. For those it shouldn\\u2019t be needed to have cloud processing of what those microphones tape in your living room, those should be able to be dealt with locally, with only novel questions or instructions being processed in the cloud. (Of course that\\u2019s not the business model of these listening devices).\nA very different factor in using voice to control things, or for instance dictate is self-consciousness. Switching on a microphone in a meeting has a silencing effect usually. For dictation, I won\\u2019t dictate text to software e.g. at a client\\u2019s office, or while in public (like on a train). Nor will I talk to my headset while walking down the street. I might do it at home, but only if I know I\\u2019m not distracting others around me. In the cases where I did use dictation software (which nowadays works remarkably well), I find it clashes with my thinking and formulation. Ultimately it\\u2019s easier for me to shape sentences on paper or screen where I see them take shape in front of me. When dictating it easily descends into meaninglessness, and it\\u2019s impossible to structure. Stream of thought dictation is the only bit that works somewhat, but that needs a lot of cleaning up afterwards. Judging by all podcasts I sampled over the years, it is something that happens to more people when confronted with a microphone (see the paragraph above). Maybe if it\\u2019s something more prepared like a lecture, or presentation, it might be different, but those types of speech have been prepared in writing usually, so there is likely a written source for it already. In any case, dictation never saved me any time. It is of course very different if you don\\u2019t have the use of your hands. Then dictation is your door to the world.\nIt makes me wonder how voice services are helping you? How is it saving you time or effort? In which cases is it more novelty than effectiveness?",
        "html": "<p>Donald Clark writes about the <a href=\"http:\\/\\/donaldclarkplanb.blogspot.com\\/2019\\/01\\/listen-up-voice-is-here-online-learning.html\">use of voice tech for learning<\\/a>. I find I struggle enormously with voice. While I recognise several aspects put forward in that posting as likely useful in learning settings (auto transcription, text to speech, oral traditions), there are others that remain barriers to adoption to me.<\\/p>\n<p>For taking in information as voice. Podcasts are mentioned as a useful tool, but don\\u2019t work for me at all. I get distracted after about 30 seconds. The voices drone on, there\\u2019s often tons of fluff as the speaker is trying to get to the point (often a lack of preparation I suppose). I don\\u2019t have moments in my day I know others use to listen to podcasts: walking the dog, sitting in traffic, going for a run. Reading a transcript is very much faster, also because you get to skip the bits that don\\u2019t interest you, or reread sections that do. Which you can\\u2019t do when listening, because you don\\u2019t know when a uninteresting segment will end, or when it might segue into something of interest. And then you\\u2019ve listened to the end and can\\u2019t get those lost minutes back. (Videos have the same issue, or rather I have the same issue with videos)<\\/p>\n<p>For using voice to ask or control things. There are obvious privacy issues with voice assistants. Having active microphones around for one. Even if they are supposed to only fully activate upon the use of the wake-up word, they get triggered by false positives. And don\\u2019t distinguish between me and other people that maybe it shouldn\\u2019t respond to. A while ago I asked around in my network how people use their Google and Amazon microphones, and the consensus was that most settle on a small range of specific uses. For those it shouldn\\u2019t be needed to have cloud processing of what those microphones tape in your living room, those should be able to be dealt with locally, with only novel questions or instructions being processed in the cloud. (Of course that\\u2019s not the business model of these listening devices).<\\/p>\n<p>A very different factor in using voice to control things, or for instance dictate is self-consciousness. Switching on a microphone in a meeting has a silencing effect usually. For dictation, I won\\u2019t dictate text to software e.g. at a client\\u2019s office, or while in public (like on a train). Nor will I talk to my headset while walking down the street. I might do it at home, but only if I know I\\u2019m not distracting others around me. In the cases where I did use dictation software (which nowadays works remarkably well), I find it clashes with my thinking and formulation. Ultimately it\\u2019s easier for me to shape sentences on paper or screen where I see them take shape in front of me. When dictating it easily descends into meaninglessness, and it\\u2019s impossible to structure. Stream of thought dictation is the only bit that works somewhat, but that needs a lot of cleaning up afterwards. Judging by all podcasts I sampled over the years, it is something that happens to more people when confronted with a microphone (see the paragraph above). Maybe if it\\u2019s something more prepared like a lecture, or presentation, it might be different, but those types of speech have been prepared in writing usually, so there is likely a written source for it already. In any case, dictation never saved me any time. It is of course very different if you don\\u2019t have the use of your hands. Then dictation is your door to the world.<\\/p>\n<p>It makes me wonder how voice services are helping you? How is it saving you time or effort? In which cases is it more novelty than effectiveness?<\\/p>"
      },
      "summary": "Donald Clark writes about the use of voice tech for learning. I find I struggle enormously with voice. While I recognise several aspects put forward in that posting as likely useful in learning settings (auto transcription, text to speech, oral traditions), there are others that remain barriers to a...",
      "post-type": "article",
      "_id": 3059,
      "_is_read": false,
      "_permalink": "https:\\/\\/www.zylstra.org\\/blog\\/2019\\/01\\/on-voice-and-being-a-text-person\\/"
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      "syndication": "https:\\/\\/www.goodreads.com\\/user_challenges\\/16255693",
      "type": "entry",
      "url": "http:\\/\\/gregorlove.com\\/2019\\/01\\/i-want-to-read-24\\/",
      "published": "2019-01-19 14:14-0800",
      "updated": "2019-01-19 14:14-0800",
      "author": {
        "name": "gRegor Morrill",
        "url": "https:\\/\\/gregorlove.com\\/",
        "photo": "http:\\/\\/gregorlove.com\\/site\\/assets\\/files\\/3473\\/profile-2016-med.jpg",
        "type": "card"
      },
      "content": {
        "text": "I want to read 24 books in 2019.",
        "html": "<p>I want to read 24 books in 2019.<\\/p>"
      },
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      "_is_read": false,
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      "type": "entry",
      "url": "https:\\/\\/dougbeal.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/5895\\/",
      "published": "2019-01-19T14:09:57-08:00",
      "updated": "2019-01-19T14:10:30-08:00",
      "content": {
        "text": "Hello From the Magic Tavern Live!"
      },
      "post-type": "checkin",
      "_id": 3068,
      "_is_read": false,
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swentel commented 5 years ago

So ran this through the debugger and it fails on 5 places in this timeline where I assume always getting an array: in-reply-to, bookmark-of, repost-of, video and photo

So, the main question is: does the spec allow to send multiple variants of a property, e.g. a string vs an array? If so, then it's a bug in Indigenous, if not, all these properties should return an array if it has a value. This applies to any response type (e.g. like-of), but also audio for instance.

dshanske commented 5 years ago

http://jf2.spec.indieweb.org/ They are supposed to be valid jf2

dshanske commented 5 years ago

" Arrays that have only a single item SHOULD be condensed into only the single containing item."

swentel commented 5 years ago

Damn :) You can move this to the indigenous queue :)

jackjamieson2 commented 5 years ago

Thanks to both of you!

I opened an issue at the indigenous repo: https://github.com/swentel/indigenous-android/issues/172

For my interest, @swentel, can I ask for more detail about what indigenous is expecting?

e.g. is it expecting the following:

"in-reply-to": {
        "url": "https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/",
      }

I ask this because for some of these items, Yarns original returned arrays and but it caused Together to crash, and so I reduced to strings (see https://github.com/cleverdevil/together/issues/80).

e.g. where Yarns now returns:

"in-reply-to": "https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/"

it used to return an object with name, url, and type

"in-reply-to": {
        "type": "entry",
        "url": "https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com\\/2019\\/01\\/19\\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\\/",
        "name": "The vulnerability of learning"
      }

I'm happy to settle on whatever fits the spec, and I'm just trying to better understand how clients may differ so I can improve compatibility.

swentel commented 5 years ago

It expects something like this:

"in-reply-to|like-of|photo|...": ["https://example.com", "https://example2.com"]
swentel commented 5 years ago

Something else I'm seeing, unrelated to the parsing exception: urls seem double escaped too, .e.g https:\\/\\/cathieleblanc.com - https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com should be good enough normally, but will see what happens once I get the parse exceptions fine.

edit - forward slashes in general seem double escaped, which cause errors in display here at the moment.

edit2 - maybe that was because of an export or copy paste, so ignore me on this if that's the case :)

jackjamieson2 commented 5 years ago

Ah, actually it looks like it wasn't a Yarns issue. I was confused because I'd had some issues with escaping earlier in development. But in this case, some extra slashes were added by the embedded json prettifier at https://duckduckgo.com/?q=json+prettify&ia=an

For reference, here's a timeline request directly from Yarns with no formatting:

 {"items":[{"category":["distribution-entertainment-industry","publishing-entertainment-industry","read","social-stream","broadcasting","facebook","social-media","toxicity","whatsapp"],"bookmark-of":"https:\/\/espresso.economist.com\/807fd505578df62fdfc87fad88d8e0dd","read-of":{"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/espresso.economist.com\/807fd505578df62fdfc87fad88d8e0dd","name":"The world in brief, January 22nd 2019","summary":"WhatsApp, a messaging service, is cracking down further on fake news. Users will now only be allowed to forward a message to five groups (each group can be up to 256 people), down from 20. The limitation was first introduced in India last year after several mob lynchings there appeared to start after incendiary messages spread through the service.","post-type":"article"},"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/22\/the-world-in-brief-january-22nd-2019-economist-espresso\/","name":"\ud83d\udc53 The world in brief, January 22nd 2019 | Economist Espresso","published":"2019-01-22T07:16:36-08:00","updated":"2019-01-22T09:46:15-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Read The world in brief, January 22nd 2019 (Economist Espresso)\nWhatsApp, a messaging service, is cracking down further on fake news. Users will now only be allowed to forward a message to five groups (each group can be up to 256 people), down from 20. The limitation was first introduced in India last year after several mob lynchings there appeared to start after incendiary messages spread through the service.\nI can\u2019t imagine that unless the average group is well under 20 people, that WhatsApps change will have a drastic effect. 256 by itself, much less 5 times that, is way over the Dunbar number and likely not enough of a brake on social gossip. This sounds like a lot of lip service to me. Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-read-of u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Read<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/espresso.economist.com\/807fd505578df62fdfc87fad88d8e0dd\" class=\"p-name u-url\">The world in brief, January 22nd 2019<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Economist Espresso<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\"><p>WhatsApp, a messaging service, is cracking down further on fake news. Users will now only be allowed to forward a message to five groups (each group can be up to 256 people), down from 20. The limitation was first introduced in India last year after several mob lynchings there appeared to start after incendiary messages spread through the service.<\/p><\/blockquote><\/section><p>I can\u2019t imagine that unless the average group is well under 20 people, that WhatsApps change will have a drastic effect. 256 by itself, much less 5 times that, is way over the Dunbar number and likely not enough of a brake on social gossip. This sounds like a lot of lip service to me.<\/p>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\"><li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.reading.am\/p\/581H\/https:\/\/espresso.economist.com\/807fd505578df62fdfc87fad88d8e0dd\"> <\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Read The world in brief, January 22nd 2019 (Economist Espresso)\nWhatsApp, a messaging service, is cracking down further on fake news. Users will now only be allowed to forward a message to five groups (each group can be up to 256 people), down from 20. The limitation was first introduced in India la...","post-type":"bookmark","_id":3160,"_is_read":false,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/22\/the-world-in-brief-january-22nd-2019-economist-espresso\/"},{"category":["indieweb","like","read","social-stream"],"like-of":"https:\/\/mxb.at\/notes\/2018-12-02\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/heres-my-first-note-max-bock\/","name":"\ud83d\udc53 Here\u2019s my first note! | Max B\u00f6ck","published":"2019-01-21T23:37:46-08:00","updated":"2019-01-22T09:32:24-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Liked a post by Max B\u00f6ck Max B\u00f6ck (Max B\u00f6ck)\nHere's my first note! I want to try this as a way of posting small, random chunks of content.\u00a0#indiewebSyndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-like-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Liked<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/mxb.at\/notes\/2018-12-02\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">a post<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/mxb.at\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i2.wp.com\/mxb.at\/assets\/images\/avatar.jpg?w=840&ssl=1\" alt=\"Max B\u00f6ck\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Max B\u00f6ck<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Max B\u00f6ck<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\"><p>Here's my first note! I want to try this as a way of posting small, random chunks of content.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/indieweb.org\/note\">#indieweb<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote><\/section><div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\"><li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.reading.am\/p\/5815\/https:\/\/mxb.at\/notes\/2018-12-02\/\"> <\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"post-type":"like","_id":3161,"_is_read":false,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/heres-my-first-note-max-bock\/"},{"category":["indieweb","read","social-stream","wordpress"],"like-of":"https:\/\/david.shanske.com\/2019\/01\/20\/state-of-the-indieweb-wordpress\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/state-of-the-indieweb-in-wordpress-david-shanske\/","name":"\ud83d\udc53 State of the Indieweb in WordPress | David Shanske","published":"2019-01-21T23:30:32-08:00","updated":"2019-01-22T09:43:55-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Liked State of the Indieweb in WordPress by David Shanske David Shanske (david.shanske.com)Every year, at the Indieweb Summit, we have the State of the Indieweb(it\u2019s the year of the Reader, by the way). The head of the WordPress project gives his State of the Word. I even watched the Governor of my State give his State of the state. As I go through my 2018 Year in Review, I wanted to co...\nThis is awesome David! Keep up the fantastic work! Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-like-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Liked<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/david.shanske.com\/2019\/01\/20\/state-of-the-indieweb-wordpress\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">State of the Indieweb in WordPress<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/david.shanske.com\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/david.shanske.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/avatar-privacy\/cache\/gravatar\/2\/c\/2cb1f8afd9c8d3b646b4071c5ed887c970d81d625eeed87e447706940e2c403d-42.png?w=840&ssl=1\" alt=\"David Shanske\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">David Shanske<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">david.shanske.com<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">Every year, at the Indieweb Summit, we have the State of the Indieweb(it\u2019s the year of the Reader, by the way). The head of the WordPress project gives his State of the Word. I even watched the Governor of my State give his State of the state.\r\nAs I go through my 2018 Year in Review, I wanted to co...<\/blockquote><\/section><p>This is awesome David! Keep up the fantastic work!<\/p>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\"><li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.reading.am\/p\/5812\/https:\/\/david.shanske.com\/2019\/01\/20\/state-of-the-indieweb-wordpress\/\"> <\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Liked State of the Indieweb in WordPress by David Shanske David Shanske (david.shanske.com)Every year, at the Indieweb Summit, we have the State of the Indieweb(it\u2019s the year of the Reader, by the way). The head of the WordPress project gives his State of the Word. I even watched the Governor of m...","post-type":"like","_id":3162,"_is_read":false,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/state-of-the-indieweb-in-wordpress-david-shanske\/"},{"category":["read","social-stream","directories","note-post"],"bookmark-of":"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/notes\/104\/","read-of":{"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/notes\/104\/","name":"Collecting note takers","author":{"photo":"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/hankchizljaw.imgix.net\/social-share.png?w=840&ssl=1","name":"Andy Bell","type":"card"},"summary":"I think I might collect links to sites of folks who are posting notes on their personal sites on GitHub. It\u2019d be great if y\u2019all could send me some links so I can start it off with a nice healthy list!","post-type":"article"},"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/collecting-note-takers-andy-bell\/","name":"\ud83d\udc53 Collecting note takers | Andy Bell","published":"2019-01-21T22:24:16-08:00","updated":"2019-01-22T09:24:41-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Read Collecting note takers by Andy Bell Andy Bell (Andy Bell)I think I might collect links to sites of folks who are posting notes on their personal sites on GitHub. It\u2019d be great if y\u2019all could send me some links so I can start it off with a nice healthy list!Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-read-of u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Read<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/notes\/104\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">Collecting note takers<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/hankchizljaw.imgix.net\/social-share.png?w=840&ssl=1\" alt=\"Andy Bell\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Andy Bell<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Andy Bell<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">I think I might collect links to sites of folks who are posting notes on their personal sites on GitHub.\r\n\r\nIt\u2019d be great if y\u2019all could send me some links so I can start it off with a nice healthy list!<\/blockquote><\/section><div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\"><li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.reading.am\/p\/57ZZ\/https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/notes\/104\/\"> <\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"post-type":"bookmark","_id":3163,"_is_read":false,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/collecting-note-takers-andy-bell\/"},{"category":{"name":"Brad Enslen","url":"https:\/\/ramblinggit.com\/","type":"card"},"bookmark-of":"https:\/\/personalsit.es\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/personal-sites-are-awesome\/","name":"\ud83d\udd16 Personal sites are awesome","published":"2019-01-21T22:12:45-08:00","updated":"2019-01-21T23:22:34-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Bookmarked Personal sites are awesome by Andy Bell (personalsit.es)\nPersonal sites are awesome, so this site was built so we can all discover each others. All the links are by folks that want to share their site with the world.\nIf you want your site to appear on here, go ahead and\u00a0submit it on GitHub, or\u00a0drop me an email.\nI just ran across this interesting version of a directory which is being built based on a GitHub repo and deployed to\u00a0https:\/\/personalsit.es\/.\u00a0\nIt\u2019s built by Andy Bell who has been building his own website and is at least IndieWeb aware. I\u2019ve added the example to the IndieWeb wiki page for directories. While interesting and useful, like some of the other directories I\u2019ve seen floating around, there is a small hurdle that one needs to be able to fork a GitHub repo, edit it, and send a PR to be included, though I do like that he has an email option to bring the technical hurdle down. The other benefit is that it allows people to modify or delete their data as well. I do like the decentralized nature of of it, but I wonder about scale and search-ability.\nI can\u2019t help but wonder about building a similar directory site that aggregates its data by Webmention and uses the h-cards from websites to automatically update itself. Naturally having an OPML file(s) (think various versions that are sortable using tags\/categories) or some other exportable and\/or subscribe-able ability for feed readers would be highly useful.\nIn addition to\u00a0resources like chat-names, Indie Map\u2018s list, as well as some planets, OPML resources like my own IndieWeb list, and the IndieWeb web ring, this could be another interesting directory creation method for IndieWeb-specific websites.\n\ud83d\udc64 Kicks Condor; Brad Enslen;\n\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Bookmarked<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/personalsit.es\" class=\"p-name u-url\">Personal sites are awesome<\/a> by <span class=\"h-card p-author\">Andy Bell<\/span> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">personalsit.es<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">\n<p>Personal sites are awesome, so this site was built so we can all discover each others. All the links are by folks that want to share their site with the world.<\/p>\r\n<p>If you want your site to appear on here, go ahead and\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/github.com\/hankchizljaw\/personalsit.es#add-your-site\">submit it on GitHub<\/a>, or\u00a0<a href=\"mailto:andy@hankchizljaw.io\">drop me an email<\/a>.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote><\/section><p>I just ran across this interesting version of a directory which is being built based on a <a href=\"https:\/\/github.com\/hankchizljaw\/personalsit.es#add-your-site\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">GitHub repo<\/a> and deployed to\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/personalsit.es\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">https:\/\/personalsit.es\/<\/a>.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s built by <a class=\"u-in-reply-to\" href=\"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/notes\/104\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Andy Bell<\/a> who has been building his own website and is at least <a href=\"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/wrote\/feed-page\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">IndieWeb aware<\/a>. I\u2019ve added the example to the <a href=\"https:\/\/indieweb.org\/directory#Personal_Sites\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">IndieWeb wiki page for directories<\/a>. While interesting and useful, like some of the other directories I\u2019ve seen floating around, there is a small hurdle that one needs to be able to fork a GitHub repo, edit it, and send a PR to be included, though I do like that he has an email option to bring the technical hurdle down. The other benefit is that it allows people to modify or delete their data as well. I do like the decentralized nature of of it, but I wonder about scale and search-ability.<\/p>\n<p>I can\u2019t help but wonder about building a similar directory site that aggregates its data by Webmention and uses the h-cards from websites to automatically update itself. Naturally having an OPML file(s) (think various versions that are sortable using tags\/categories) or some other exportable and\/or subscribe-able ability for feed readers would be highly useful.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to\u00a0resources like <a href=\"https:\/\/indieweb.org\/chat-names\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">chat-names<\/a>, <a href=\"https:\/\/indieweb.org\/indie_map\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Indie Map<\/a>\u2018s <a href=\"https:\/\/github.com\/snarfed\/indie-map\/blob\/master\/crawl\/domains.txt\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">list<\/a>, as well as some <a href=\"https:\/\/indieweb.org\/planet\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">planets<\/a>, OPML resources like <a href=\"https:\/\/www.boffosocko.com\/wp-links-opml.php?link_cat=1521\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">my own IndieWeb list<\/a>, and the <a href=\"https:\/\/indieweb.org\/indiewebring\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">IndieWeb web ring<\/a>, this could be another interesting directory creation method for IndieWeb-specific websites.<\/p>\n<hr><p>\ud83d\udc64 <a class=\"plain u-category h-card\" href=\"https:\/\/kickscondor.com\">Kicks Condor<\/a>; <a class=\"plain u-category h-card\" href=\"https:\/\/ramblinggit.com\/\">Brad Enslen<\/a>;<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"u-syndication broken_link\" href=\"https:\/\/news.indieweb.org\/en\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/personal-sites-are-awesome\/\" rel=\"nofollow\">\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b\u200b<\/a><\/p>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\">\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/chrisaldrich.wordpress.com\/?p=55683560\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/indieweb.org\/directory#Personal_Sites\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/indieweb.xyz\/en\/linking\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/ChrisAldrich\/status\/1087611256259760129\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Bookmarked Personal sites are awesome by Andy Bell (personalsit.es)\nPersonal sites are awesome, so this site was built so we can all discover each others. All the links are by folks that want to share their site with the world.\nIf you want your site to appear on here, go ahead and\u00a0submit it on GitH...","post-type":"bookmark","_id":3157,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/personal-sites-are-awesome\/"},{"category":["indieweb","read","social-stream","feed-readers","rss"],"bookmark-of":"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/wrote\/feed-page\/","read-of":{"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/wrote\/feed-page\/","name":"Feed page","author":{"photo":"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/hankchizljaw.imgix.net\/social-share.png?w=840&ssl=1","name":"Andy Bell","type":"card"},"summary":"I started using this site as the canonical root of all of my \u201csocial\u201d content in 2018, but got lured back into the convenience of Twitter and Mastodon and sort of gave up on that idea. With yet more Facebook and Instagram controversies closing out the year, I had a sudden reminder that I should own my content\u2014not irresponsible corporations like them or Twitter.","post-type":"article"},"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/feed-page-andy-bell\/","name":"\ud83d\udc53 Feed page | Andy Bell","published":"2019-01-21T21:47:19-08:00","updated":"2019-01-22T09:22:56-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Read Feed page by Andy Bell Andy Bell (Andy Bell)I started using this site as the canonical root of all of my \u201csocial\u201d content in 2018, but got lured back into the convenience of Twitter and Mastodon and sort of gave up on that idea. With yet more Facebook and Instagram controversies closing out the year, I had a sudden reminder that I should own my content\u2014not irresponsible corporations like them or Twitter.Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-read-of u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Read<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/wrote\/feed-page\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">Feed page<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/hankchizljaw.imgix.net\/social-share.png?w=840&ssl=1\" alt=\"Andy Bell\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Andy Bell<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Andy Bell<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">I started using this site as the canonical root of all of my \u201csocial\u201d content in 2018, but got lured back into the convenience of Twitter and Mastodon and sort of gave up on that idea. With yet more Facebook and Instagram controversies closing out the year, I had a sudden reminder that I should own my content\u2014not irresponsible corporations like them or Twitter.<\/blockquote><\/section><div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\"><li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.reading.am\/p\/57ZX\/https:\/\/andy-bell.design\/wrote\/feed-page\/\"> <\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Read Feed page by Andy Bell Andy Bell (Andy Bell)I started using this site as the canonical root of all of my \u201csocial\u201d content in 2018, but got lured back into the convenience of Twitter and Mastodon and sort of gave up on that idea. With yet more Facebook and Instagram controversies closing out...","post-type":"bookmark","_id":3164,"_is_read":false,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/feed-page-andy-bell\/"},{"category":["indieweb","read","social-stream","wordpress","classicpress","microformats","web-standards"],"bookmark-of":"https:\/\/quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com\/2018\/12\/14\/4-reasons-getclassicpress-should-add-native-microformats-support","read-of":{"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com\/2018\/12\/14\/4-reasons-getclassicpress-should-add-native-microformats-support","name":"4 Reasons @GetClassicPress Should Add Native Microformats Support","author":{"photo":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com\/file\/2d6c9cfed7ac8e849f492b5bc7e6a630\/thumb.jpg?w=840&ssl=1","name":"Greg McVerry","type":"card"},"summary":"Now that phase one of Gutenberg has dropped the interest in #ClassicPress grows by the day. So many WordPress developers fear the loss of control they will face under the new regime of 5.0. Many just don't want to do the work of all that refactoring. #IndieWeb and #ClassicPress should join forces. w...","post-type":"article"},"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/4-reasons-getclassicpress-should-add-native-microformats-support-greg-mcverry\/","name":"\ud83d\udc53 4 Reasons @GetClassicPress Should Add Native Microformats Support | Greg McVerry","published":"2019-01-21T09:29:10-08:00","updated":"2019-01-21T15:40:05-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Read 4 Reasons @GetClassicPress Should Add Native Microformats Support by Greg McVerry Greg McVerry (quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com)Now that phase one of Gutenberg has dropped the interest in #ClassicPress grows by the day. So many WordPress developers fear the loss of control they will face under the new regime of 5.0. Many just don't want to do the work of all that refactoring. #IndieWeb and #ClassicPress should join forces. w...Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-read-of u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Read<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com\/2018\/12\/14\/4-reasons-getclassicpress-should-add-native-microformats-support\" class=\"p-name u-url\">4 Reasons @GetClassicPress Should Add Native Microformats Support<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com\/profile\/jgmac1106\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com\/file\/2d6c9cfed7ac8e849f492b5bc7e6a630\/thumb.jpg?w=840&ssl=1\" alt=\"Greg McVerry\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Greg McVerry<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">Now that phase one of Gutenberg has dropped the interest in #ClassicPress grows by the day. So many WordPress developers fear the loss of control they will face under the new regime of 5.0. Many just don't want to do the work of all that refactoring.\r\n#IndieWeb and #ClassicPress should join forces.\r\nw...<\/blockquote><\/section><div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\"><li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.reading.am\/p\/57YR\/https:\/\/quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com\/2018\/12\/14\/4-reasons-getclassicpress-should-add-native-microformats-support\"> <\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Read 4 Reasons @GetClassicPress Should Add Native Microformats Support by Greg McVerry Greg McVerry (quickthoughts.jgregorymcverry.com)Now that phase one of Gutenberg has dropped the interest in #ClassicPress grows by the day. So many WordPress developers fear the loss of control they will face unde...","post-type":"bookmark","_id":3119,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/4-reasons-getclassicpress-should-add-native-microformats-support-greg-mcverry\/"},{"category":["annotation","indieweb","social-stream","gardening"],"in-reply-to":"https:\/\/stream.jeremycherfas.net\/2018\/thanks-for-the-wayback-link-kevin-i","bookmark-of":"https:\/\/stream.jeremycherfas.net\/2018\/thanks-for-the-wayback-link-kevin-i","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/thanks-for-the-wayback-link-kevin-i-jeremy-cherfas\/","name":"\ud83d\udcd1 Thanks for the wayback link Kevin. I \u2026 | Jeremy Cherfas","published":"2019-01-21T09:19:54-08:00","updated":"2019-01-21T15:42:51-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Annotated a post by Jeremy Cherfas Jeremy Cherfas (Jeremy Cherfas)Maintaining a website that you regard as your own does require maintenance. Like a garden, you may choose to let a few weeds flourish, for the wildlife, and you may also seek to encourage volunteers, for the aesthetics. A garden without wildlife is dull, a garden without aesthetics is pointless.\u00a0\u00a0\u2767 Syndicated copies to:","html":"&#013;\n<section class=\"response u-annotation-of u-in-reply-to u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Annotated<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/stream.jeremycherfas.net\/2018\/thanks-for-the-wayback-link-kevin-i\" class=\"p-name u-url\">a post<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/stream.jeremycherfas.net\/profile\/jeremy\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/stream.jeremycherfas.net\/file\/ef801e05730eba56004c5b712ad84731\/thumb.jpg?w=840&amp;ssl=1\" alt=\"Jeremy Cherfas\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Jeremy Cherfas<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Jeremy Cherfas<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">Maintaining a website that you regard as your own does require maintenance. Like a garden, you may choose to let a few weeds flourish, for the wildlife, and you may also seek to encourage volunteers, for the aesthetics. A garden without wildlife is dull, a garden without aesthetics is pointless.&#xA0;&#xA0;<a title=\"click to see this annotation in situ\" href=\"https:\/\/hyp.is\/tVVPhB2gEemvrsOfYcDS7w\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">&#x2767;<\/a>&#013;\n<\/blockquote><\/section><div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\">\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/chrisaldrich.wordpress.com\/?p=55683550\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/hypothes.is\/a\/tVVPhB2gEemvrsOfYcDS7w\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Annotated a post by Jeremy Cherfas Jeremy Cherfas (Jeremy Cherfas)Maintaining a website that you regard as your own does require maintenance. Like a garden, you may choose to let a few weeds flourish, for the wildlife, and you may also seek to encourage volunteers, for the aesthetics. A garden witho...","post-type":"bookmark","_id":3120,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/21\/thanks-for-the-wayback-link-kevin-i-jeremy-cherfas\/"},{"in-reply-to":"https:\/\/percolator.today\/episode\/23","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/martymcgui.re\/2019\/01\/21\/115121\/","published":"2019-01-21T11:51:21-0500","updated":"2019-01-21T11:51:21-0500","author":{"name":"Marty McGuire","photo":"https:\/\/martymcgui.re\/images\/logo.jpg","url":"https:\/\/martymcgui.re\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"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.\nI 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\u2019t even have to do anything special for them to show up there!","html":"<p>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.<\/p>\n\n<p>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\u2019t even have to do anything special for them to show up there!<\/p>"},"summary":"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.\nI will of course keep my own RSVPs, ph...","syndication":["https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213663573485594","https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/62057\/checkin\/5c3933e666fc65002c6e82be","https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213623958095234","https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213617507333969","https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/62057\/checkin\/5c33ec86c824ae002c1b63e1","https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/62057\/checkin\/5c3143129ba3e50039cb681b","https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/62057\/checkin\/5c30e914c824ae002c0087ac","https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213577296448722","https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213528073938190"],"post-type":"reply","_id":3117,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/martymcgui.re\/2019\/01\/21\/115121\/"},{"in-reply-to":"https:\/\/waterpigs.co.uk\/notes\/4ybKKi\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/martymcgui.re\/2019\/01\/21\/094850\/","published":"2019-01-21T09:48:50-0500","updated":"2019-01-21T09:48:50-0500","author":{"name":"Marty McGuire","photo":"https:\/\/martymcgui.re\/images\/logo.jpg","url":"https:\/\/martymcgui.re\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"That sounds like a reel of LEDs for a pick-and-place machine! It came with leads attached to power it??","html":"<p>That sounds like a reel of LEDs for a pick-and-place machine! It came with leads attached to power it??<\/p>"},"syndication":["https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213663573485594","https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/62057\/checkin\/5c3933e666fc65002c6e82be","https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213623958095234","https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213617507333969","https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/62057\/checkin\/5c33ec86c824ae002c1b63e1","https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/62057\/checkin\/5c3143129ba3e50039cb681b","https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/62057\/checkin\/5c30e914c824ae002c0087ac","https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213577296448722","https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/marty.mcguire.54\/posts\/10213528073938190"],"post-type":"reply","_id":3118,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/martymcgui.re\/2019\/01\/21\/094850\/"},{"category":["read","social-stream","business-strategy","donald-j-trump","empathy","goodwill","government-shutdown","the-golden-rule"],"bookmark-of":"http:\/\/fortune.com\/2016\/09\/30\/donald-trump-stiff-contractors\/","read-of":{"type":"entry","url":"http:\/\/fortune.com\/2016\/09\/30\/donald-trump-stiff-contractors\/","name":"Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors","summary":"Fortunately, the practice is not common in business.","post-type":"article"},"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/20\/donald-trump-why-us-law-makes-it-easy-to-stiff-contractors-fortune\/","name":"\ud83d\udc53 Donald Trump: Why US Law Makes It Easy to Stiff Contractors. | Fortune","published":"2019-01-20T22:02:21-08:00","updated":"2019-01-20T23:36:19-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Read Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors (Fortune)Fortunately, the practice is not common in business.\nI came across this article while thinking about how Trump\u2019s stiffing workers and contractors seemed similar to his handling of the government shutdown.\nAfter reading this, it almost seems to me that with the government shutdown Trump is \u201cselling out his goodwill\u201d in a political sense the same way he\u2019s sold out the goodwill of his own businesses.\nSeeing both of these things juxtaposed is another very stark reminder that he seems to have no empathy for anyone at all. This article seems to have called out the same thing long ago.\nIn practice this [selling out goodwill] rarely happens, for two reasons.\nFirst, most business people, despite what some people think, have integrity, a heart, and a conscience.\n[\u2026]\nFortunately, you don\u2019t see that too often. That\u2019s because most business people, like most other Americans, are fundamentally decent people. They believe in, and practice, the Golden Rule. Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-read-of u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Read<\/span> <a href=\"http:\/\/fortune.com\/2016\/09\/30\/donald-trump-stiff-contractors\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Fortune<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">Fortunately, the practice is not common in business.<\/blockquote><\/section><p>I came across this article <a href=\"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/19\/tigers-do-not-change-their-stripes\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">while thinking about how Trump\u2019s stiffing workers and contractors seemed similar to his handling of the government shutdown<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>After reading this, it almost seems to me that with the government shutdown Trump is \u201cselling out his goodwill\u201d in a political sense the same way he\u2019s sold out the goodwill of his own businesses.<\/p>\n<p>Seeing both of these things juxtaposed is another very stark reminder that he seems to have no empathy for anyone at all. This article seems to have called out the same thing long ago.<\/p>\n<blockquote class=\"annotation p-annotation-of\"><p>\nIn practice this [selling out goodwill] rarely happens, for two reasons.<br>\nFirst, most business people, despite what some people think, have integrity, a heart, and a conscience.<br>\n[\u2026]<br>\nFortunately, you don\u2019t see that too often. That\u2019s because most business people, like most other Americans, are fundamentally decent people. They believe in, and practice, the Golden Rule.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\">\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.reading.am\/p\/57Yo\/http:\/\/fortune.com\/2016\/09\/30\/donald-trump-stiff-contractors\/\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/ChrisAldrich\/status\/1087252255957409792\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Read Why U.S. Law Makes It Easy for Donald Trump To Stiff Contractors (Fortune)Fortunately, the practice is not common in business.\nI came across this article while thinking about how Trump\u2019s stiffing workers and contractors seemed similar to his handling of the government shutdown.\nAfter reading ...","post-type":"bookmark","_id":3082,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/20\/donald-trump-why-us-law-makes-it-easy-to-stiff-contractors-fortune\/"},{"category":["annotation","reply","social-stream","creativity","learning","responses","teaching","thought-spaces","trust","vulnerability"],"in-reply-to":"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/2019\/01\/19\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/20\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-cathie-leblanc-2\/","name":"\ud83d\udcd1 The Vulnerability of Learning | Cathie LeBlanc","published":"2019-01-20T21:26:53-08:00","updated":"2019-01-21T00:45:41-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Replied to The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)\nWhen I received Chris\u2019s comment, my first response was that I should delete my post or at least the incorrect part of it. It\u2019s embarrassing to have your incorrect understandings available for public view. But I decided to leave the post as is but put in a disclaimer so that others would not be misled by my misunderstandings.\nThis experience reminded me that learning makes us vulnerable. Admitting that you don\u2019t know something is hard and being corrected is even harder. Chris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine? Could I be more gentle? How often have I graded my students\u2019 work and only focused on what they did wrong? Or forgotten that feeling of vulnerability when you don\u2019t know something, when you put your work out for others to judge? This experience has also reminded me that it\u2019s important that we as teachers regularly put ourselves into situations in which we authentically grapple with not knowing something. We should regularly share our less than fully formed understandings with others for feedback. It helps us remember that even confident learners can struggle with being vulnerable. And we need to keep in mind that many of our students are not confident learners.\u00a0\u00a0\u2767\nI\u2019m reminded here of the broad idea that many bloggers write about sooner or later of their website being a \u201cthought space\u201d or place to contemplate out in the open. More often than not, even if they don\u2019t have an audience to interact with, their writings become a way of thinking out loud, clarifying things for themselves, self-evolving, or putting themselves out there for potential public reactions (good, bad, or indifferent).\nWhile writing things out loud to no audience can be helpful and useful on an individual level, it\u2019s often even more helpful to have some sort of productive and constructive feedback. While a handful of likes or positive seeming responses can be useful, I always prefer the ones that make me think more broadly, deeply, or force me to consider other pieces I hadn\u2019t envisioned before. To me this is the real value of these open and often very public thought spaces.\nFor those interested in the general idea, I\u2019ve been [bookmarking\/tagging things around the idea of thought spaces I\u2019ve read on my own website](https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/tag\/thought-spaces\/). Hopefully this collection helps others better understand the spectrum of these ideas for themselves.\nWith respect to the vulnerability piece, I\u2019m reminded of an episode of The Human Current I listened to a few weeks back. There was an excellent section that touched on building up trust with students or even a class when it comes to providing feedback and criticism. Having a bank of trust makes it easier to give feedback as well as to receive it. Here\u2019s a link to the audio portion and a copy of the relevant text. Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"h-cite response p-in-reply-to \"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Replied to<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/2019\/01\/19\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">The Vulnerability of Learning<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/cathieleblanc.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/06\/profile.jpg?resize=150%2C150\" alt=\"Cathie LeBlanc\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Cathie LeBlanc<\/a><em> (<span class=\"p-publication\">Desert of My Real Life<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\"><p>When I received Chris\u2019s comment, my first response was that I should delete my post or at least the incorrect part of it. It\u2019s embarrassing to have your incorrect understandings available for public view. But I decided to leave the post as is but put in a disclaimer so that others would not be misled by my misunderstandings.<br>\r\nThis experience reminded me that learning makes us vulnerable. Admitting that you don\u2019t know something is hard and being corrected is even harder. Chris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine? Could I be more gentle? How often have I graded my students\u2019 work and only focused on what they did wrong? Or forgotten that feeling of vulnerability when you don\u2019t know something, when you put your work out for others to judge? This experience has also reminded me that it\u2019s important that we as teachers regularly put ourselves into situations in which we authentically grapple with not knowing something. We should regularly share our less than fully formed understandings with others for feedback. It helps us remember that even confident learners can struggle with being vulnerable. And we need to keep in mind that many of our students are not confident learners.\u00a0\u00a0<a title=\"click to see this annotation in situ\" href=\"https:\/\/hyp.is\/IbcchB09EemEPDvd3wd0mA\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">\u2767<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote><\/section><p>I\u2019m reminded here of the broad idea that many bloggers write about sooner or later of their website being a \u201cthought space\u201d or place to contemplate out in the open. More often than not, even if they don\u2019t have an audience to interact with, their writings become a way of thinking out loud, clarifying things for themselves, self-evolving, or putting themselves out there for potential public reactions (good, bad, or indifferent).<\/p>\n<p>While writing things out loud to no audience can be helpful and useful on an individual level, it\u2019s often even more helpful to have some sort of productive and constructive feedback. While a handful of likes or positive seeming responses can be useful, I always prefer the ones that make me think more broadly, deeply, or force me to consider other pieces I hadn\u2019t envisioned before. To me this is the real value of these open and often very public thought spaces.<\/p>\n<p>For those interested in the general idea, I\u2019ve been [bookmarking\/tagging things around the idea of thought spaces I\u2019ve read on my own website](https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/tag\/thought-spaces\/). Hopefully this collection helps others better understand the spectrum of these ideas for themselves.<\/p>\n<p>With respect to the vulnerability piece, I\u2019m reminded of an <a href=\"http:\/\/www.human-current.com\/episode-082-the-complexity-chaos-of-creativity\/\">episode of <cite>The Human Current<\/cite><\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/08\/episode-082-the-complexity-chaos-of-creativity-human-current\/\">I listened to<\/a> a few weeks back. There was an excellent section that touched on building up trust with students or even a class when it comes to providing feedback and criticism. Having a bank of trust makes it easier to give feedback as well as to receive it. Here\u2019s a <a href=\"http:\/\/hwcdn.libsyn.com\/p\/0\/c\/2\/0c2e5a4377419e30\/082_Jon20Kolko.mp3?c_id=20485978&cs_id=20485978&destination_id=280210&expiration=1548050165&hwt=c9a47bb5703602f53c287fce3b5eaafe#t=1595\">link to the audio portion<\/a> and a copy of the <a href=\"https:\/\/hyp.is\/L-l_qh03Eemqow9FJNYNYQ\/static1.squarespace.com\/static\/54f8c6cee4b0e25f5b1af40c\/t\/5ba27cb90e2e72a6a0e64302\/1537375418029\/082_The+Complexity+%26+Chaos+of+Creativity%2C+with+Jon+Kolko.pdf\">relevant text<\/a>.<\/p>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\">\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/chrisaldrich.wordpress.com\/?p=55683539\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/hypothes.is\/a\/IbcchB09EemEPDvd3wd0mA\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Replied to The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)\nWhen I received Chris\u2019s comment, my first response was that I should delete my post or at least the incorrect part of it. It\u2019s embarrassing to have your incorrect understandings available for publi...","post-type":"reply","_id":3084,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/20\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-cathie-leblanc-2\/"},{"category":["education","read","social-stream","creativity","learning","responses","teaching","thought-spaces","trust","vulnerability"],"bookmark-of":"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/2019\/01\/19\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\/","read-of":{"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/2019\/01\/19\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\/","name":"The Vulnerability of Learning","author":{"photo":"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/cathieleblanc.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/06\/profile.jpg?resize=150%2C150","name":"Cathie LeBlanc","type":"card"},"summary":"Listening to the students talk about feeling unsure and vulnerable when they first encountered open educational practices made me think about my own learning. As a mid-career academic who has changed jobs and even disciplines, I am a confident learner. I have received lots of praise and other kinds of positive reinforcement for my ability to learn new things. If you have read previous posts on my blog, you might know that I am really interested in developments in the IndieWeb movement and am trying to write about some of my experiences with using IndieWeb tools to build my own web site. I\u2019ve been building my own sites for years and so I have a lot of confidence in my ability there as well. Working on the IndieWeb stuff has been challenging because there\u2019s a lot of new language and new concepts as well as some aspects of web development that I have not engaged with before. I often feel vulnerable when I write my posts about the IndieWeb because my understanding of how everything works is emerging. In other words, I don\u2019t get it all yet but I\u2019m still writing publicly about my work.","post-type":"article"},"type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/20\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-desert-of-my-real-life\/","name":"\ud83d\udc53 The Vulnerability of Learning | Desert of My Real Life","published":"2019-01-20T21:14:24-08:00","updated":"2019-01-21T00:22:09-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Read The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)Listening to the students talk about feeling unsure and vulnerable when they first encountered open educational practices made me think about my own learning. As a mid-career academic who has changed jobs and even disciplines, I am a confident learner. I have received lots of praise and other kinds of positive reinforcement for my ability to learn new things. If you have read previous posts on my blog, you might know that I am really interested in developments in the IndieWeb movement and am trying to write about some of my experiences with using IndieWeb tools to build my own web site. I\u2019ve been building my own sites for years and so I have a lot of confidence in my ability there as well. Working on the IndieWeb stuff has been challenging because there\u2019s a lot of new language and new concepts as well as some aspects of web development that I have not engaged with before. I often feel vulnerable when I write my posts about the IndieWeb because my understanding of how everything works is emerging. In other words, I don\u2019t get it all yet but I\u2019m still writing publicly about my work.Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"response u-read-of u-bookmark-of h-cite\"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Read<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/2019\/01\/19\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">The Vulnerability of Learning<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/cathieleblanc.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/06\/profile.jpg?resize=150%2C150\" alt=\"Cathie LeBlanc\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Cathie LeBlanc<\/a> <em>(<span class=\"p-publication\">Desert of My Real Life<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\">Listening to the students talk about feeling unsure and vulnerable when they first encountered open educational practices made me think about my own learning. As a mid-career academic who has changed jobs and even disciplines, I am a confident learner. I have received lots of praise and other kinds of positive reinforcement for my ability to learn new things. If you have read previous posts on my blog, you might know that I am really interested in developments in the IndieWeb movement and am trying to write about some of my experiences with using IndieWeb tools to build my own web site. I\u2019ve been building my own sites for years and so I have a lot of confidence in my ability there as well. Working on the IndieWeb stuff has been challenging because there\u2019s a lot of new language and new concepts as well as some aspects of web development that I have not engaged with before. I often feel vulnerable when I write my posts about the IndieWeb because my understanding of how everything works is emerging. In other words, I don\u2019t get it all yet but I\u2019m still writing publicly about my work.<\/blockquote><\/section><div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\"><li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/www.reading.am\/p\/57Yd\/https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/2019\/01\/19\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\/\"> <\/a><\/li><\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Read The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)Listening to the students talk about feeling unsure and vulnerable when they first encountered open educational practices made me think about my own learning. As a mid-career academic who has changed jobs and...","post-type":"bookmark","_id":3085,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/20\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-desert-of-my-real-life\/"},{"checkin":{"name":"Starbucks Reserve","url":"https:\/\/foursquare.com\/v\/4b670e59f964a52066372be3","type":"card"},"syndication":"https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/432794314\/checkin\/5c4547b58496ca002c83d036","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5930\/","published":"2019-01-20T20:16:53-08:00","updated":"2019-01-20T20:16:53-08:00","post-type":"checkin","_id":3073,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5930\/"},{"category":["annotation","reply","social-stream","creativity","learning","responses","teaching","thought-spaces","trust","vulnerability"],"in-reply-to":"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/2019\/01\/19\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/20\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-cathie-leblanc\/","name":"\ud83d\udcd1 The Vulnerability of Learning | Cathie LeBlanc","published":"2019-01-20T20:03:42-08:00","updated":"2019-01-21T00:38:58-08:00","author":{"name":"Chris Aldrich","photo":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/d5fb4e498fe609cc29b04e5b7ad688c4?s=49&d=identicon&r=pg","url":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/","type":"card"},"content":{"text":"Replied to The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)\nChris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine?\u00a0\u00a0\u2767\nWhat a relief to hear this! The hardest part about writing my response was in possibly coming off too hard or painfully pedantic and not wanting to turn you off in your explorations. Syndicated copies to:","html":"<section class=\"h-cite response p-in-reply-to \"><header><span class=\"kind-display-text\">Replied to<\/span> <a href=\"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/2019\/01\/19\/the-vulnerability-of-learning\/\" class=\"p-name u-url\">The Vulnerability of Learning<\/a> by <a href=\"https:\/\/cathieleblanc.com\/\" class=\"h-card p-author\"><img class=\"u-photo\" src=\"https:\/\/i1.wp.com\/cathieleblanc.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/06\/profile.jpg?resize=150%2C150\" alt=\"Cathie LeBlanc\" width=\"32\" height=\"32\">Cathie LeBlanc<\/a><em> (<span class=\"p-publication\">Desert of My Real Life<\/span>)<\/em><\/header><blockquote class=\"e-summary\"><p>Chris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine?\u00a0\u00a0<a title=\"click to see this annotation in situ\" href=\"https:\/\/hyp.is\/dBcDfh0xEemcD5uCKKk9qg\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">\u2767<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote><\/section><p>What a relief to hear this! The hardest part about writing <a class=\"u-in-reply-to\" href=\"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/09\/everything-old-is-new-again-adventures-in-the-indieweb-desert-of-my-real-life\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">my response<\/a> was in possibly coming off too hard or painfully pedantic and not wanting to turn you off in your explorations.<\/p>\n<div id=\"syndication-links\">\n<span class=\"syn-text\">Syndicated copies to:<\/span><ul class=\"relsyn\">\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/chrisaldrich.wordpress.com\/?p=55683537\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<li><a class=\"u-syndication syn-link\" href=\"https:\/\/hypothes.is\/a\/dBcDfh0xEemcD5uCKKk9qg\"> <\/a><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>"},"summary":"Replied to The Vulnerability of Learning by Cathie LeBlanc Cathie LeBlanc (Desert of My Real Life)\nChris was incredibly gentle in his correction. It makes me think about how I respond to my students\u2019 work. Am I as gentle with their work as Chris was to mine?\u00a0\u00a0\u2767\nWhat a relief to hear this! The ...","post-type":"reply","_id":3086,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/boffosocko.com\/2019\/01\/20\/the-vulnerability-of-learning-cathie-leblanc\/"},{"checkin":{"name":"Piroshky Piroshky","url":"https:\/\/foursquare.com\/v\/49ee65a3f964a52058681fe3","type":"card"},"syndication":"https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/432794314\/checkin\/5c453d28340a58002cda8bad","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5929\/","published":"2019-01-20T19:31:52-08:00","updated":"2019-01-20T19:31:52-08:00","post-type":"checkin","_id":3074,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5929\/"},{"checkin":{"name":"Pike Place Market","url":"https:\/\/foursquare.com\/v\/427ea800f964a520b1211fe3","type":"card"},"syndication":"https:\/\/www.swarmapp.com\/user\/432794314\/checkin\/5c453b9b9ba3e5002c43bcf1","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5926\/","published":"2019-01-20T19:25:15-08:00","updated":"2019-01-20T19:25:15-08:00","post-type":"checkin","_id":3075,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5926\/"},{"syndication":"https:\/\/www.instagram.com\/p\/Bs4CwVLjZH-\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5923\/","published":"2019-01-20T15:59:08-08:00","updated":"2019-01-20T15:59:08-08:00","content":{"text":"#podcon2 Origin Stories"},"post-type":"note","_id":3076,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5923\/"},{"syndication":"https:\/\/www.instagram.com\/p\/Bs39IqtDg-0\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5920\/","published":"2019-01-20T15:10:02-08:00","updated":"2019-01-20T15:10:02-08:00","content":{"text":"Another PodCon, another awesome poster. Some Relay hosts my be in pin form only\ud83d\ude09","html":"Another PodCon, another awesome poster. Some Relay hosts my be in pin form only\ud83d\ude09"},"post-type":"note","_id":3077,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5920\/"},{"photo":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2019\/01\/igqzYKpM-1-1024x957.jpg","syndication":"https:\/\/www.instagram.com\/p\/Bs3zrDDD4yz\/","type":"entry","url":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5918\/","published":"2019-01-20T13:47:20-08:00","updated":"2019-01-20T13:47:20-08:00","content":{"text":"Staying on brand #PodCon2 #Indieweb"},"post-type":"photo","_id":3078,"_is_read":true,"_permalink":"https:\/\/dougbeal.com\/2019\/01\/20\/5918\/"}],"paging":{"before":"3164","after":"3073"}}

URLs are still escaped, but not double-escaped:

e.g. "https:\/\/espresso.economist.com\/807fd505578df62fdfc87fad88d8e0dd"

@swentel, If you spot anything else funky please let me know and I'll try to resolve it as quickly as possible

swentel commented 5 years ago

@jackjamieson2 yes, that dump works perfectly now in indigenous! I'll push a new release in a few minutes!

swentel commented 5 years ago

New release pushed, so this can be closed :)

jackjamieson2 commented 5 years ago

Thanks @swentel! Just verified and it's working great!