Trusting #Twitter with any important corporate, organizational, emergency or other public service functions is like trusting Donald Trump to pay his bills. Only far worse.
The photos of this nuclear-powered cruise ship from the 1960’s are wild—it is like a perfectly preserved time capsule, with atom-themed light fixtures and tableware. A small wooden cube illustrates the amount of uranium fuel needed to circumnavigate the globe over a dozen times.
I recently read Darek Kay's excellent post about styling RSS feeds and wanted to do something similar. So, here's my simple guide to styling your WordPress blog's RSS / Atom theme. The end result is that if someone clicks on a link to your feed, they see something nicely formatted, like this: Prerequisites This involves […]
I've been rediscovering RSS feeds and Feeder has been a delight! I'm curious what other feed readers folks are using and what interesting feeds folks are following?
Hopefully enough folks see this who use RSS feeds to respond
You're not #social when you hamper sharing by removing feeds. You're happy to have customers creating content for your ecosystem, but you don't want this content out - a content you do not even own. Google Takeout is just a gimmick. We want our data to flow, we want RSS or #Atom feeds.
We want to share with friends, using open protocols: RSS, ATOM, #XMPP, whatever. Because no one wants to have your service with your applications using your API force-feeding them. Friends must be free to choose whatever software and service they want.
Hey netizens, do me a favour: if you have a site and it has a newsfeed (#RSS or #Atom), please check it with https://validator.w3.org/feed/ If it fails the validation, please tell the author of your software about it. If you're the author and you don't understand what the validator is telling you, comment here and I'll try to help (others are welcome to help too!)
The world is full of slightly broken feeds. Let's make it a better place.
J'vais de moins en moins consulter les réseaux sociaux : pour les actualités, j'utilise maintenant le flux RSS/Atom avec comme lecteur @nextcloud News (instance @murena). Pour bcp d'infos, j'ne fais que de les consulter; intéragir vient après. Merci @thelinuxEXP ! La veille informationnelle devient largement + simple. #news#rss#atom#synchro#veille#watch#dailies#foresight 👍
So I would argue that not only the shutdown of #GoogleReader was the primary cause for the #RSS demise, but also this was actually intentional, to wipe out from the general consciousness the awareness of the possibility and existence of decentralized, user-controlled forms of content distribution.
Several users have also remarked that RSS and #Atom feeds still exist, citing podcasts as primary application (in fact, it could be argued that it's not a podcast if it's not available via RSS).
Looking up "Drupal" and "Notion" and I'm finding how to integrate with the Notion API and I'm like you don't understand I didn't want to work with Notion I wanted to reimplement Notion.
It's okay the urge passed. Just one of those ADHD "I've got a brilliant idea" moments
@butter, @dessalines, I've grown quite fond of Friendica for that very thing, following things, not just people. Not only does it let me follow topics via tags, but things like #lemmy and #guppe get added as "forums", plus I can follow any #RSS or #Atom feed. All of these are added the same as adding any other contact (follow). All of these different ways of following things get listed in the same area of my account, as "contacts", where they can be easily separated into to multiple groups (lists). Each followed hashtag, forum, contact group, or protocol type is always listed down the side of my page where I can simply click on it to filter my current feed.
I know that other #fediverse / #ActivityPub interfaces such as #Pleroma, #Akkoma, #Misskey, #Calckey, #Hubzilla, and #Streams have some/all of these capabilities, each to their own extent. However, having played around extensively with all of them, I've come to find that #Friendica is the one that works best for me. And at the end of the day, this is the only thing that matters. It may be a bit time consuming, but trying all the things is the best (only?) way to see how they'll work for you.
Mastodon monoculture problem (rys.io)