Dries Buytaert: creator of Drupal and co-founder of Acquia

Followed Dries Buytaert, creator of Drupal and co-founder of Acquia by Dries BuytaertDries Buytaert (dri.es)
Discover Dries' thoughts on the open web, the future of digital, technology startups, Open Source and Drupal.
Dries looks like he’s not only starting to post more, but post more interesting pieces about the future of the web.

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Chris Aldrich

I'm a biomedical and electrical engineer with interests in information theory, complexity, evolution, genetics, signal processing, IndieWeb, theoretical mathematics, and big history. I'm also a talent manager-producer-publisher in the entertainment industry with expertise in representation, distribution, finance, production, content delivery, and new media.

One thought on “Dries Buytaert: creator of Drupal and co-founder of Acquia”

  1. Replied to a tweet by Dries Buytaert (Twitter)

    “It touches me that some people have been reading my blog for over a decade.” https://dri.es/forty I’ve been thinking about that since. It would be nice to know who is subscribed to your blog so you can build a relationship. #indieweb @davewiner— Dries Buytaert (@Dries) November 22, 2018

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    Happy birthday Dries! If I may, can I outline a potential web-based birthday present based on your  wish?
    Follow posts
    With relation to your desire to know who’s subscribed and potentially reading your posts, I think there are a number of ways forward, and even better, ways that are within easy immediate reach using Drupal as well as many other CMSes using some simple web standards.
    I suspect you’ve been following Kristof De Jaeger’s work with the Drupal IndieWeb module which is now a release candidate. It will allow you to send and receive Webmentions (a W3C recommendation) which are simple notifications much the way they work on Twitter, Facebook, etc. I’ve written a bit about how they could be leveraged to accomplish several things in Webmentions: Enabling Better Communication on the Internet.
    Not mentioned in that article for brevity is the ability to send notifications via Webmention when one makes follow or subscription posts.
    As an example, I’ve created a follow post for you for which my site would have sent a Webmention. Unfortunately at the time, your site didn’t support receiving it, so you would have missed out on it unless you support older legacy specs like pingback, trackback, or refback.
    I also created a larger related Following page of people and sites I’m subscribed to which also lists you, so you would have received another notification from it if you supported Webmention.
    I’m unaware of anyone actually displaying these notifications on their website (yet!), though I’ve got some infrastructure on my own site to create a “Followed by” page which will store and show these follows or subscriptions. At present, they’re simply stored in my back end.
    Read Posts

    Heh – that’s funny – @lizzjoy and I were just saying we need to find a way of knowing who is reading the Drupal community and association blogrolls…
    — Rachel Lawson 🇪🇺 (@rachel_norfolk) November 22, 2018

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js
    As for Rachel’s request, this too is also possible with “read” webmentions. I maintain a specific linkblog feed (RSS) with all of the online material I read. All of those posts send notifications to the linked sites. While it’s not widely supported by other platforms yet, there are a few which do, so that online publications can better delineate and display the difference between likes, bookmarks, reads, etc. There’s at least one online newspaper among 800+WordPress websites which support this functionality. I suspect that with swentel’s Drupal module and some code for supporting the proper microformats, this is a quick reality in the Drupal space as well. Because the functionality is built on basic web standards, it’s possible for any CMS to support them. All that’s left is to ramp up adoption.
    A quick note on Microsub and feed readers
    Dave Winer in his reply to you linked to a post about showing likes on his site (presumably using the Twitter API) where he laments:

    I know the Like icon doesn’t show up in your feed reader (maybe that can change)

    Interestingly, swentel’s module also supports Microsub, so that reader clients will allow one to like (bookmark, or reply to) posts directly within readers which will then send Micropub requests to one’s website to post them as well as to potentially send Webmention notifications. These pieces help to close the circle of posting, reading, and easily interacting on the open web the way closed silos like Facebook, Twitter, et al. allow.
    Syndicated copies to:

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