Non-technical IndieWeb: Fun, Creativity, Community, and “Content”

I resemble that remark.

rakhim
–Credit: Rakhim

Um…

Er… I mean…

I resent that remark. 😉 

The point of having a website is putting something interesting on it right?

The IndieWeb wiki does tend toward the technical, but many of us are working toward remedying that. For those who haven’t found them yet, there are some pages around a variety of topics like poetry, crafts, hobbies, music, writing, journalism, education, and a variety of other businesses and use cases. How we don’t have one on art (yet) is beyond me… Hopefully these might help us begin to use our sites instead of incessantly building them, though this can be a happy hobby if you enjoy it.

If you’ve got an IndieWeb friendly site, why not use it to interact with others? Help aggregate people around other things in which you’re interested. One might interact with the micro.blog community around any of their tagmoji. (I’m personally hoping there will be one for the stationery, pen, and typewriter crowd.) One might also find some community on any of the various stubs (or by creating new stubs) on IndieWeb.xyz

For more practical advice and to borrow a proverbial page from the movie Finding Forrester, perhaps reading others’ words and borrowing or replying to them may also help you along. I find that starting and ending everything from my own website means that I’m never at a loss for content to consume or create. Just start a conversation, even if it’s just with yourself. This started out as a short reply, but grew into a longer post aggregating various ideas I’ve had banging around my head this month.

Rachel Syme recently made me think about “old school blogs”, and as interesting as her question was, I would recommend against getting stuck in that framing which can be a trap that limits your creativity. It’s your site, do what you want with it. Don’t make it a single topic. That will make it feel like work to use it.

The ever-wise Charlie Owen reminds of this and suggests a solution for others reading our content. 

Of course if building websites is your passion and you want to make a new one on a new platform every week, that’s cool too. Perhaps you could document the continuing refreshing of the process each time and that could be your content?

Of course if this isn’t enough, I’ll also recommend Matthias Ott‘s advice to Make it Personal. And for those with a more technical bent, Simon Collison has a recent and interesting take on how we might be a bit more creative with our technical skills in This Used to be Our Playground.

In any case, good luck and remember to have some fun!

Published by

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.

5 thoughts on “Non-technical IndieWeb: Fun, Creativity, Community, and “Content””

  1. Over the past several years I’ve written a broad number of pieces about the IndieWeb. I find that many people are now actively searching for, reading, and implementing various versions of what I’ve done, particularly on the WordPress Platform.
    Because of some discussions at IndieWebCamp Baltimore, work I’m doing on my related book, interactions with Aaron Davis and Khürt Williams, and even Michael Bishop’s forthcoming IndieWeb WordPress platform/resource, I’ve decided that it’s time to conglomerate a handful of these articles into a single page or collection to make finding and reading them in some sort of order a bit easier.
    In many cases, people searching relevant pages on the IndieWeb wiki will hopefully find many of these articles and pieces also linked there or with short snippets of documentation as well. For those implementing things on their own websites, I heartily recommend the wiki as a first resource to see how others have done things and for examples of user interface and interaction.
    Caveat emptor: Just because I’ve done something in a particular way is a poor excuse to replicate it, and even then I’m always iterating, so your mileage may vary. If you have questions, feel free to ask me or others in the IndieWeb chat.
    Introductory Articles

    An Introduction to the IndieWeb (07/28/17)
    Defining the IndieWeb (06/15/18)
    Non-technical IndieWeb: Fun, Creativity, Community, and “Content” (12/20/2020)
    The Logos, Ethos, and Pathos of IndieWeb (5/9/22)
    Setting up WordPress for IndieWeb use (video tutorial/walkthrough)
    A pencast overview (with audio and recorded visual diagrams) of IndieWeb technologies
    A New Way to “Know and Master Your Social Media Flow” (4/11/17)
    How many social media related accounts can one person have on the web?! (10/17/16)
    Feed reader revolution (6/9/17)
    Webmentions: Enabling Better Communication on the Internet [Published in A List Apart](7/19/18)
    Micropub (Article coming soon)
    RSS Feeds on BoffoSocko.com (12/18/16) – differentiating feeds and limiting posts for email subscribers
    The Story of My Domain (05/13/18)
    Buzzfeed implements the IndieWeb concept of backfeed to limit filter bubbles (2/20/17) – Some thoughts on comments sections and backfeed
    IndieWeb Syndication Sketchnotes: POSSE >> PESOS >> PASTA >> PESETAS >> POOSNOW (A sketchnote about syndication) (8/21/21)

    Presentations

    The Web is my Social Network at WordCamp Riverside 2018 (slides)
    Micropub and WordPress: Custom Posting Applications at WordCamp Santa Clarita 2019 (slides) (2019-04-06)
    WordPress and IndieWeb: Creating Your Dialtone on the Internet at WordCamp Riverside 2019 (slides) (2019-11-09)
    A Twitter of Our Own at the OERxDomains 2021 conference for the Association for Learning Technology and Reclaim Hosting (slides) (2021-04-22)

    An IndieWeb Podcast
    Beginning in early 2018, David Shanske and I began recording episodes of a podcast focusing on various IndieWeb concepts. The series can be found here.
    Plugin specific articles

    Post Kinds Plugin for WordPress (8/11/17)

    Manually adding a new post kind to the Post Kinds Plugin for WordPress (06/06/2018)
    Allowing arbitrary HTML in the Summary/Quote field in the Post Kinds Plugin (06/08/2018)
    Creating a tag cloud directory for the Post Kinds Plugin on WordPress (7/16/18)

    Using Facepiles in Comments for WordPress with Webmentions and Semantic Linkbacks (10/6/17)
    Threaded Replies and Comments with Webmentions in WordPress (12/15/17)
    Browser Bookmarklets and Mobile Sharing with Post Kinds Plugin for WordPress (1/10/17)
    Using IFTTT to syndicate (PESOS) content from social services to WordPress using Micropub (01/21/20)

    Occasional WordPress Plugin Suite articles

    Reads, Listens, Watches, and Editable Webmention Types and Avatars in the IndieWeb WordPress Suite (05/31/18)

    Replies with introductory content

    POSSE and PESOS on the IndieWeb (11/19/17)
    Setting up IndieWeb replies in WordPress (9/17/17)

    Particular Post Kinds and Pages
    Pages

    Social Media Accounts and Links
    Mentions Page
    Following Page
    Supporting Page
    Favorite Things
    Ask me anything

    Reading

    Webmention + Books = BookMention (6/6/16)
    A New Reading Post-type for Bookmarking and Reading Workflow (8/22/16)
    Owning my Online Reading Status Updates (11/20/16) – a PESOS-based method involving Reading.am and IFTTT
    PressForward as an IndieWeb WordPress-based RSS Feed Reader & Pocket/Instapaper Replacement (12/31/16)
    Early notes on PressForward for read posts (12/17/16)
    Transitioning from Pocket to PressForward (2/26/2017)
    a note on reading UI
    An update to read posts for physical books (12/11/17)
    Thoughts on linkblogs, bookmarks, reads, likes, favorites, follows, and related links (3/10/2018)

    Marginalia, notes, highlights, fragmentions

    BoffoSocko.com Now Supports Fragmentions! (7/21/15)
    Hypothes.is and the IndieWeb (6/17/16) – Explorations with annotations and marginalia
    Notes, Highlights, and Marginalia: From E-books to Online (10/24/16)
    Some thoughts on fragmentions (1/5/17)
    Un-Annotated by Audrey Watters (Hack Education) (5/10/17) – an example of highlights and marginalia on an exterior post with PressForward, Hypothesis, and my site.
    Reply to Annotating Web Audio by Jon Udell (1/7/18)
    Fragmentions for Better Highlighting and Direct References on the Web (1/23/18)
    Some thoughts on highlights and marginalia with examples (6/21/18)
    An Outline for Using Hypothesis for Owning your Annotations and Highlights (6/23/18)
    A reply to Ian O’Byrne on annotations (7/6/18)
    Differentiating online variations of the Commonplace Book: Digital Gardens, Wikis, Zettlekasten, Waste Books, Florilegia, and Second Brains (7/3/21)
    Creating Internal Backlinks for MediaWiki for Digital Gardeners (6/1/21)

    Blogroll Experiments

    The beginnings of a blogroll (6/26/17)
    A Following Page (aka some significant updates to my Blogroll) (11/10/17)
    OPML files for categories within WordPress’s Links Manager (11/13/17)

    Silo related
    Twitter related

    @Mentions from Twitter to My Website (4/15/17) – An outline of how I used Indieweb technology to let Twitter users send @mentions to me on my own website.
    Two alternatives to #WomenBoycottTwitter that don’t rely on women’s silencing by Zoe Stavri (Another Angry Woman) – reverse gamifying Twitter
    How to Own & Display Your Twitter Archive on Your Website in Under 10 Minutes (12/5/16)
    Reply to Creating an Archive of a Set of Tweets by Aaron Davis (12/12/17)
    Adding Simple Twitter Response Buttons to WordPress Posts (12/24/17)
    Threaded conversations between WordPress and Twitter (07/02/18)

    Other silos

    Instagram Single Photo Bookmarklet (8/28/16)
    Mastodon.Social isn’t as Federated or as Decentralized as the Indie Web (4/5/17)
    Bye-bye, Google+ — but what next? by John Carlos Baez (Google+) (4/19/17) – thoughts on Mastodon, micro.blog, and IndieWeb
    Title-less Status Updates for Micro.blog (5/4/17)
    The Facebook Algorithm Mom Problem(7/11/17)
    Enabling two way communication with WordPress and GitHub for Issues (3/3/18)
    Crediting your own website when syndicating to Mastodon with WordPress plugins (12/18/20)

    Miscellaneous experiments / Posts with Resources

    Today is My Third IndieWeb Anniversary (4/25/17)- a synopsis of changes I’ve made in the past year
    Comment on Supporting Digital Identities in School by Christina Smith (Read Write Respond) (1/5/18)
    Give your web presence a more personal identity (10/26/16) – Photos on WordPress with Gravatar
    I’m apparently the king of the microformat rel=”me” (6/24/17)
    Reply to doesn’t link back by Khürt Williams (Island in the Net) (12/3/17) – practical notes on rel=”me”
    IndieWeb and Education (3/29/17)
    Person tagging experiment (12/09/17)
    Reply to Annotating Web Audio by Jon Udell (1/7/18)
    RSVP to an event (11/30/17)
    Reply to Aggregating the Decentralized Social Web by Jason Green (þoht-hord) (11/30/17) – philosophy on social web and networks
    Practical thoughts on h-cards (11/23/17)
    Blue Sky ideas for adding IndieWeb technology to podcatchers and podcasting (including Micropub for Listen Posts) (9/11/18)
    I’ll agree: Passive Tracking > Active Tracking (1/14/19)
    Updates to the Boffo Socko Newsletter (4/8/21)
    A note taking problem and a proposed solution (8/29/20)

    Journalism

    The IndieWeb and Journalism (1/13/17) – Some thoughts about how journalists could improve their online presences with IndieWeb principles along with a mini-case study of a site that is employing some of these ideas.
    A journalism wiki stub for IndieWeb (7/6/17)
    Creating an archive of my online writing, from 2002-2017 by Richard MacManus (richardmacmanus.com) (7/12/17)
    IndieWeb Journalism in the Wild (John Naughton example)

    Handwriting
    Pen and paper publishing to your website? PaperWebsite is on to something. (11/23/21)
    Handwriting my Website with a Digital Amanuensis (12/20/21)
    Other Miscellaneous

    IndieWeb Summit 2018 Recap (07/07/2018)
    IndieWeb Inspirational Cards (12-01-20) 
    IndieWeb Readlists: Tools and Brainstorming (3/26/22)

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