“I didn’t want to maintain two LinkedIn’s, one is bad enough” - Jordan at @IndieWebSummit on changing her name online to get a job #IndieWeb
— Lillian Karabaic (@anomalily) June 29, 2019
Definitely a contender for quote of the day.
“I didn’t want to maintain two LinkedIn’s, one is bad enough” - Jordan at @IndieWebSummit on changing her name online to get a job #IndieWeb
— Lillian Karabaic (@anomalily) June 29, 2019
I have successfully gotten the fake LinkedIn account in my name deleted. To prevent someone from doing this again, I signed up for LinkedIn. This is my first -- and only -- post on that account. Now I hear that LinkedIn is e-mailing people on my behalf, suggesting that they friend, follow, connect, or whatever they do there with me. I assure you that I have nothing to do with any of those e-mails, nor do I care what anyone does in response.
So the real question facing companies with stand alone traditional feed reader products–like Feedly, Digg Reader, The Old Reader, Inoreader, Reeder, NewsBlur, Netvibes, Tiny Tiny RSS, WordPress reader–and the cadre of others is:
In short the primary question is:
What should a modern RSS feed reader be capable of doing?