Read Private posts: the move of the checkins by Sebastiaan AndewegSebastiaan Andeweg (seblog.nl)

I’ve attended both IndieWebCamp Düsseldorf and Utrecht last month. At the first one, we had a very good session about the UI side of private posts. The blogpost I wrote about it unfortunately stayed in draft. The summary: I used to denote private posts by adding the word ‘privé’ in bold below the post, next to the timestamp. Since the hackday I now show a sort-of header with a lock icon, and a text telling you that only you can see the post, or you and others, if that’s the case.

A big takeaway from Düsseldorf was that I don’t need to do it all at once. To me, the first step to private posts is letting people login to your site. This can be done with IndieAuth, or by using IndieAuth.com (which will move to IndieLogin.com at some point). The second step is to mark a post as private in your storage, and only serve it to people who are logged in. The third step is to add a list of people who can see the post, and only show it to those people. This is the place where I was at.

Read 30 Days of Red Shirts – Day Three: Vaporised by phaser by Lee (leedrawsstuff.com)

This one is certainly nowhere near as gory as yesterday’s but I imagine the smell of a person being vaporised is probably somewhat pungent.

I’ve got a few vaporisations in the 30 days so I might follow this one up with more of the disintegration process (like in that TNG episode with the bugs and that guy’s face melts off in possibly one of the weirdest tonal changes in the show).

Cartoon/watercolor of the away team on a planet and the red shirt is being vaporised by a phaser
30 Days of red shirts is a cool concept for an art series and it’s pretty well executed.
Read About (Own Your Content)
What is this for? It’s for you—someone who creates work to tell stories, to educate and empower, to share a point of view. Whether it’s through essays, illustrations, or photographs, your work is your livelihood. In 2018, we launched Season 1 of Own Your Content with 9 creative leaders that ha...
This site has a very IndieWeb flavor about it. While it takes a very WordPress-slanted view of life and is geared toward the Creative Mornings crowd, it’s expanding on many basic IndieWeb principles including own your own domain name, have your own website, and (obviously) own your content.
Read Khoi Vinh on How His Blog Amplified His Work and Career by Kyle (Own Your Content)
It’s fair to think, what if you never monetize your website? What if no one reads your blog? What is it all for? We spoke with Khoi Vinh, Principal Designer at Adobe, author of How They Got Here: Interviews With Digital Designers About Their Careers, and a writer who’s been publishing on his blo...

👓 Robots, Autopilot, and The Holy Grail of WebOps | Pantheon Acquires StagingPilot

Read Robots, Autopilot, and The Holy Grail of WebOps - Pantheon Acquires StagingPilot by Josh KoenigJosh Koenig (pantheon.io)
Today, I’m thrilled to announce that Pantheon has acquired StagingPilot, creating a clear pathway for us to offer automation for website updates through our WebOps platform. This acquisition includes not just StagingPilot’s outstanding technology, but also founder Nathan Tyler and his brother Phil, who have created the gold standard of automated CMS maintenance.
Congratulations Nathan Tyler!

👓 PeerTube: retrospective, new features and more to come! | #JoinPeerTube

Read PeerTube: retrospective, new features and more to come! (joinpeertube.org)
Since version 1.0 has been released last November, we went on improving PeerTube, day after day. These improvements on PeerTube go well beyond the objectives fixed during the crowdfunding. They have been funded by the Framasoft non-profit, which develops the software (and lives only through your donations). Here is a small retrospective of the end of 2018/beginning of 2019:

👓 Accueil — Systemic design & UX research | Marie-Cécile Godwin Paccard

Read Marie-Cécile Godwin Paccard (Marie-Cécile Godwin Paccard — Systemic design & UX research)
Designer systémique, facilitatrice, oratrice, mentor, moteur d'écosystèmes, écoféministe intersectionnelle. J'appréhende le complexe pour comprendre, converger, structurer et construire. Je donne des conférences et je publie sur mon métier et sur des thématiques comme le burnout ou l'anthropocène. Mes valeurs conduisent ma pratique du métier et je pratique un design inclusif et éthique. Depuis bientôt 15 ans, j'aide les personnes et les organisations à définir leurs fondamentaux et leurs objectifs et à…

👓 A Brief History of LessWrong | LessWrong 2.0

Read A Brief History of LessWrong (lesswrong.com)
In 2006, Eliezer Yudkowsky [https://www.lesswrong.com/users/eliezer_yudkowsky], Robin Hanson [https://www.lesswrong.com/users/robin_hanson2], and others began writing on Overcoming Bias [https://www.overcomingbias.com/about], a group blog with the general theme of how to move one’s beliefs closer to reality despite biases such as overconfidence and wishful thinking. In 2009, after the topics drifted more widely, Eliezer moved to a new community blog, LessWrong. LessWrong was seeded with series of daily blog posts written by Eliezer, originally known as The Sequences, and more recently compiled into an edited volume, Rationality: A-Z [https://www.lesswrong.com/rationality]. These writings attracted a large community of readers and writers interested in the art of human rationality. In 2015-2016 the site underwent a steady decline of activity leading some to declare the site dead. In 2017, a team led by Oliver Habryka took over the administration and development of the site, relaunching it on an entirely new codebase [https://github.com/LessWrong2/Lesswrong2] later that year. The new project, dubbed LessWrong 2.0, was the first time LessWrong had a full-time dedicated development team behind it instead of only volunteer hours. Site activity recovered from the 2015-2016 decline and has remained at steady levels [https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/9dA6GfuDca3Zh3RMa/data-analysis-of-lw-activity-levels-age-distribution-of-user] since the launch. The team behind LessWrong 2.0 has ambitions not limited to maintaining the original LessWrong community blog and forum. The LessWrong 2.0 team conceives of itself more broadly as an organization attempting to build community, culture, and technology which will drive intellectual progress on the world’s most pressing problems.