Bookmarked https://www.robinrendle.com/notes/a-web-browser-built-for-me/.
Notes
For shorter content, like notes.
I’ve been playing with Micropub a bit over the last couple days and am pretty excited about the progress I’ve made. Looking forward to posting more content—likes, reposts, replies, notes, and blog posts—from alternate editors, especially on mobile!
This is a note that should show up as a reply, I think 🤔
I haven’t left a note in a while. Hi! 👋🏻

Vine number one is measuring about 13.5 feet. There’s about 6.5 feet of twine left before I need to figure out something else. 😅
Shortnotes version 1.1.1 released: a bit of house keeping and affirmation of WordPress 5.8 support.

I almost don’t fit in the selfie anymore!
It’s a very comfortable 85 out right now. May we be done with that nonsense for a bit. Bring on the 90s!

The first vine has latched!
This one is the best so far. Another plant just started sprouting its second set of leaves, another is still just a nub of a stem, and there has been no visible growth from the fourth.
I’ve approached this crime—using the first image in post content as a featured image—a few different times and this seems the most like an infraction.
(yes, I had to lookup what came before misdemeanor)
I’m always scared to try and paste a link over text in places because I assume it won’t work, but it did just work in Slack and now I know 🍻

I’d love to find the right way to insert inline, non-text, markup into a paragraph block in WordPress.
Another IndieWeb PopUp event to look forward to! I’ve been playing with a mix of public and private content both on this site and over at the new digital garden. It will be fun to dive into that a bit more with others.
I found it hard hard to find oh well whatever nevermind
Nirvana’s Smells Like Teen Spirit as an anthem for poorly designed user experience?
It’s official, we’re hiring at Happy Prime!
October, 2005: “Today Google announced a web-based feed reader…”
March, 2013: “We launched Google Reader in 2005 in an effort to make it easy for people to discover and keep tabs on their favorite websites.” … “So, on July 1, 2013, we will retire Google Reader.”
May, 2021: “[Today] we’re exploring how to simplify the experience of getting the latest and greatest from your favorite sites directly in Chrome, building on the open RSS web standard.”
Here’s to whatever happens in 2029. 🙄