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I Tested HEY World! (#hey #heyworld)
Today, I tested HEY World. This is my non-review. It could have worked great, but itâs not ready yet. One could say âNice try, buddyâ. I love their response to my test message. One thing stands out from their response, though: âFor now, HEY World is just an experiment. ⊠âAssuming thereâs demand, weâll begin opening it up for more people soon. And then, hopefully, for all HEY for You customers. Continue reading â
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The beginning of the end for me and Twitter?Twitter announces paid Super Follows to let you charge for tweets
More shit like this and I guess Twitter will be my next one to quit.

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Ghostâs Killer Feature (#ghost #blogging)
After reading âGhost on the iPad, a Reviewâ from Tablet Habit, I tried to remember my experience when I tried the service myself. It wasnât a good one for the thing I wanted to do with it: create a photography-oriented blog. In recent days, it seems that the âGhostâ name is gaining traction in the blogging arena. I have to wonder if Ghost is better at this than what I experienced for photography. Continue reading â
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On paper, yes, but how do you cope in a "streaming-only" world?Owning media > streaming services
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How many websites can a blogger have? (#blogger #blogging #bloggerlife)
How many websites a blogger can have? Good question. I do have (too?) many, each filling their own niche. On that subject, something caught my attention yesterday in the public announcement of HEYâs experiment: âHello, World!â. Jason Fried explaining why he never had a blog: âIt was primarily because setting up a personal blog was just too much of a hassle. It felt formal, it required yet another tool, yet another place to write, yet another platform to pay for just one feature. Continue reading â
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Happy birthday, Steve. (#apple #stevejobs #remembering)
Steve would have been 66 years old today. Even if I love what Apple has become over the years since he died, I miss him dearly. What a great picture of him. It is nice to see Apple and Tim Cook paying a small tribute each year. Continue reading â
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Hey, World (#hey #newsletters)
Each day, it seems there is always something new happening in the world of newsletters. When itâs not someone famous who joins Substack, a company out of nowhere offers a brilliant idea built around supporting newsletters in one way or the other. Iâm thinking of Hey in particular. âEmail is the internet’s oldest instant self-publishing platform. Except you have to define a small audience every time you write. But what if you didn’t? Continue reading â
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Whatâs next for the iPad Pro? (#apple #ipadpro)
9to5Mac published a nice comparison between the iPad Air and the 2020 iPad Pro. The latter still hold the crown with its 120Hz ProMotion display and LiDAR. Rumours are pointing to an update for the Pro line in March. The question that comes to my mind is: whatâs missing from the iPad Pro, from the hardware point of view? I mean, speed, screen, form factor are just close to âperfectâ. Continue reading â
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HEY, Hey just got updated (#hey)
My go-to email client got an update today. Hey version 1.2 brings a few tweaks in the compose mode. In recent weeks, updates are more frequent as they finally delivered support for corporate email. Now, the other thing Iâd like to see is a collapsible view in the feed view. I donât see how pinch-to-zoom can be added without implementing the opposite to bring a collapsed view. Continue reading â
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Crafting something with Craft (#craft #rumours #apple)
In my quest to better understand the full potential of note taking application « Craft », Iâve come up to something different, a website about Appleâs related rumours. You can hit this link to have a look. You can leave comments, no registration required. Enjoy. Continue reading â
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Are we digital nomads? (#blogging #internet)
In the last few months, on Twitter and on Micro.blog, Iâve been witnessing something that takes the shape of a small phenomenon: people are moving from one place to another in the digital space. Many are writing about their experience of moving from one hosting site to another. Some are leaving WordPress to return to Ghost. Others are proudly putting together their hosting solutions. The same happens in the newsletters hosting space: people are leaving Mailchimp to go to Substack or Revue. Continue reading â
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Learning Blot.im the hard way (#blot #selfhosting)
So I started another experiment involving Blot.im. For those who donât know Blot.im, it is a static web site generator that seems popular among the crowd here. On paper, the process of publishing is very simple: you drag and drop files on a specific folder on your computer and they get instantly published on the web. Sound great, right? Thatâs what I thought. My goal with Blot.im is to do some âmeta bloggingâ; a place where I could write about the tools, services and my blogger workflow. Continue reading â
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Testing, testing, 1.2.3. (#webmention #indieweb #openweb)
Iâm still new to the Indieweb world. Today, Iâm learning about webmentions. I like the idea of linking reactions back to the origin. So, after enabling a plugin on my main blog, Iâm trying to link back to one of my recent post and see what happens. One day, I wrote âThe Journey is the Rewardâ. I donât post personal things very often. Thanks for your feedback. Continue reading â
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Love and hate (#microblog)
Iâm in love with Micro.blog. Itâs simple, not too busy. Based on open web standards. But today, Iâm a bit frustrated with the bad sad of being too simple. My most important grievance is the lack of design flexibility. Built-in themes are too basics and unappealing. You have to be a HTML and CSS expert to try to figure out how to make simple tweaks. This frustration is behind my recent desire to look elsewhere for hosting the whole thing. Continue reading â
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Looking behind the scene. (#blogging #Hugo #html #git #github)
It all started with the idea of tweaking my micro.blog visual theme. I donât like it, but this is the best that I could find from the included themes. After reading for a while and seeing people writing about their blogger workflow, I found out that Micro.blog is using Hugo, a static website generator. Then I started to learn about Hugo by searching for introduction videos on YouTube. Then, I learned about Hugo themes and how they are constructed, and at the center of how a website is displayed. Continue reading â
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Dear Micro.blog, where do you plan to go next? (#microblogging #microblog)
Thought of the day for @manton and @jean: there is something that could be improved regarding micro.blog: opening up the evolution and improvement roadmap of the platform. I do appreciate when a service do put out their roadmaps so the community get a better look at where things will be going in the future. Mailbrew, Plausible and Craft are very vocal about their future plans, you just have to find the place where they talk about it. Continue reading â
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Welcome back to the Mac computer club @mattbirchler (#apple #macbookair #applesilicon)
As much as you can like to work on the iPad, there are edge cases where the iPad falls short. Since I got an Apple Silicon powered Mac, and thanks to many nifty Mac utilities, I rediscovered what it really means to be productive and efficient on a computer platform. This blog post by Matt Birchler is an example of an edge case being better served by a traditional yet powerful computer. Continue reading â
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Hey @jack! Let’s start a discussion.đ I’m looking at your sites, your work and the tools and services you use. I’m very curious about how it all fit together. I’m curious about this Hugo thing, Github as a storage service and content editors and how they all talk to each other. Maybe others would be interested to discuss their options and workflow too. Chime in!
Let’s start like this: I started to look closely at Hugo and now I do have a better idea of this engine. What is less clear is this. Suppose I’m running an instance of Hugo on my M1-based Mac mini. Where does Github fit? Why I would use it?
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This could be my next... (#iphone #apple #rumors)
As reported by MacRumors, the next major revision of the iPhone looks promising for me: “Weinbach claims that the always-on display will look like a “toned down Lock screen,” where the clock and battery charge are always visible, and past notifications are shown through “a bar and icons.” When users receive a notification, the notification will “pop up normally except that the screen will not entirely light up.” Instead, “it will display it just like you’re used to right now, except dimmed down and only temporarily,” according to the leaker. Continue reading â