Idag lyssnar jag för första gången ordentligt på U2s *No Line on the Horizon* och måste säga att den är ganska bra. Grymt elbasljud!
Idag lyssnar jag för första gången ordentligt på U2s *No Line on the Horizon* och måste säga att den är ganska bra. Grymt elbasljud!
Just a quick note before I head to bed. In a comment to a post I linked to earlier Andy Sylvester points out that WordPress’ ”Link Manager” (aka ”blogroll”) could be used to generate an OPML file.
Per this WordPress support page, you can type in a URL like the following and see the blogroll or links of a WordPress weblog in OPML format:
http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/wp-links-opml.php
http://andysylvester.com/wp-links-opml.php
To me this seems like a more or less forgotten and highly downplayed feature of WordPress that could be really, really powerful.
I’ll get back to this subject eventually.
I just installed River4 on a headless Ubuntu server. Unfortunately it was not as straight forward as it was installing it on my Mac.
If you’re trying to install River4 on Ubuntu, please read this whole article. Don’t do things as you read. Reading it in its entirety will likely spare you some headaches.
Dave Winer, the creator of River4, has an easy to follow guide on how to install River4 on a Mac. To install it on Ubuntu you need to be able to wing it a bit.
The first order of business for me was to install Node.js. I tried to do that simply by running
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sudo apt-get install node |
It seems to work fine so I uploaded the River4 files via my FTP-client of choise. I then navigated to the River4 folder and tried running
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npm install |
And hit a big snag. It turns out installing Node via apt-get does not install NPM. So I tried
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sudo apt-get install npm |
Okay, NPM got installed and I tried npm install
once again. Still no luck. NPM itself ran but couldn’t download the specified packages.
After doing a bit of searching I found a Stack Overflow post that instructed me to change the way NPM got its data. I managed to do that and it seemed like the install process got further but it still ended up failing, now with and error message telling me my version of Node was too old for River4.
WTF?!? I just installed it. How can it be too old?
Well, after som more searching I found an article titled Node.js v0.12, io.js, and the NodeSource Linux Repositories. I did not read every word of it but the gist of it is that the latest versions of Node is not accessible via apt-get(!). Instead the article gives us the following command-line instructions to run:
# Note the new setup script name for Node.js v0.12
curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_0.12 | sudo bash -
# Then install with:
sudo apt-get install -y nodejs
I’m sure someone smarter than me will know the exact details of what this does. To me it was enough to know that it would allow me to install version 0.12 of Node. So I ran it and then tried to install the River4 dependencies again. Once again it didn’t work.
Out of frustration I removed the entire River4-folder from the machine, re-uploaded it via FTP and tried NPM again. This time it worked and the app could be launched with node river4.js
.
When I logged out of the server it stopped working so I learned the hard way that I needed to launch it using nohup node river4.js > /dev/null 2>&1 &
. This way it’ll continue running in the background indefinitely.
This is an attempt of telling you how to go about installing River4 on Ubuntu. I leave absolutely no guarantees. It might not work. It might blow up your server. It might make you sad.
# Note the new setup script name for Node.js v0.12
> curl -sL https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_0.12 | sudo bash -
> # Then install with:
> sudo apt-get install -y nodejs
sudo apt-get install npm
.npm install
in the River4 folder.nohup node river4.js > /dev/null 2>&1 &
.If NPM gives you problems in step 4, try changing where it gets its data:
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npm config set registry http://registry.npmjs.org/ |
@davewiner I joined a few days ago. :) Thanks for posting the link!
@synvila — I posted a link to your piece to the River4 list. You should probably join the list if you plan to keep using River4.
I’m having a problem. I currently feel like I need to ”accomplish” something, and that I haven’t done that in quite a while.
In reality this is so not true. For the last five weeks I’ve been on vacation and most of that time have been spent raising my baby daughter. Before that I worked and raised my baby daughter. So off course I’ve accomplished something. I’m in the middle of raising a human being!
But that doesn’t make the feeling of needing to accomplish something less urgent. What I mean in this case is that I feel that I should create something, something that is visible online.
I have a lot of ideas of things to do and a lot of started projects that doesn’t seem to ever go anywhere. Here are some of the things I want to do/have begun doing:
Last summer I finally managed to carve out the time to learn how to use Objective-C and how to code iOS apps.
I’ve made two apps that kind of works that’s only been used by me and my girlfriend.1 However I’ve not managed to get them polished up to the point where I’ve felt comfortable posting them to the App Store.
This is very common for me. I start something and it gets ”good enough” for me to use it, but then I never make it good enough for others to use.#
The apps are a photo app to create time-lapse photos of something that slowly changes (like a pregnant woman’s belly) and a private photo sharing app that uses WordPress as a backend.
I also have an idea for a River of News based RSS reader.
Lately I’ve been really interested in the idea of owning your content, in ”POSSE” and the whole indie web, or silo-less web or whatever you want to call it. That has gotten me to start changing things around on this blog to accommodate ”microblog”, ”link blogs” etc. etc. (I’m also highly anticipating Manton Reece’s upcoming microblogging service.)
This has led to some progress but also to a cluttered site, both in terms of the content but mostly in terms of the underlying code and the services I use (for instance IFTTT and Radio3) to make this happen.
I would like to clean up the code and at the same time move forward in adding functionality, like webmentions and some sort of backfeed of comments from Twitter and App.Net.
At the moment it seems like it would be faster to actually start creating a new theme from scratch (although with the same basic look) rather than refactoring the one I’m using. But it also feels like a drag to do that. It feels like I once again start over in something rather then polishing something up. (Do you see a pattern here?)
On the other hand, working on the theme might result in some open source code and that would really be me making something.
A couple of days ago I installed a River of News aggregator on my computer and I got blown away by it. Unlike other forms of RSS aggregation this seems like the perfect way to consume a large number of current topics via RSS. I also have a strong feeling that rivers of news will be important in a possible future with a more open web. Hell, Twitter is basically a bunch of rivers of news!
Today I also read a post that, among other things, requested a better way for blogs to recommend each other to readers and to curate content from each others blogs. This is likely accomplished by rivers and the OPML files that are the foundations of the rivers.
So I have multiple ideas of things to do involving rivers.
Or, I could just continue to Zelda: Majora’s Mask 3D. Sometimes playing a video game can feel like I’m accomplishing things.
I really, really, love to read but I read way to seldom. So maybe I should just continue reading Spook Country.
I don’t know. Hopefully something productive. I guess time will tell.
Jag håller på att sammanställa en lista på svenska nyhetsflöden (RSS/Atom etc.) för en ”River of News”. Tips på sajter att inkludera?
När det gäller att annonsera om sina RSS-flöden så verkar Aftonbladet och Dagens Nyheter vara bäst av de stora svenska tidningarna.
This is a reply to http://rhiaro.co.uk/2015/07/synvilahttptwittercomsynvila (and by extension a test to see if the webmentions plugin work correctly.)
Thank you for your reply and the links. indiewebify.me was a lot easier to get something out of than the ”Getting started” page on the indieweb wiki.
Eftersom Twitter är ett dåligt medium för längre diskussioner så tänkte jag använda den här bloggposten till att skriva ett inlägg i en twitterdiskussion.
Nyligen länkade jag till en ledarartikel på dt.se angående ”tvillingupproret” och kommenterade att jag tyckte att det var Rimlig kritik av tvillingupproret.
Jag fick mothugg på Twitter från Käthe Nilsson (@kathes):
@synvila nej det räcker inte eftersom det behövs två hemma vid tvillingar.
På detta svarade jag genom att fråga, Hur funkar det i länder där det inte finns så generösa föräldraförsäkringar?
och fick två tweets till svar/som motargument:
@synvila det går alltid att hitta andra barn i andra länder som har det sämre.
…
@synvila varför ska det vara skillnad på enlingar och flerlingar i samma land?
Att säga att man aldrig ska gnälla så länge någon annan har det sämre är ett dåligt argument, det håller jag med om. Men det är inte det jag vill säga med min fråga om andra länder. Min poäng var att ifrågasätta påståendet att antalet föräldradagar (480 + 180) inte räcker, att det behövs två hemma för att ta hand om tvillingar. Detta är uppenbarligen inte sant eftersom det redan idag fungerar med tvillingar utan dubbla antalet föräldradagar (i så väl Sverige som andra länder).
Angående att göra skillnad på ”enlingar” och ”flerlingar” så är det snarare ett ökat antal föräldradagar vid tvillingar (eller fler) som gör att det görs skillnad. 480 dagar är 480 dagar, alldeles oavsett hur många barn som föräldern är hemma med, eller hur? Så eftersom tvillingföräldrar potentiellt är hemma mera med sina barn så får alltså dessa barn fler dagar med förälder hemma än vad ”enlingar” får.
Om tvillingupproret menar att det för millimeterrättvisans skull krävs att varje barn får exakt samma uppmärksamhet räknat i minuter – att 480 dagar hemma med två barn i praktiken innebär 240 dagar per barn – så kan det bli ett problem att ha en förälder hemma med fler än ett barn i jämförelse med en förälder och ett barn. Men även om ”tvillingdagarna” skulle utökas till 480 + 480 så skulle man ha problem eftersom olika familjer hanterar sin föräldraledighet på olika sätt och dessutom kan samma familj hantera det olika vid olika barn beroende på olika livssituation. Att försöka hitta någon exakt rättvisa här går inte.
Dessutom så drabbar denna ”orättvisa” i så fall nästan alla barn som inte är äldst i en familj eftersom äldre syskon som går på förskola får sin förskoletid kortad när en förälder är föräldraledig med ett syskon. Är detta också en orättvisa av stora mått?
Att staten bekostar att man är hemma med sina barn är ingen mänsklig rättighet. Det är en otrolig ynnest och ett privilegium som delvis bekostas av de som inte har några barn. Vi som kan få del av det privilegiet bör vara glada. Att då börja ropa om ”diskriminering” gör att man framstår som bortskämd tycker jag och det är det som gör att jag irriterar mig på tvillingupproret.
Imagine a photo-sharing site built with WordPress. For all intents and purposes it’s like Instagram. Every post has a photo, posts can’t be photo-less and you can’t have more than one photo in a post.
Would you implement this using the Featured Image property of a post or would the photo be ”hard coded” so to speak in each post using an <img>
element inside the actual post content?
Any thoughts? Please let me know via App.Net, e-mail or Twitter.
(This is a question for David Smith, the developer of Feed Wrangler. Since it may be interesting to more people than me I choose to ask it in this public place.)
Edited 2015-07-16 with David Smith’s response.
According to the RSS specification the title of an item is optional. This is especially useful in the context of microblogging.
In Feed Wrangler, when a post lacks a title it gets the title [Untitled]. Is there a way for a client side app to distinguish a post that actually lacks the title from a post that really is titled [Untitled]?
(I realize that this is an extreme edge case. There are probably very few blog posts floating around that is actually titled [Untitled].)
David responded to me:
I don’t expose if a post is actually titled “[Untitled]” or if I was missing its title. Where would the difference be of use?
Replies and comments
Henrik
13 juli, 2016 18:00Henrik mentioned this on blog.henrikcarlsson.se.