No, I’m just manually marking it up as such. Maybe it has something to do with the blog-subdomain not being what I had previously put into my micro.blog account as my webpage. I’ve changed that now, so let’s see if this reply works better.
No, I’m just manually marking it up as such. Maybe it has something to do with the blog-subdomain not being what I had previously put into my micro.blog account as my webpage. I’ve changed that now, so let’s see if this reply works better.
Thanks John! If this works as intended this should show up as a reply at micro.blog, even though it was posted on my blog with “u-in-reply-to”. Does it work?
I’m testing some things with my blog and micro.blog. If you’re willing to possibly receive some test responses, reply to this post on micro.blog.
@MrHenko here you go.
@MrHenko YOLO
Does this show up in micro.blog as well?
I wonder if this will show up in micro.blog?
@blog @MrHenko it does! I see the re comes from @blog but it has your avatar. Are you using the post_kinds WordPress plugin for replies?
@MrHenko that fixed it, but I see 2 messages in the main timeline? Only one in conversation view (mac app).
@MrHenko Are you planning on doing a write-up about this process when you’re done? It looks like you and @johnjohnston found at least two areas where extra care was needed (m.b webpage URL has to match blog url, webmention replies “doubled” if not also excluded from feed sent to m.b), and it would be good to have a detailed-ish document about WordPress webmention replies and Micro.blog out there on the web (and in the wiki)….
@johnjohnston Hrm, you’re @johnjohnston in that reply, even though your M.b profile URL matches your blog URL…. (And there’s that strange “Like this:Like Loading…” at the end.)
@smokey @johnjohnston Oh, weird; something’s busted in @-mentions for “domain usernames”; it’s truncating at the period (which explains John’s mentioning of “blog” in this reply)…
@MrHenko @smokey Thanks! If you write this up, feel free to include bug reports in the blog post too. 🙂 The double posts might be a bug, but I noticed that the URL is different for those 2 posts: one uses the format p=10756
in WordPress, so Micro.blog can’t know that it’s the same as the other permalink.
@MrHenko Did you remove one of the duplicates? It’s no longer showing up in the conversation, but it was a little while ago.
@MrHenko I’m interested in knowing more about what you did. I’m sending my blog here, and using webmentions on my blog to track convos, but hadn’t seen how to link stuff here back there. I generate different rss entries for short and long blog posts (I created “microposts” on my blog which come through as simple messages, while normal ones do the ”title, link” thing).
@smokey @MrHenko @manton the “Like this:Like Loading…” comes from my use of the Jetpack like button. I probably need to give that up or understand a bit better how a mention is grabbed from a post…
My micro.blog account has johnjohnston.info/blog/ verified. I guess the incoming mention is reduced to the domain and not the folder my blog is in. Would it help for me to add a rel link to micro.blog on the home page? Will that confuse things? I’ve got the link on /blog/
@johnjohnston Ah, I see. Yes, Micro.blog assumes for incoming Webmentions that the verified site is just a domain name without a path. I don’t think you need to add anything else, because you do have a rel=me
on the reply pages already (but Micro.blog doesn’t check that currently).
@manton if I added rel=me on my domain page and verified that, would that break anything or help anything?
@johnjohnston You’d also need to update the URL on your profile to just be the domain name. That may be a good short-term change while I consider if there’s more Micro.blog could do here. Thanks!
Henrik Carlsson mentioned this note on blog.henrikcarlsson.se.
I’m hoping that turning this switch to “off” in Overcast will decrease the amount of mindless listening and get me to make more conscious choices about when to listen and to what.
(Also I love any excuse to use my Pencil.)
Part of rethinking the tech I use to get work done is also getting rid of Dropbox. From now on, personal documents that need cloud sync goes into iCloud Drive and work stuff goes in OneDrive.
This was originally planned to be a post about me trying out a new tech setup for getting work done, but as I kept on writing I realized that it would need to be broken up into multiple parts, so this is more of a prolog.
This is my backpack. (Nerdy Log Lady for scale.)
It’s not fancy or elegant but I like it. A lot.
Mostly I like it because it contains all the things I use to get my work done. Most importantly it contains my computer and its various peripherals.
When it comes to getting my work done, a real computer has always been my tool of choice and for as long as I’ve had my current job, that computer has been a MacBook Pro.
I also like my computer. A lot. It’s the last of its kind, really. It is the 2015 15″ Retina MacBook Pro model that was sold up until last summer, which was when I bought this one. It’s the tool that I use for most of the things involved in my job. I do carry a physical notebook and a pen quite often and use it to scribble down my thoughts but it is the computer that is the main work machine.
There are other things in the backpack that help me get my work done. In fact, I have a thirty-eight (38) items long checklist in OmniFocus for the things that should ideally be in the backpack. The notebook and pen I just mentioned are two of the items on the list. A charger for the computer is another one. There’s also an external hard drive, adapters for Thunderbolt to Ethernet, Thunderbolt to FireWire 800, a FireWire 800 cable(!), a FireWire 800 to 400 adapter(!?!?), Mini DisplayPort to VGA, Mini DisplayPort to HDMI, an Ethernet cable, all kinds of USB cables, a PowerBank and adapters for camera and microphone mounts. Oh, and an umbrella and various non-prescription medications.
(Just some of the stuff is actually in the picture.)
And that’s just the basic configuration of it. Some days I might carry another external hard drive, or maybe a iPad Air. And most days I carry my lunchbox in it as well.
In many ways this is a really good setup. The bag is heavy, but most days I sling it on one shoulder for the twenty steps walk to the car, dump it in the passenger seat next to me where it rests while I drop the kids off at preschool and then drive to work. Arriving at work I take a similar twenty to forty steps walk with the backpack on my back before arriving at my office and dumping it on the floor where it will rest until I walk back to the car and drive home.
The computer is also heavy, but it lives its life mostly either docked to an external display and keyboard and trackpad at my office at work, in a similar arrangement at my home office, or in the backpack being transported between work and home.
This setup is also good for travel, because as long as I have the backpack with me I have everything that I might need to get work done with me. There’s nothing1 that I need to do that I can’t get done.
However, or but,
This setup is also really bad for travel because it’s heavy and, even worse, bulky. It takes up a lot of space in the car. That’s not a problem when commuting to work but when I actually travel somewhere by car it’s often with the family and that always means there are a ton of stuff being packed already. My backpack just adds insult to injury, and for all kind of travel that’s not commuting, it is always just one of my bags. I’ll always need to bring at least one more bag for clothes and toiletries.
Heavy and bulky is also applicable to the computer unfortunately, which is why it is not a solution to get a smaller bag and pack less stuff in it, as long as the computer is part of the stuff being packed. If the computer should be brought, the backpack in question is the best way to bring it because even though it’s heavy and bulky it sits nicely on my back.
But maybe there’s different way to do this…
A silly amount of computing devices.
@MrHenko A few weeks back I was with my family down the shore. There were stacks of MacBooks. 🙃
@MrHenko Do you have a favourite?
@Bruce But that was multiple people’s devices, right? This was just my stuff, trying to get some work done. :)
@martinfeld Generally answer to that would be the MacBook Pro. It enables me to do 100% of my work and everything else that I might ever want to do on a computer.
However, I’m right now reconsidering the technology I’m using to get work done. I’m drafting a longer blog post about this but haven’t quite gotten around to finish it yet. The short version is that I’m right now testing out the iPad Mini, and that’s the reason for the insane pile of technology yesterday as I was trying to get it setup just right. My hope is to have a setup where I can do 80% of the work on the iPad Mini but still do most of it on the MacBook Pro. The benefit I’m hoping to get out of it is to be able to grab the iPad at a moments notice and go for a walk or just sit down at a different place when I feel the procrastination coming. It’ll also help a lot on the days when I’m staying at home with one or more sick kids and need to get some lighter work done in a more portable setting.
@MrHenko Great answer! I’ve always been a Mac fan but I also enjoy the ability to just pick up the iPad and start doing something away from a desk. I look forward to your longer blog post!
🎞 Watched: Black Panther (2018)
The MCU movies keeps on delivering. This was another really good one.
🎞 Watched: Interstellar
Me and Linn watched Interstellar last week and we both really liked it.
@MrHenko This film blew me away. I saw it first at a second run theater with smallish screens, so I jumped at the chance to see it at the science museum’s jumbo theater, then later in one of the few theaters outfitted with 70mm equipment. Stunning.
@macgenie That sounds like a lot cooler circumstances than we watched it in. For us it was a 37″ television at home, with the kids literately sleeping on the other side of the wall that the tv hangs on. So the audio and visuals didn’t quite give the impact that I think Nolan was going for. Probably why the music, that everybody seems to think is brilliant, sort of underwhelmed me.
I just found Rebble, a project to keep Pebble watches working. Maybe this is what gets me to love my Pebble again.
Replies and comments
johnjohnston
18 augusti, 2019 23:32@MrHenko that fixed it, but I see 2 messages in the main timeline? Only one in conversation view (mac app).