Pokémon Go is now officially available in the UK! http://www.imore.com/pokemon-go-now-officially-available-uk
Pokémon Go is now officially available in the UK! http://www.imore.com/pokemon-go-now-officially-available-uk

(Also on Instagram.)
Svensk polis varnar för Pokémon Go
http://www.dn.se/nyheter/sverige/svensk-polis-varnar-for-pokemon-go/
Pokemon Go Promo liked this on twitter.com.
Next SpaceX launch will bring critical docking adapter to International Space Station
http://www.theverge.com/2016/7/13/12172822/nasa-docking-adapter-spacex-boeing-commercial-crew
En jäkligt bra grej med att inte använda Twitter är att jag i år har missat allt om Almedalen. Bra för blodtrycket.
Miljöpartiet vill ha fler bibliotek i Ludvika
http://www.dt.se/dalarna/ludvika/miljopartiet-vill-ha-fler-bibliotek-i-ludvika
Almost a year ago I wrote about WordPress’ Link Manager. It’s an old feature of WP that seems to get very little use these days. But it is a way to collect links to websites and, this is the important part, their corresponding RSS/Atom feeds, and get an OPML file os the websites in question.
Collected links can be put in categories and every category has its own OPML. You can find the OPML for all my links here.
OPML is one of the file formats that can feed a river in River 5. As far as I know the OPML that River 5 reads needs to be in the lists folder in your River 5 installation, so at first glance that seems to rule out using WordPress’ OPML feature.
The not so secret sauce that makes it work is the ”include” node in OPML. In my lists folder I have and OPML file for each and every river I want River 5 to generate. Each of those files contain a single <outline> node that links to the corresponding category among my WP links.
For example, my ”Everything feed”:
|
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 |
<?xml version="1.0"?> <opml version="2.0"> <head> <title>"Master feed"</title> </head> <body> <outline title="Everything" type="include" url="http://blog.henrikcarlsson.se/wp-links-opml.php" /> </body> </opml> |
This tells River 5 to include everything it finds at the URL http://blog.henrikcarlsson.se/wp-links-opml.php which, as I just mentioned, is the full list of links that I collect in my sites link manager.
So whenever I want to add or remove a link (site/blog/etc) I just use WordPress’ link manager. That makes it very simple to add and remove stuff and therefore I’m more likely to try to add new sites to the mix and see if they add to my satisfaction or not.
River 5 has been running on one of my servers now for about twenty-four hours and so far things seem to work perfectly. Order is restored and I feel connected with the news again.
River 5 is a feed reader that generate rivers of news. A river of news is a way of displaying items of feeds that presents the items in one or more feeds as a reverse-chronological list with a headline (if present), short text and a link to the original post. It’s very similar to the Twitter timeline. The main difference is that news rivers uses RSS and Atom feeds for their content, not a proprietary plattform, hence they are part of the open web.
You can see and use my rivers in the native views that’s included with River 5 here, or you can checkout my own simplified version of the viewer, that’s more optimized for my smartphone.1
As I’ve mentioned before, I’m currently not using Twitter. I stopped mostly because I don’t like the debate-climate there. The limitations of Twitter that once made it interesting has turned it into a great megaphone for anti-intellectualism and it effects all of us when we’re using it. However, I did started to feel disconnected from the news of the world when my old, River 4-based, rivers stopped working right around the time i quit Twitter.
So I rebooted using River 5 and now I feel connected again. The river is basically my timeline. I decide what goes into it, the same way I did on Twitter. The difference is that the articles on news sites and the posts on people’s blogs are more thought-through than the quips we throw around Twitter. The same goes for the microblogs I include in the rivers. Even though they are basically the same as tweets, I don’t think they are as hamstrung by the format.
Still true six months later. http://blog.henrikcarlsson.se/2015/12/7167/
“Det händer spännande saker i Venezuela.”…
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