βThe enclosure of internet commonsβ
DHH makes a few valid points as to why smartphones are general computing devices and why Apple and Google want them to be just phones.
This is a collection of links I stumbled across and found worth sharing. Also see the blogroll for links to blogs I regularly read.
DHH makes a few valid points as to why smartphones are general computing devices and why Apple and Google want them to be just phones.
Until today, I used the Tinify API to compress images on my blog. About 250 images per month are free, after that itβs pretty cheap. (I never exceeded the free limit).
James Van Dyne reminds to start a blog:
I donβt really like the language of this website (it would also have been possible to communicate the content in more civilised language), but I agree with the content:
Like of: An article by Desmond Rivet
I think Desmond Rivet wrote a very, very good explanation about the IndieWeb. Here are my favorite pieces from this article:
Manton Reece, the creator of micro.blog, writes about his blogging workflow. He uses many different ways to post to his blog depending on what he wants to publish.
I develop code in Go for just a few months now, but I learned to like it. Itβs fast, simple and can produce static binaries. In contrast to Java (the language I have to use for a lot of university and work stuff) it does many things much simpler. And I think Go is really easy to learn, also thanks to its good documentation.
I just did updates on my home cloud, and among those updates was a new version of bitwarden_rs. Bitwarden is a quite popular open source password management solution. I use it for quite some time already. Until some months ago, I used the hosted version, for which I even paid a few bucks to get premium features and support the developer behind the project.
Although the linked article is basically an ad for Firefox, there are two things I would like to highlight.
I heard of telnet already, but I never used it in some way. Itβs one of the oldest internet standards. Now I discovered a cool project: mapscii.