I hear it everywhere. The web is dead, apps are the future. I heard it first on the cover of Wired Magazine in March 1997 and again in August 2010. I was so impressed I added it to my blogroll, as a reminder to all that you're reading a dead medium. That was said in jest, of course. I'll keep playing here while the rest of you flirt with apps. I'll be here when you come back. I know it's going to
I spent the last couple of days creating an installable scripting2.root, with a howto. That's the software I use to edit this weblog and produce all the feeds. The sites are fully baked, meaning they can be hosted anywhere. It's set up to, by default, host sites on Amazon S3. One of the things I tripped over while testing the release is some code I forgot I had written. It manages a file that's wh
Thursday, December 17, 2009 by Dave Winer. Marco at Tumblr says that he was inspired by the "seriously clever" use of the Twitter API by WordPress. Of course I was too. When they came out with it I wondered out loud if the Twitter API is now an open standard. Well, less than a week later, Tumblr now has implemented the Twitter API, and as a result you can use any Twitter-compatible tool to post to
Saturday, December 26, 2009 by Dave Winer. As I noted in a post on Wednesday, I'm using the holiday to build out the CloudPipe protocol that I explained in a post on December 9. I'm getting pretty close to the point where I'll write docs and put it up for review. But I wanted to post a heads-up now that I've made a change in how it works, a difference between the actual protocol and the December 9
Sunday, September 20, 2009 by Dave Winer. Here is a Unix shell command that gets the address of my RSS feed: dig +short davewiner.supercloud.org TXT It makes a DNS call to get the TXT record associated with davewiner.supercloud.org. That's different from an A record or a CNAME record. TXT records are used for things like this. That's why when you go there in your browser it doesn't go anywhere. I
I spent some time this week reviewing the UI of Radio UserLand, released in 2002. It was both a feed reader and a writing tool. # One would have thought, btw, that from that start that all subsequent blogging tools would have the same connections, even if the functionality was not all in the same product. But then came Twitter and Facebook, and they said they weren't blogs, and presumably would st
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