From fa449aa715854fafd06b6cd50401d538e9d7503b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Pinapelz Date: Tue, 2 Dec 2025 19:46:47 -0800 Subject: micro: reorganize posts with numbers --- indieweb-micro/content/posts/01-hello-world.md | 34 +++++++++++++++++++++ .../content/posts/02-china-town-fair/gloves.webp | Bin 0 -> 431668 bytes .../content/posts/02-china-town-fair/index.md | 30 ++++++++++++++++++ .../posts/02-china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp | Bin 0 -> 1020876 bytes .../posts/02-china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp | Bin 0 -> 355348 bytes .../content/posts/china-town-fair/gloves.webp | Bin 431668 -> 0 bytes .../content/posts/china-town-fair/index.md | 30 ------------------ .../content/posts/china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp | Bin 1020876 -> 0 bytes .../content/posts/china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp | Bin 355348 -> 0 bytes indieweb-micro/content/posts/hello-world.md | 34 --------------------- 10 files changed, 64 insertions(+), 64 deletions(-) create mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/01-hello-world.md create mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/gloves.webp create mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/index.md create mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp create mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp delete mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/gloves.webp delete mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/index.md delete mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp delete mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp delete mode 100644 indieweb-micro/content/posts/hello-world.md diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/01-hello-world.md b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/01-hello-world.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dfb1082 --- /dev/null +++ b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/01-hello-world.md @@ -0,0 +1,34 @@ +--- +title: "Hello World - Why This" +date: 2025-12-01T20:11:57-08:00 +slug: 2025-12-01-hello-world +type: posts +draft: false +categories: + - default +tags: + - default +--- +I think having control of your own data is great. The same is true for decentralized social media. I've always been a primary user of microblog platforms (like Twitter/X). Having experienced both the traditional and "decentralized" approaches to microblogs, they both have some particular shortcoming in terms of what I want to get out of "social media". + +## Twitter/X +This is fairly self explanatory. The rebranding of Twitter to X and Musk's new ownership of the platform shifted the direction of the platform to be ever more political. X Premium boosting visibility is also something I wasn't a particular fan of. You can't view anything without signing in either, so goodbye viewing stuff anonymously. There's just a lot of "features" here I'm not a fan of. Needless to say, there's a lot of reasons to not post stuff there. + + +## Fediverse +I initially moved to the `Fediverse` (on Misskey/Sharkey). Interoperability between different platforms is very cool, and the wide variety of platforms to choose from means that picking any platform never made me feel like "missing out" elsewhere. + +However, this in itself has a problem. If you create an account on someone else's instance, you are a part of their *walled garden*. Now I'm sure that they are a wonderful person who equally values data ownership/agency, however it doesn't change the fact that someone else holds your content/data and you rely on them for that service. + +So then the alternative here is self-hosting a single person instance. This solves everything, **BUT** the fact that its quite expensive to pay for the bandwidth + storage if you are a small instance and end up federating with a lot of instances. This wasn't a compromise I wanted, since the name of the game with the Fediverse is being able to connect cross-platform. Great if you have the resources, but not particularly worth it for a single person starting fresh. There's not really a good way to handle this right now, which is why federation with a very large platform like Threads is limited. + +## Bluesky +`Bluesky` is one of the drop-in alternatives for Twitter. Its built on the AT-Protocol, which does actually solve a lot of the problems of ActivityPub (Fediverse) in terms of handling small self-hosted instance with large ones. +AtProto allows you to host a `PDS (Personal Data Server)` which stores all your own posts, profile info, and follows. This boils down to meaning that you really only need to be responsible for serving your own content, which you also own on your own machine. There's also a lot of fine-grain features that help with not getting overwhelmed by firehose traffic. + +While this is great, the issue is that the service is not truly "federated" (yet?). Its still early days for the platform and protocol, Most people are still on `bsky.social`. This means that to get anything to read at all you'd still need to pull from the big central relay. Even if we were successful in this, its not entirely clear what the costs would be for running all these components together (is it even worth it for a single person?). I think AtProto is promising, but its still early days and who knows where it'll go... + +# Now What +Its time to try something new. From a surface view the idea of [IndieWeb](https://indieweb.org/) is a good solution from the perspective of creating the content. You basically just build a website/blog (which nowadays is dirt cheap to host something static), you then just add some special HTML ([microformats](https://indieweb.org/microformats)) and now you've got a common protocol similar to a post (only now you can leverage the power of HTML/CSS and customize it however you want). Then implemtning [webmentions](https://indieweb.org/Webmention) gives the ability for other people to interact with your content. Using a bridging/syndication service like [Bridgy Fed](https://fed.brid.gy/) you can post to the Fediverse and Bluesky as well as allow others from there to interact with your post. + +So that's what this is. Let's see how it goes. diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/gloves.webp b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/gloves.webp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fd42b6c Binary files /dev/null and b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/gloves.webp differ diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/index.md b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/index.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..1c5fca2 --- /dev/null +++ b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,30 @@ +--- +title: "China Town Fair" +date: 2025-12-02T00:22:32-08:00 +slug: 2025-12-02-china-town-fair +type: posts +draft: false +categories: + - life +tags: + - arcade +--- +Visited New York during the Thanksgiving break and had a chance to stopped by one of the most legendary landmarks North American arcade gaming history. + +{{< figure src="outside-ctf.webp" alt="China Town Fair Outside" >}} + +Also yep you're reading that right, it indeed once home to a [dancing chicken as well as one that played tic tac toe](https://davidpotorti.substack.com/p/the-dancing-chicken). + +But apart from just being an old arcade, it was also home to one of the largest competitive arcade game fighting scene (Marvel vs Capcom, Street Fighter, etc.). Many of NAs top players frequented this arcade. However, as we all already know video arcades began to die down during the early 2000s and China Town Fair was no exception having closed in 2011. + +Then it re-opened under new management and became a complete shell of its former self. These days its pretty much all redemption slop in there. Very few actual "games" in there; there's a DDR A3 cab, PIU, a singular jubeat with a broken audio mod, a fully broken down SDVX Nemsys, and 3 Wangan 5DX+ (not sure what happened to the 4th one). + +{{< figure src="inside-ctf.webp" alt="China Town Fair Inside" >}} + +Anyways, its pretty tiny in there and feels like its not doing amazing. A single credit for jubeat was like 3-4 USD I think, and one of the machines to reload cards was fully broken down (tbh just go to Round1 and play). + +If you want some actual rhythm games though, walk like 6 minutes and the newly opened "Akiba House" store has private networked maimai DX, WACCA (modded), and CHUNITHM. + +{{< figure src="gloves.webp" alt="Chinese maimai gloves" width="300" >}} + +Also I was absolutely not ready for the New York winter temps. Thankfully I always keep my rhythm game gloves on me which saved my hands from freezing. diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d08d15f Binary files /dev/null and b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp differ diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..aacc4e2 Binary files /dev/null and b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/02-china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp differ diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/gloves.webp b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/gloves.webp deleted file mode 100644 index fd42b6c..0000000 Binary files a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/gloves.webp and /dev/null differ diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/index.md b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/index.md deleted file mode 100644 index 1c5fca2..0000000 --- a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/index.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,30 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "China Town Fair" -date: 2025-12-02T00:22:32-08:00 -slug: 2025-12-02-china-town-fair -type: posts -draft: false -categories: - - life -tags: - - arcade ---- -Visited New York during the Thanksgiving break and had a chance to stopped by one of the most legendary landmarks North American arcade gaming history. - -{{< figure src="outside-ctf.webp" alt="China Town Fair Outside" >}} - -Also yep you're reading that right, it indeed once home to a [dancing chicken as well as one that played tic tac toe](https://davidpotorti.substack.com/p/the-dancing-chicken). - -But apart from just being an old arcade, it was also home to one of the largest competitive arcade game fighting scene (Marvel vs Capcom, Street Fighter, etc.). Many of NAs top players frequented this arcade. However, as we all already know video arcades began to die down during the early 2000s and China Town Fair was no exception having closed in 2011. - -Then it re-opened under new management and became a complete shell of its former self. These days its pretty much all redemption slop in there. Very few actual "games" in there; there's a DDR A3 cab, PIU, a singular jubeat with a broken audio mod, a fully broken down SDVX Nemsys, and 3 Wangan 5DX+ (not sure what happened to the 4th one). - -{{< figure src="inside-ctf.webp" alt="China Town Fair Inside" >}} - -Anyways, its pretty tiny in there and feels like its not doing amazing. A single credit for jubeat was like 3-4 USD I think, and one of the machines to reload cards was fully broken down (tbh just go to Round1 and play). - -If you want some actual rhythm games though, walk like 6 minutes and the newly opened "Akiba House" store has private networked maimai DX, WACCA (modded), and CHUNITHM. - -{{< figure src="gloves.webp" alt="Chinese maimai gloves" width="300" >}} - -Also I was absolutely not ready for the New York winter temps. Thankfully I always keep my rhythm game gloves on me which saved my hands from freezing. diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp deleted file mode 100644 index d08d15f..0000000 Binary files a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/inside-ctf.webp and /dev/null differ diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp deleted file mode 100644 index aacc4e2..0000000 Binary files a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/china-town-fair/outside-ctf.webp and /dev/null differ diff --git a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/hello-world.md b/indieweb-micro/content/posts/hello-world.md deleted file mode 100644 index dfb1082..0000000 --- a/indieweb-micro/content/posts/hello-world.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,34 +0,0 @@ ---- -title: "Hello World - Why This" -date: 2025-12-01T20:11:57-08:00 -slug: 2025-12-01-hello-world -type: posts -draft: false -categories: - - default -tags: - - default ---- -I think having control of your own data is great. The same is true for decentralized social media. I've always been a primary user of microblog platforms (like Twitter/X). Having experienced both the traditional and "decentralized" approaches to microblogs, they both have some particular shortcoming in terms of what I want to get out of "social media". - -## Twitter/X -This is fairly self explanatory. The rebranding of Twitter to X and Musk's new ownership of the platform shifted the direction of the platform to be ever more political. X Premium boosting visibility is also something I wasn't a particular fan of. You can't view anything without signing in either, so goodbye viewing stuff anonymously. There's just a lot of "features" here I'm not a fan of. Needless to say, there's a lot of reasons to not post stuff there. - - -## Fediverse -I initially moved to the `Fediverse` (on Misskey/Sharkey). Interoperability between different platforms is very cool, and the wide variety of platforms to choose from means that picking any platform never made me feel like "missing out" elsewhere. - -However, this in itself has a problem. If you create an account on someone else's instance, you are a part of their *walled garden*. Now I'm sure that they are a wonderful person who equally values data ownership/agency, however it doesn't change the fact that someone else holds your content/data and you rely on them for that service. - -So then the alternative here is self-hosting a single person instance. This solves everything, **BUT** the fact that its quite expensive to pay for the bandwidth + storage if you are a small instance and end up federating with a lot of instances. This wasn't a compromise I wanted, since the name of the game with the Fediverse is being able to connect cross-platform. Great if you have the resources, but not particularly worth it for a single person starting fresh. There's not really a good way to handle this right now, which is why federation with a very large platform like Threads is limited. - -## Bluesky -`Bluesky` is one of the drop-in alternatives for Twitter. Its built on the AT-Protocol, which does actually solve a lot of the problems of ActivityPub (Fediverse) in terms of handling small self-hosted instance with large ones. -AtProto allows you to host a `PDS (Personal Data Server)` which stores all your own posts, profile info, and follows. This boils down to meaning that you really only need to be responsible for serving your own content, which you also own on your own machine. There's also a lot of fine-grain features that help with not getting overwhelmed by firehose traffic. - -While this is great, the issue is that the service is not truly "federated" (yet?). Its still early days for the platform and protocol, Most people are still on `bsky.social`. This means that to get anything to read at all you'd still need to pull from the big central relay. Even if we were successful in this, its not entirely clear what the costs would be for running all these components together (is it even worth it for a single person?). I think AtProto is promising, but its still early days and who knows where it'll go... - -# Now What -Its time to try something new. From a surface view the idea of [IndieWeb](https://indieweb.org/) is a good solution from the perspective of creating the content. You basically just build a website/blog (which nowadays is dirt cheap to host something static), you then just add some special HTML ([microformats](https://indieweb.org/microformats)) and now you've got a common protocol similar to a post (only now you can leverage the power of HTML/CSS and customize it however you want). Then implemtning [webmentions](https://indieweb.org/Webmention) gives the ability for other people to interact with your content. Using a bridging/syndication service like [Bridgy Fed](https://fed.brid.gy/) you can post to the Fediverse and Bluesky as well as allow others from there to interact with your post. - -So that's what this is. Let's see how it goes. -- cgit v1.2.3