twtxt is a decentralised, minimalist microblogging service for hackers.
The keyword here is microblogging
. But it doesn’t feel like we’ve been (relatively speaking) doing much of that lately… maybe I go the concept of microblogging
wrong.
twtxt is a decentralised, minimalist microblogging service for hackers.
The keyword here is microblogging
. But it doesn’t feel like we’ve been (relatively speaking) doing much of that lately… maybe I go the concept of microblogging
wrong.
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com That’s how twtxt started: As microblogging. Yarn shifted up some gears and now it’s more like social media – more powerful, but a bit different. 😅
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com I cannot tell you either. I don’t know the difference. :-)
I’d need to think about it deeply, but at a first sight, nanoblogging
would be a simple text (like the original twtxt spec, aimed for TUIs), and microblogging
(like Twitter was a few years ago), would be about sharing texts, images, videos, GIFs, links, and perhaps Markdown styling.
Why? You have shorter messages than in a blog, but you may add almost anything you could do in a blog.
Buuut… who knows?
You’re all wrong 😑 @anth@a.9srv.net will happily tell you (hopefully) that we’ve been doing this whole “microblogging” / “status update” thing decades earlier than anything you’ve ever seen in the form of finger
🤣 and “plan” files 😅
I think we are approaching a new step.
well (insert stubborn emoji here) 😛, word blog
comes from weblog, and microblogging could derivate from ‘smaller weblog’. https://www.wikiwand.com/en/articles/Microblogging
I’d differentiate it from sharing status updates as it was done with ‘finger’ or even a BBS. For example, being able to reply; create new threads and sharing them on a URL is something we could expect from ‘Twitter’, the most popular microbloging model (citation needed)
I like to discuss it, since conversations usually are improved if we sync on what we understand for the same words.
@eapl.me@eapl.me@eapl.me@eapl.me So what was the definition of a web log back in the day? 🧐