Sorry if you got spam. My test messages came through together after fixing my BASE_URL=
from http
to https
.
I purged my installation and I’m back up here laz@tt.vltra.plus
@laz@tt.vltra.plus
@prologic@twtxt.net From what I can determine, this line was was culprit:
` environment:
#- NAME="VltraPlus"
`
Removing the NAME from docker-compose.yml seems to have solved the cookie issue.
I can set the name in the Settings menu, but the cookie stays as twtxt.net=
My test twt is not displaying :(
https://tt.vltra.plus/user/laz/twtxt.txt
yarnd
and I can't replicate the -R
problem either 🧐 Very strange, I guess something really strange happened in my first venture or I did something I can't recall. Sorry for putting you through extra testing! I do have some extra feedback I'll put down in a moment on the build process though that I encountered.
@prologic@twtxt.net Thanks, but I think I will have to save it for later or another day now :/
I have to get into some work now.
Btw, I had to change the docker-compose.yml to use dockerfile: Dockerfile
and not dockerfile: Dockerfile.dev
yarnd
and I can't replicate the -R
problem either 🧐 Very strange, I guess something really strange happened in my first venture or I did something I can't recall. Sorry for putting you through extra testing! I do have some extra feedback I'll put down in a moment on the build process though that I encountered.
@prologic@twtxt.net Anything needed to update for Docker?
I had it working once, but for some reason the password manager I used to generate my password didn’t save, so I couldn’t log into my account. I purged, grabbed the repo again, and recreated my image but now I can’t log in.
man
-ish. https://mkws.sh/
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org @prologic@twtxt.net For example I have currently running a Matrix server here https://ix.social/ with the following
`server {
server_name ix.social;
...
location /.well-known/matrix/server {
return 200 '{ "m.server": "syn.ix.social:443"}';
...
}
location /.well-known/matrix/client {
return 200 '{"m.homeserver": {"base_url": "https://syn.ix.social:443"}}';
...`
This allows the user handle to be username@ix.social instead of username@syn.ix.social where Synapse is running.
man
-ish. https://mkws.sh/
@prologic@twtxt.net So it works for @lyse@lyse.isobeef.org and @movq because they are just hosting a twtxt file and not a pod? They can still have landing page for their website and have their handle at the domain.tld level this way.
It’s not a big issue for me, was just wondering if it were possible to make use of a .well-known in nginx.
man
-ish. https://mkws.sh/
@prologic@twtxt.net @movq How can you specify your handle? Do other sites recognise it depending where the twtxt.txt is located?
e.g. Can I host a pod publicly at yarn.domain.tld but have the yarn handle just as
@username@domain.tld instead of @username@yarn.domain.tld
I mean, from the perspective of everyone else.
I realise the profile will still be viewable at yarn.domain.tld/user/username
man
-ish. https://mkws.sh/
@adi@twtxt.net It will be a basic social profile site similar to examples listed on mkws, and with at least a yarn pod :)
I’m a dummy, so I might need some help when I get around to it!
man
-ish. https://mkws.sh/
@adi@twtxt.net Looks good :) I will give mkws a go soon
@jlj@twt.nfld.uk @twtxt@twtxt.net @prologic@twtxt.net anyway to prevent someone from following another user’s per-event feed?
@prologic@twtxt.net Ah, I forgot no emails. The notification doesn’t have to be something that disrupts the user. Somthing simple that users can toggle on and off that can serve as a reminder might be desirable for some. Actually, I don’t really care about being notified, but I think it probably shouldn’t be published in the Timeline.
@twtxt@twtxt.net @prologic@twtxt.net perhaps the option for email notifications (once a day or week) or a visual marker - your followers display with a slightly thicker border around their avatar or such.
@prologic@twtxt.net @adi@twtxt.net @eldersnake@yarn.andrewjvpowell.com @lyse@lyse.isobeef.org I’ve never heard of opoll being used before. People add things to UD that might be their own invention and not used outside their social circle.
If the poll is only for arranging a meeting date then I would suggest a name based around ‘date’, ‘meet’ or similar.
e.g.
Dayt-me (date me)
D-date (dd your availability)
meet-on
@prologic@twtxt.net My first thought was something boring and simple like yPoll is you wanted to connect it to yarn.social.
The next idea which is less simple led me to this https://www.anonypoll.com/
@prologic@twtxt.net @jlj@twt.nfld.uk Yeah, as jlj shared the direct link to the blog, not the twt about the blog, the reader has to go looking to see if there is a twt to reply to.
The twt propagates across pods but the user profile of a different pod doesn’t show the link to blog entries on a different pod.
If I saw the twt at his page, I could copy the ‘conv/qc5b6ba’ and manually add it to twtxt.net to reply. Maybe for now, if pod owners wanted to make it easier to reply, they could copy the link and edit their blog entry to include it.
@prologic@twtxt.net Thanks.
My wife and I had covid last month. We have recovered and are sort of cleared to renter society, but our apartment building is still considered a ‘red zone’ here in Ho Chi Minh so we can’t actually go shopping ourselves. Still have to order everything.
Our daughter is 7 months now and crawling around the place so needs more supervision and entertaining :)
How have you been, are you under martial law yet?
Hi twt.social / yarn.social :)
Been a while since I’ve been here.
I just read @jlj@twt.nfld.uk recent blog entry and noticed for the users with their own instance, the link to their blogs is only visible from their side. Is this by design at this stage? Only users on the same instance can reply comment on a blog?
@prologic@twtxt.net Nice! Is that your house next to a giant park?
@prologic@twtxt.net @movq At least you won’t forget your passphrases.
so many apps, just need a peek at your contacts and location
I think it’s not just Turkey
https://actu.epfl.ch/news/mass-scale-manipulation-of-twitter-trends-discov-2/
yikes!
From the psychiatrist who ran the blog, Slate Star Codex. A lengthy but worthwhile piece on online culture
There is no apology that is ever good enough for these people. It is both demanded and used as confirmation of the exaggerated guilt assigned to disqualify someone from their profession.
Others are not happy with their lot and are quick to become spiteful. Cancelling others is a way to reduce the pool of competition in hope that one day a more prestigious position will open up, and only a smaller minority of ‘the right sort’ (less challenging / mediocre) will be acceptable choices.