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webmention-receiver
webmention-receiver
This is a webmention-receiver server. It allows anyone to receive notifications when someone links to their website via webmentions, without needing to create an account. To use it, add this HTML to the head section of the pages you want to receive mentions for: link href="https://webmention.wesleyac.com/example.com/receiver" rel="webmention" Replacing example.com with the domain your website is on.
·webmention.wesleyac.com·
webmention-receiver
How This Blog Does IndieWeb
How This Blog Does IndieWeb
This article will explain how the blog is organized at a technical level, and show how I implemented various IndieWeb features. Table of Contents: Motivation Structure and Deployment Static search index Running scripts via GitHub Actions Social media syndication and the “shortform” section Links to syndicated versions at the end of each post Warning for a too-long first paragraph Triggering this workflow automatically after deployment Blogroll (the “What I’m Reading” page) Chrome extension Webmentions and referencing external discussion threads Bridgy Hacker News backlinks Outgoing webmentions DOIs Dead link checker Motivation Earlier this year I migrated this blog off Wordpress to the Hugo static site generator.
·jeremykun.com·
How This Blog Does IndieWeb
The internet used to be fun | kwon.nyc
The internet used to be fun | kwon.nyc
Personal website manifestos. I’ve been meaning to write some kind of Important Thinkpiece™ on the glory days of the early internet, but every time I sit down to do it, I find another, better piece that someone else has already written. So for now, here’s a collection of articles that to some degree answer the question “Why have a personal website?” with “Because it’s fun, and the internet used to be fun.”
·projects.kwon.nyc·
The internet used to be fun | kwon.nyc