275
results for "small web"
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edited /small_web (-17) "more related, move a see also link to Gemini since it only mentions small web in passing"
Loqi
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2022-09-02 19:20
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edited /Gemini (+63) "move a see also from small web to here where it's more appropriate"
Loqi
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2022-09-02 19:20
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[indienews] New post: "Small Web" https://www.jayeless.net/wiki/small-web.html (from https://beesbuzz.biz/blog/chatter/1587-Small-Web)
Loqi
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2022-08-30 05:09
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Indiekit (GitHub repo) is “a small but powerful server that acts as the go-between your website and the wider independent web” https://indieweb.org/Indiekit
Loqi
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2022-08-25 21:58
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I think I might've started an outline for a small essay on IndieWeb, modern web and a proposed new generation of social readers. The recent short discussion and my experience with my website being degraded for more than a year, leaving me unable to use the usual social web tooling gave me a burst of inspiration. I hope it lasts.
vikanezrimaya
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2022-07-27 07:22
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I do wonder how these laws affect to independent small businesses and enthusiast / @indiewebcamp solutions Are we fighting the big web companies by making it impossible for anyone but the big web companies to run any kind of web service?
Loqi
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2022-07-05 15:10
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Square has been a helpful service in this regard to many small businesses, especially for in-person transactions. There are other providers for backend payment services like Stripe etc. and those are helpful too, just like web hosting services are helpful
[tantek]
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2022-06-15 17:54
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to me this is one of the challenges of the indieweb (and frankly the web platform as a whole) in that there is too much admintax for individual small business to setup & maintain their own websites for their customers to use (repeatedly over time). like the web has taken a giant step backwards from the accessibility of phone & fax to place orders
[tantek]
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2022-06-15 17:37
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in my humble opinion -- going from making wikis for different small web apps/design guides in propriatary software corps
crimsonkinda
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2022-06-10 19:32
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scojjac, yes, and I think another long term lesson here is that non-C syntax languages are never going to be dominant, and likely retreat to finding only small community niches. the one exception being Python which is still fighting to hang on. Perl is essentially the COBOL of the web now.
[tantek]
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2022-06-06 19:02