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Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone

Herve Family

Our family’s website // Le site de notre petite famille // Kis családunk honlapja // Lec’hienn hor familh

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  • Traveling to the US with an ESTA in 2026

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    It looks like the ESTA application process is about to get quite a bit more complicated. Check this proposal for changes to the process:Agency Information Collection Activities; Revision; Arrival and Departure Record (Form I-94) and Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA)Among the changes, here is what jumps out to me:CBP is adding social media as a mandatory data element for an ESTA application. The data element will require ESTA applicants to provide their social media from the last 5 years.[…]CBP will add several “high value data fields” to the ESTA application, when feasibleEmail addresses used in the last ten years;Family number telephone numbers used in the last five years;I’m not sure if those fields will be optional, or if omitting or forgetting some of that data can result in not getting an authorization of entry.I’m honestly not quite sure how I would provide such data. I use unique email addresses for most services out there. Do they accept wildcards as email addresses? 🙂In any case, comments are open so I would encourage everyone to send your feedback, maybe that will help make that process clearer.Written comments and/or suggestions regarding the item(s) contained in this notice must include the OMB Control Number 1651-0111 in the subject line and the agency name. Please submit written comments and/or suggestions in English. Please use the following method to submit comments:Email: Submit comments to: CBP_PRA@cbp.dhs.gov.It seems pretty clear at this point that the US administration does not want foreigners visiting the country anymore 🙂
  • @passthejoe.wordpress.com

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    @passthejoe.wordpress.comI thought about starting a blog as a Fediverse accountThe good news is, you’ve already enabled the Fediverse option for your WordPress site so it’s already done for you. All you have to do is blog! Arguably that’s the hardest part 😉
  • @davemart.in

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    @davemart.inI like the general idea. This is definitely a problem in WordPress today.I wonder if the solution could be to better surface the command palette? The palette already allows you to quickly find what you’re looking for, without having to look through many menus. It’s also extensible so plugins can hook into and add their own menus. It does miss 3 things though:The default view remains cluttered with all the available menus.One needs to know an obscure keyboard shortcut (Cmd+K) to access the palette.It’s not available on mobile.Maybe we could have a better, clutter-free default view of the dashboard, with only the command palette’s main input field. What do you think?
  • Stargate is back! Indeed!

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    It’s hard to believe but after 14 years, the Stargate franchise is back. It won’t be a reboot, it’s backed by Amazon and folks from the original series (Brad Wright, Joe Mallozzi, Martin Gero) are involved in the project. I probably shouldn’t get too excited, but… It sounds promising? Youtube Video It’s funny how they’re completely ignoring the Stargate Origins miniseries in their announcement. It looks like everyone agrees it’s better to forget about it. 🙂
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    “Instead of investing in advertising we invest in product development”Free Search is a Trap | Kagi’s CEO Vlad on Building a New InternetThis resonates with me a lot. I’m a happy user of @kagihq, and it was good to hear its founder address some of the questions I’ve been asking myself about its future and its vision. Great interview @ente!
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    Take-home assignments are dead, “one prompt away” is one prompt too far, and what we should do nextAI isn’t eliminating some boring, mechanical part of learning. It’s replacing the very core.University education as we know it is over
  • IA: La mort programmée du flow

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    IA: La mort programmée du flowEn obligeant notre cerveau à basculer en permanence d’une tâche à l’autre, on l’épuise considérablement.[…]L’IA nous force à osciller constamment entre, d’une part, l’hyper-vigilance requise pour la formulation des prompts et la vérification critique, et, d’autre part, l’hypo-vigilance, cet ennui intense induit par la lecture passive de la prose sans âme et sans intention générée par la machine.L’IA me fait gagner 5 heures par semaine… Mais pourquoi suis-je aussi épuisé? — @babeleur
  • Thumbs Up 👍

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    Thumbs Up 👍Clear and effective human communication is one of the hardest things to get right. The widespread adoption of emojis only made the problem worse. Instead of adding context, by, you know, using words, like these, emojis manage to strip even more context, sometimes paradoxically by adding layers of confusion.Thumbs Up 👍
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    Over at WordPress.com, we recently added a new feature to the WordPress.com Reader. You can now build a list of blogs you like, and recommend them to others.What if your readers could help your blog grow? What if the writers you love could introduce their audience to yours?That’s the idea behind recommended blogs, a feature now available in the WordPress.com Reader that lets you share the blogs you enjoy most with your own audience.Let’s Grow Together: Introducing Recommended Blogs Since the WordPress.com Reader lets you follow any site that supports RSS, you can recommend blogs on any platform or CMS. As long as the site includes an RSS feed, you’ll be good to go!You can view my recommended blogs in my WordPress.com Reader profile. Ever the champion of the Open Web, @davew asked me if one could fetch those recommended blogs to show in their own app or tools. Since this is WordPress.com, recommended blogs are indeed available via the WordPress.com REST API. There are different endpoints one can use to fetch and show recommended blogs. All you need to get started is a WordPress.com username.Side-note: WordPress.com usernames are also Gravatar usernames, so once you have a Gravatar username, you can show all sorts of information the person chose to make public in their profile:Check our API documentation to find out more.Once you have a WordPress.com username, you can make a request to rest/v1.2/read/lists/<username>/recommended-blogs/items to get a list of their recommended blogs:We also have another endpoint you can use to export the list in OPML format: wpcom/v2/read/lists/<list-ID>/export. You can get that list ID from the API response just above. That can be handy if you then want to import the list in your own Reader!If you haven’t tried the WordPress.com Reader yet, this could be a good opportunity to give it a try!
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    @scriptingWhen you paste a url into a selection, the text you selected becomes a link to that url.“Cute paste” is a nice name for this feature @davew! It’s a much better name than “Paste a URL over text to make a link”. Over the years, I’ve become so used to this feature in WordPress / Slack / GitHub / Notion, that it’s really frustrating when it’s missing from an editor. At least once a week I make the mistake in Google Docs for example. I’m glad to see it appear in WordLand.#WordLand #WordPress
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    Les récentes tribulations de notre gouvernement et de notre premier ministre sont frustrantes pour beaucoup de raisons. Mais c’est pour moi une autre occasion de me demander pourquoi nos institutions continuent à utiliser Twitter pour faire leur communication. Notre (ancien) premier ministre continue de publier des annonces sur son compte Twitter, qui ne sont pas disponibles ailleurs. Son compte “vérifié” assure que ses tweets sont visibles même à ceux qui n’ont pas de compte, mais ce n’est pas le cas de tous nos politiques, et l’expérience reste tout de même assez pourrie.Est-ce trop demander d’avoir nos représentants utiliser une plateforme entièrement controlée par le gouvernement français. Je pensais que c’était justement le rôle d’@admin. Je rêve d’un monde ou le site du gouvernement listerait autre chose que Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, Threads, TikTok, WhatsApp, YouTube, et RSS (yay !!!) comme manière de suivre le gouvernement :Si vous partagez mon opinion, allez-donc signer la pétition : Cesser d’utiliser X (anciennement Twitter) pour les communications officielles du gouvernement
  • @oursinculte'nÇa me semble logique.

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    @oursinculteÇa me semble logique. TER est peine, et c’est la vérité. 🙂
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    @EVOTkJe me suis fait la même réflexion avant d’activer la “reader view” sur Firefox. Mais je le fais sur de plus en plus d’articles, donc je me dis que c’est plus moi qui vieillis qu’autre chose 😅
  • Watson turns 13 today.

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    Watson turns 13 today. Happy birthday old boy! You haven’t changed too much in 13 years 🙂#Dogs #DogsOfMastodon
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    @davewI’m happy to see myself there, thank you, but I think my WordPress feed https://herve.bzh/c/wordpress/feed/ may be more appropriate 🙂
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    @Camille_PoulsardRien que d’y repenser, la musique d’intro de Mc Gyver me revient en tête, c’était vraiment quelque chose. Highlander aussi, avec la chanson de Queen au générique ! “Here we are, born to be kings,…” Youtube Video
  • @macmanxI really appreciate that illustrator.

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    @macmanxI really appreciate that illustrator. It’s been great revisiting those moments of the show, and the animation really adds value to the replay. ♥️
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    @jrouet No, the blocks are available on any site running the ActivityPub plugin, regardless of where the site is hosted.
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    @davew Here is an example:https://bsky.app/profile/jeremy.herve.bzh.ap.brid.gy/post/3lxatofyputi2The limits remain indeed. This is “only” a bridge, so when the post lands on Bluesky it still has to respect the constraints of the platform.
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    Last year I discovered Worlds Beyond Number, a narrative play audio drama podcast. I was hooked. There are a lot of DnD podcasts and YouTube channels out there, but Worlds Beyond Number is a much more immersive experience, with sound effects and a soundtrack that turn a TTRPG session into a great story. It helps that it’s created by folks that are very talented at story telling. Book 1 of The Wizard, The Witch, and the Wild One recently completed so I went looking for something new.After a few searches I found another great story: Fables oF Frost and Fur, by the Roll for impact team. Another new world, great characters, great sound design, great story telling. But I am now out of new episodes! I need a new show! Does anyone have any recommendations? Thank you!#DnD #podcast

Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
  • @lmorchard wrote a great post, I relate to a lot of what he’s saying in there. It’s hard to pick one part to quote in particular, so I would encourage you to go read the whole thing!

    I think recognizing which kind of grief you’re feeling is the actually useful thing here. If you’re mourning the loss of the craft itself—the texture of writing code, the satisfaction of an elegant solution—that’s real, and no amount of “just adapt” addresses it. You might need to find that satisfaction somewhere else, or accept that work is going to feel different. Frankly, we’ve been lucky there’s been a livelihood in craft up to now.

    If you’re mourning the context—the changing web, the shifting career landscape, the uncertainty—that’s real too, but it’s more actionable. You can learn new tools. You can push for the web you want, even if it’s a small web. You can grieve and adapt at the same time.

    Grief and the AI Split
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  • There’s a certain type of blog post I sometimes save for later. Not because I want to re-read it right away, but because it’s worth revisiting in six months to see how things actually played out.

    Migrating PerezBox From WordPress to Flat PHP in 90 Minutes” is one of those posts.

    I actually migrated perezbox.com from a full WordPress installation to a flat PHP site with zero external dependencies.

    No database. No frameworks. No build tools. No package managers. No node_modules. No Composer. No plugins. Just PHP, HTML, CSS

    The “I migrated away from WordPress to something simpler” post is a classic of the genre. I understand the appeal, it can be tempting. In fact, I have tried migrating away from WordPress in the past. About fifteen years ago I tried Jekyll, as a way to experiment and try something new. I came back to WordPress. Twelve years ago I tried Ghost, partly for the same reasons. I came back again. And I published another reaction post 10 years ago, responding to a post saying WordPress was doomed, static site generators were in.

    I won’t try to convince you not to try alternatives to WordPress. In fact I think you should, from time to time. It’s healthy to look at what’s on the other side of the fence from time to time, it’s always a good learning experience. I do, however, think we should always be honest with ourselves about the trade-offs.

    Whether it makes sense depends a lot on the type of site you’re running and how often your content or design actually needs to change. For the right project, a flat-file setup can be a good fit.

    Here are a few questions I would ask, 6 months from now.

    Are you still using your custom solution?

    WordPress is much more than a post editor ; it’s an ecosystem. And it’s easy to underestimate everything you take for granted until it’s gone. Galleries, embedded content types, archive pages, category views, comments, all the little things that just work. And that’s not even taking plugins into consideration, and the myriad of other features they can bring to WordPress. A few months in, when you need one of those things, you’ll have to build it from scratch or accept that your site won’t support that.

    WordPress comes with so many little things that come bundled with the software, we don’t even think about them. A good example may be responsive images. It may sometimes seem like bloat to see so many different image sizes generated every time you upload a new image to WordPress, but those can be useful in so many different places.

    It may not be a feature you’d put in a comparison table. But it’s one of hundreds of small things the platform does for you without you ever having to think about it.

    Are you still publishing?

    This one matters even more to me. When your publishing flow changes, when it’s no longer a matter of opening a familiar editor (on desktop or on mobile) and hitting publish, the friction adds up. And in a lot of cases like this, people just… publish less.

    That’s obviously less of an argument with AI: AI can help you with that flow, can publish / push for you, can write your posts for you. AI does change things, for building sites as much as for everything else.

    Generating code has become (too?) easy. You can reinvent the wheel for every project if you want to ; no need for a library, a plugin, or a third-party service when you can just ask an AI to build you a custom one.

    But it cuts both ways. You can’t say your site has “zero external dependencies” and then build your entire publishing pipeline around Claude. That is a dependency, a significant one. It’s a paid service, you don’t control it, it can unreliable at times, it can change its pricing tomorrow. You can certainly do without it and edit files the old fashioned way, but then we’re back to the problem I mentioned above. It becomes considerably harder to publish than it ever was with WordPress.

    So the real questions become: once the site is live, how easy is it to maintain? If updating it requires leaning on AI every time, are you comfortable with that trade-off? Is that really simpler than what you had before, or just a different kind of complexity? Did you trade one dependency for another?

    I am really curious to see what the future has in store for us, and for WordPress as a whole. I’ll check back in six months I guess 🙂

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  • WordCamp Bretagne revient !

    C’est maintenant officiel, WordCamp Bretagne est de retour en 2026, le 18 septembre, encore une fois à Rennes, encore une fois au Couvent des Jacobins.

    Marquez la date dans vos calendriers, on se donne rendez-vous là-bas !

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  • @deadsuperhero

    What kind of customizations did you have in mind? What would you like your site to look like?

    I’ve learned to really appreciate the flexibility of the block-based themes in WordPress ; they offer a lot that was previously only available to folks comfortable with PHP. That said, this is mostly about layout and display. If you want to display custom data, you may still have to dive into code to get what you need. That is, unless someone else already developed it 🙂

    The ActivityPub plugin includes more and more blocks that can help bring Fediverse functionality to your site, to create real Fediverse profiles for authors. If you have ideas of more things we could implement, please let us, either in the WordPress.org support forums for the plugin, on GitHub, or right here (you can ping @pfefferle or me any time!)

    read more

  • @nicosomb

    Notre commune a un site officiel qui sert beaucoup. Toutes les annonces officielles y sont publiées, et sont ensuite partagées sur les réseaux sociaux, essentiellement Facebook, mais aussi LinkedIn. YouTube aussi est de plus en plus utilisé ; les réunions du conseil y sont streamés en live, puis donc disponibles sur le long terme, et mises à disposition sur le site (et donc dispo par RSS aussi). De nombreuses catégories peuvent être suivies via des flux différents, ce qui est très utile.

    Certaines communications sont encore seulement publiées sur Facebook malheureusement, mais le pense que les choses se sont améliorées de ce côté là. On peut maintenant se tenir au courant d’une grande majorité des nouvelles de la commune sans se rendre sur Facebook. Bon, on est loin de la présence sur le Fediverse tout de même 🙂

    Toute cette présence est à mon avis le résultat de beaucoup d’éducation et de discussions, et pas quelque chose de forcément naturel pour chacun des élus. Il y a un grand contraste avec les communications de tous les partis se présentant aux élections, y compris le parti de la majorité, qui communiquent essentiellement via Facebook, ont des sites qui ne sont pas à jour, ont leurs programmes disponibles sur Facebook et pas sur le site, …

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  • @nicosomb

    One vaut, 4 main folders (using the PARA method), many (too many) subfolders. I think it could be better, but I haven’t found a better way yet. I’m not too worried about it though, I rely on search, bases, and internal links to navigate across my vault and it works.

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  • I’ve been building an RSS reader for the past year. No unread counts, no inbox to clear. Just a river that flows at its own pace.

    Today it’s live on iPhone, iPad, and Mac. I wrote about everything that went into it.

    Current, an RSS Reader, by @tg

    Current is a new RSS reader that takes a really interesting approach to how we consume feeds. Instead of treating your subscriptions as a to-do list with an ever-growing unread count, it presents your feeds as a river; articles flow in, linger for a while, and eventually fade away on their own.

    Although the app is mac / iOS only, and paid, it’s not completely closed. You can hook it up to existing RSS backends like Feedbin or Miniflux.

    The completionist part of me does miss the idea of reaching “inbox zero.” For me, inbox zero was never about obsessive consumption (or at least I like to think so); it was the permission to walk away. When I’ve read everything, I’m done. I can close the app and move on with my day. I wouldn’t want my RSS experience to turn into a TikTok-like endless scroll where I just keep going without thinking. Current isn’t exactly that though, and that’s where its velocity system gets really interesting.

    Each feed gets assigned a half-life that determines how long its articles stay visible. Breaking news fade away faster than blog posts for example. This means the app naturally surfaces content proportionally to its nature; a prolific news site won’t drown out the small blogs you actually care about. The pace of consumption adapts to the pace of creation, which feels much more respectful of both the reader’s attention and the author’s intent.

    On top of that, Current watches your reading patterns and offers suggestions to help you “quiet” noisy sources. If a feed floods your timeline with 18 articles in one day, or if you keep skipping posts from the same source, it’ll nudge you to rate-limit or mute it.

    I would give the app a try, but it’s iOS and mac-only so far, so I guess I’ll have to wait! 🙂

    read more

  • @dilmandila

    Could you check that the ActivityPub plugin is still active on your site? You seem to be using the Friends plugin but the ActivityFun plugin itself seems disabled.

    You can also post in the plugin’s support forums if that doesn’t help ; we’ll be happy to help!

    read more
Post suggeriti
  • @deadsuperhero

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    @deadsuperheroWhat kind of customizations did you have in mind? What would you like your site to look like?I’ve learned to really appreciate the flexibility of the block-based themes in WordPress ; they offer a lot that was previously only available to folks comfortable with PHP. That said, this is mostly about layout and display. If you want to display custom data, you may still have to dive into code to get what you need. That is, unless someone else already developed it 🙂The ActivityPub plugin includes more and more blocks that can help bring Fediverse functionality to your site, to create real Fediverse profiles for authors. If you have ideas of more things we could implement, please let us, either in the WordPress.org support forums for the plugin, on GitHub, or right here (you can ping @pfefferle or me any time!)
  • @nicosomb

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    @nicosombOne vaut, 4 main folders (using the PARA method), many (too many) subfolders. I think it could be better, but I haven’t found a better way yet. I’m not too worried about it though, I rely on search, bases, and internal links to navigate across my vault and it works.
  • @nicosomb

    Herve Family lamballe
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    @nicosombNotre commune a un site officiel qui sert beaucoup. Toutes les annonces officielles y sont publiées, et sont ensuite partagées sur les réseaux sociaux, essentiellement Facebook, mais aussi LinkedIn. YouTube aussi est de plus en plus utilisé ; les réunions du conseil y sont streamés en live, puis donc disponibles sur le long terme, et mises à disposition sur le site (et donc dispo par RSS aussi). De nombreuses catégories peuvent être suivies via des flux différents, ce qui est très utile. Certaines communications sont encore seulement publiées sur Facebook malheureusement, mais le pense que les choses se sont améliorées de ce côté là. On peut maintenant se tenir au courant d’une grande majorité des nouvelles de la commune sans se rendre sur Facebook. Bon, on est loin de la présence sur le Fediverse tout de même 🙂Toute cette présence est à mon avis le résultat de beaucoup d’éducation et de discussions, et pas quelque chose de forcément naturel pour chacun des élus. Il y a un grand contraste avec les communications de tous les partis se présentant aux élections, y compris le parti de la majorité, qui communiquent essentiellement via Facebook, ont des sites qui ne sont pas à jour, ont leurs programmes disponibles sur Facebook et pas sur le site, …
  • Current, a new, calm RSS Reader

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    I’ve been building an RSS reader for the past year. No unread counts, no inbox to clear. Just a river that flows at its own pace.Today it’s live on iPhone, iPad, and Mac. I wrote about everything that went into it.Current, an RSS Reader, by @tgCurrent is a new RSS reader that takes a really interesting approach to how we consume feeds. Instead of treating your subscriptions as a to-do list with an ever-growing unread count, it presents your feeds as a river; articles flow in, linger for a while, and eventually fade away on their own.Although the app is mac / iOS only, and paid, it’s not completely closed. You can hook it up to existing RSS backends like Feedbin or Miniflux.The completionist part of me does miss the idea of reaching “inbox zero.” For me, inbox zero was never about obsessive consumption (or at least I like to think so); it was the permission to walk away. When I’ve read everything, I’m done. I can close the app and move on with my day. I wouldn’t want my RSS experience to turn into a TikTok-like endless scroll where I just keep going without thinking. Current isn’t exactly that though, and that’s where its velocity system gets really interesting.Each feed gets assigned a half-life that determines how long its articles stay visible. Breaking news fade away faster than blog posts for example. This means the app naturally surfaces content proportionally to its nature; a prolific news site won’t drown out the small blogs you actually care about. The pace of consumption adapts to the pace of creation, which feels much more respectful of both the reader’s attention and the author’s intent.On top of that, Current watches your reading patterns and offers suggestions to help you “quiet” noisy sources. If a feed floods your timeline with 18 articles in one day, or if you keep skipping posts from the same source, it’ll nudge you to rate-limit or mute it.I would give the app a try, but it’s iOS and mac-only so far, so I guess I’ll have to wait! 🙂