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

RE: https://activitypub.blog/2025/10/01/7-5-0-follow-the-feed-quote-the-lead/@davew we just released our Mastodon to RSS bridge.

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    @Neko0001 bonjour!
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    In the Fediverse track at SFSCon, Joan Pla spoke about:Decentralised Social Media Initiatives Within European Public Service Mediahttps://fediforum.org/2025-11-sfscon/#fediforum #sfscon #fediverse #socialweb #research
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    The major feature in v3.2.0 of Ktistec is thread analysis. The previous release, v3.1.2, added support for viewing threads from Lemmy communities. I follow the Open Source community, which leads to many large threads. The thread on FFMpeg and Google has 112 posts and is still growing.Thread analysis helps me navigate these extensive conversations. It includes: top contributors, a timeline histogram, and notable branches.The analysis applies several heuristics to identify interesting branches of the main thread. β€œInteresting” is subjective, but the algorithm currently looks for sudden bursts of activity and highlights those areas. Ktistec uses this to create a table of contents that links directly to those branches. Clicking on one of these links takes you to a branch-only view that focuses on the selected part of the thread.It's fastβ€”I anticipated needing to cache analyses, but analyzing a thread with over 400 posts takes only about 50 milliseconds on my production server.Figure 1: Screenshot of the final design. Notable branches link to subsets of the thread.This release also addresses an object visibility regression that was introduced in a previous version.Full ChangelogAddedThread analysis that displays key participants, a timeline histogram, and notable branchesNew MCP tools: analyze_thread and get_threadFocal point rendering support for image attachmentsFixedRegression in object visibility affecting replies to threadsChangedEnhanced MCP tool details for likes, dislikes, and announcesImproved cookie security.#ktistec #fediverse #activitypub #crystallang
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    Tech people talk about tech too much. I really really REALLY want to use all the awesome privacy friendly FOSS (and similar) stuff, but I am not a techie person! I don't know how to program, nor do I want to. And every SINGLE time I try to find out even what thing (OS, program, app, service, etc) to use, let alone how, and I search for it... I get techie-focused answers. It's complete gibberish to me! Absolutely useless. It makes me feel actively unwelcome even though I really care about using alternatives to Windows, Meta, X and other dystopic nonsense. For example: I'm like "How do I start a non-enshittified group chat to talk about a thing?" and all the results are technobabble to me. I don't even know if the words they use are supposed to be normal english words or if they refer to orgs or groups or apps or some weird coding wizardry. I am so lost, every single time. I stick with it though. But like. I wonder if the tech people realise that this is happening???? Because they probably understand what they're talking about. And they seem to not realise that not everyone does. I'm not trying to blame or shame anyone or even complaining as such (a little bit complaining, ngl), mostly just giving feedback. This is not an issue with a singe thing but with ALL of it as a whole! Including #GNU #Linux the #Fediverse #Matrix and most #FOSS apps. My sincere wish: Give non-techie people an EASY TO FIND and easy to read and easy to understand and easy to implement guide about how to use the things as an alternative to using big corporation services, ie, "I just want it to work" and not have to worry about the technical side of things. (examples in thread)