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Piero Bosio Social Web Site Personale Logo Fediverso

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

I've been building an RSS reader for the past year.

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Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
  • BrindisiReport
    https://www.brindisireport.it
    Pensionato di 79 anni investe due studentesse sulle strisce...capo di stato USA di 79 anni ammazza migliaia di persone... TOGLIERE LA PATENTE DI GUIDA A ENTRAMBI!

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  • @fediversereport Good overview as usual.

    One point I would have added is that, while Mastodon announced this Share button a while back, a “pure” ActivityPub-based way to expose share URLs and similar features exists in FEP-3b86 (https://fediverse.codeberg.page/fep/fep/3b86/) and has also been gaining prominence recently (c.f. the list of implementations).

    For example, ActivityPub for WordPress published its v8.0.0 today, which includes new “Like” and “Share” buttons that use this proposal.

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  • @DigiDavidex dimmi che sandwich crei e [...]
    dirò che animale interiore ti g[...]

    Ora voglio sapere!

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  • 🎶 se questo fosse vero amore
    (vero amore)
    tu non mi lasceresti mai🎶

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  • @Bastacosi

    ah... ecco perché non ci incontriamo. Quello è un livello troppo alto a cui non posso arrivare.

    Io scendo di livello con Ascanio Celestini o simili. Peccato non essere abbastanza per quella comicità!

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  • @fediversereport@mastodon.social I'd say a protocol handler would be one small step in making this better handled.

    The friction with a global "share to the fediverse" button is the instance chooser. Not knowing what your home instance is is a major sticking point.

    A protocol handler could allow you to skip this step, assuming you have an app that has registered against it.

    Otherwise, yes, the same fallback would need to continue to exist (enter your home server! blah blah)

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  • I am convinced we are on the verge of the first "AI agent worm". This looks like the closest hint of it, though it isn't it quite itself: an attack on a PR agent that got it to set up to install openclaw with full access on 4k machines https://grith.ai/blog/clinejection-when-your-ai-tool-installs-another

    But, the agents installed weren't given instructions to *do* anything yet.

    Soon they will be. And when they are, the havoc will be massive. Unlike traditional worms, where you're looking for the typically byte-for-byte identical worm embedded in the system, an agent worm can do different, nondeterministic things on every install, and carry out a global action.

    I suspect we're months away from seeing the first agent worm, *if* that. There may already be some happening right now in FOSS projects, undetected.

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  • Nessuno ha dimostrato che l'Iran stesse costruendo la bomba atomica

    Nel mezzo di una crisi che ha già visto attacchi militari israeliani e statunitensi contro le installazioni nucleari iraniane, una voce autorevole ha parlato con chiarezza: Rafael Grossi, Direttore Generale dell'Agenzia Internazionale per l'Energia Atomica (AIEA). Egli ha ribadito in più occasioni che l'agenzia non ha trovato prove che l'Iran stesse costruendo una bomba nucleare.

    https://lists.peacelink.it/news/2026/03/msg00000.html

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Post suggeriti
  • Current, a new, calm RSS Reader

    Herve Family rss
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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! 🙂
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    If you’re an old-time blogger, you probably remember Freshly Pressed. 16 years ago (!), the folks at WordPress.com launched a new blog where they highlighted interesting blog posts from the WordPress.com community every week. We iterated on the idea a few times over the years but the main idea stayed the same:a curated collection of posts that entertained, enlightened, and inspired. It was our way of saying “we like you, we really like you” to creators, and amplifying their great work for others to find. Great Writing Deserves a Spotlight: Freshly Pressed Is BackFreshly Pressed went away for the past few years, but I’m happy to say that my team brought it back! It’s got a fresh coat of paint and most importantly, it’s got quite a few interesting blog posts already!Im really happy and proud that we were able to get this done. Today, more than ever, I think we could use a bit more humanity on the web.The old web felt like a city. You could turn down a random alley and find a weird little shop. You could get lost and discover something beautiful by accident. You could end up in a tiny shop you didn’t know existed or sit on a bench and people-watch.Now it’s a mall. Every path leads past a store. Every store wants something from you. Even the “public” space is engineered to keep you moving toward purchase.Straight from today’s Freshly Pressed post, I miss being unmarketable on the internet.So check some of those blogs out. Give them a Like. Leave a comment. Start following them. And if you find good potential candidates for the next Freshly Pressed post, send them my way! All you need to be featured is a WordPress.com or self-hosted WordPress site running the Jetpack plugin, and most importantly, an interesting, or funny, or unique story to tell! Bonus: if you’re more of an RSS person, you can also get Freshly Pressed posts straight in your RSS reader via this feed. Pinging @davew, I know you’re always looking for good feeds 🙂
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    Some things you do can with postmarketOS on a refurbished phone like a OnePlus 6/6T:1. Use Telegram and Flare (Signal client) to message your contacts2. Use jmp.chat and an xmpp client like Dino to call and message regular phone numbers3. Use Tuba for Fediverse applications like Mastodon4. Browse the internet with mobile-friendly configured Firefox5. Use Newsflash to follow RSS feeds and blogsWhat else do you enjoy on #MobileLinux?#postmarketos #xmpp #jmp #phosh #rss #linux @dino @Tuba
  • 0 Votes
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    @pfefferle https://github.com/scripting/Scripting-News/issues/329