Australian urban planning, public transport, politics, retrocomputing, and tech nerd. Recovering journo. Cat parent. Part-time miserable grump.

Cities for people, not cars! Tech for people, not investors!

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: November 5th, 2022

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  • @wscholermann @Seagoon_ And when politics is covered by most of the media, it’s basically presented as a clash of personalities and a footy game.

    This Labor MP says this. This Coalition MP says that. Minister refuses to confirm. Party room sources say. This shadow minister made a gaffe. The opposition leader made comments attacking this. The prime minister responded by saying that.

    And according to the latest opinion polls…

    It’s really irrelevant to the everyday lives of most people!

    Meanwhile, the thing that really matters from politics is the laws we live under. How government departments go about their job and deliver things like schools and hospitals. Which new train lines do or don’t get built. What the government funds, and who pays how much tax for it.

    The focus should be on what issues people in the community are facing.

    What kind of society do we have right now? What kind of country, state, and city do we want to live in?

    What are the laws and policies right now?

    What’s their impact on those issues? Are they helping or harming?

    And how could they be different?





  • @makeasnek On a broader note, I think possibly the best approach for decentralised, open-sourced web search might be an evolution on the SearXNG model.

    At the top of the funnel, you have meta search engines that query and aggregate results from a number of smaller niche search engines.

    The metasearch engines are open source, anyone with a spare server or a web hosting account can spin one up.

    For some larger sites that are trustworthy, such as Wikipedia, the site’s own search engine might be what’s queried.

    For the Fediverse and other similar federated networks, the query is fed through a trusted node on the network.

    And then there’s a host of smaller niche search engines, which only crawl and index pages on a small number of websites vetted and curated by a human.

    (Perhaps on a particular topic? Or a local library or university might curate a list of notable local websites?)

    (Alternatively, it might be that a crawler for a web index like Curlie.org only crawls websites chosen by its topic moderators.)

    In this manner, you could build a decent web search engine without needing the scale of Google or Microsoft.



  • @sabreW4K3 Plume doesn’t appear to be active, unfortunately 🥺

    There’s a notice on the official Join Plume website saying the former developers don’t have the time to maintain it anymore. Most of the former public instances now throw up errors of various kinds.

    WriteFreely ( @writefreely ) is alive and well. I was seriously toying with the idea of setting up a blog through its main instance, which is called Write.as Professional. The sticking point for me was that the official on-platform monetisation tool (Coil) appears to be dead, and doesn’t support members-only posts (like Ghost).

    Ghost, when federation goes live, looks like it will be the best option for my blog.

    WordPress plus @pfefferle 's plugins is another great option, depending on what you want to use it for. (There’s no shortage of WP plugins!)

    As for Lemmy, I could see a blogging-focussed front end being created for it, in the same way FediBB put a traditional message board front end on it, but one doesn’t appear to exist at present.


  • @tombruzzo @Gibsonisafluffybutt I’m in the process of switching over — I downloaded Firefox quite literally this morning.

    I’m also playing around with NextCloud as a possible substitute for a number of Google’s other services.

    Unfortunately, it looks like Google jumped the shark at this point.

    The accountants and managerialists are well and truly in charge. The people who actually cared about building a great search engine, or a great open mobile operating system, have been cast aside.

    Panicked decision-making about LLMs and enshittification for profit seems to be the new norm.