Wow! I'm making #Bandwagon -- an open source, community-focused alternative to #Bandcamp that anyone can self-host.
As of this morning, there are 99 #Musicians and #Bands who have set up #Fediverse profiles on bandwagon.fm -- and half of those already indexable on search engines.
So I'm humbled by the number of people who are giving it a go. There's obviously lots of people out there looking for something new.
I promise to do my best to give y'all the tools you deserve.
reshared this
Matrix 1.12, performance improvements for sliding sync, the birth of gomuks web. That and much more happened This Week in Matrix!
matrix.org/blog/2024/10/18/thi…
This Week in Matrix 2024-10-18
Matrix, the open protocol for secure decentralised communicationsThib (matrix.org)
On this day (or near it) in 2015, I joined the Mozilla project by starting work as a full-time employee of Mozilla Corporation. I’m two hardware refreshes in (I was bad for doing them on time, leaving my 2017 refresh until 2018 and my 2020 refresh until 2022! (though, admittedly, the 2020 refresh was actually pushed to the end of 2021 by a policy change in early 2020 moving from 2-year to 3-year refreshes)) and facing a third in February. Organizationally, I’m three CEOs and sixty reorgs in.
I’m still working on Data, same as last year. And I’m still trying to move Firefox Desktop to use solely Glean for its data collection system. Some of my predictions from last year’s moziversary post came true: I continued working on client code in Firefox Desktop, I hardly blogged at all, we continue to support collections in all of Legacy Telemetry’s systems (though we’ve excitingly just removed some big APIs), Glean has continued to gain ground in Firefox Desktop (we’re up to 4134 metrics at time of writing), and “FOG Migration” has continued to not happen (I suppose it was one missed prediction that top-down guidance would change — it hasn’t, but interpretations of it sure have), and I’m publishing this moziversary blog post a little ahead of my moziversary instead of after it.
My biggest missed prediction was “We will quietly stop talking about AI so much, in the same way most firms have stopped talking about Web3 this year”. Mozilla, both Corporation and Foundation, seem unable to stop talking about AI (a phrase here meaning “large generative models built on extractive data mining which use chatbot UI”). Which, I mean, fair: it’s consuming basically all the oxygen and money in the industry at the moment. We have to have a position on it, and it’s appropriating “Open” language that Mozilla has a vested interest in protecting (though you’d be excused for forgetting that given how little we’ve tried to work with the FSF and assorted other orgs trying to shepherd the ideas and values of Open Source in the recent past). But we’ve for some reason been building products around these chatbots without interrogating whether that’s a good thing.
And you’d think with all our worry about what a definition of Open Source might mean, we’d make certain to only release products that are Open Source. But no.
I understand why we’re diving into products and trying to release innovative things in product shape… but Mozilla is famously terrible at building products. We’re okay at building services (I’m a fan of both Monitor and Relay). But where we seem to truly excel is in building platforms and infrastructure.
We build Firefox, the only independent browser, a train that runs on the rails of the Web. We build Common Voice, a community and platform for getting underserved languages (where which languages are used is determined by the community) the support they need. We built Rust, a memory-safe systems language that is now succeeding without Mozilla’s help. We built Hubs, a platform for bringing people together in virtual space with nothing but a web browser.
We’re just so much better at platforms and infrastructure. Why we don’t lean more into that, I don’t know.
Well, I _do_ know. Or I can guess. Our golden goose might be cooked.
How can Mozilla make money if our search deal becomes illegal? Maintaining a browser is expensive. Hosting services is expensive. Keeping the tech giants on their toes and compelling them to be better is expensive. We need money, and we’ve learned that there is no world where donations will be enough to fund even just the necessary work let alone any innovations we might try.
How do you monetize a platform? How do you monetize infrastructure?
Governments do it through taxation and funding. But Mozilla Corporation isn’t a government agency. It’s a conventional Silicon Valley private capital corporation (its relationship to Mozilla Foundation is unconventional, true, but I argue that’s irrelevant to how MoCo organizes itself these days). And the only process by which Silicon Valley seems to understand how to extract money to pay off their venture capitalists is products and consumers.
Now, Mozilla Corporation doesn’t have venture capital. You can read in the State of Mozilla that we operate at a profit each and every year with net assets valued at over a billion USD. But the environment in which MoCo operates — the place from which we hire our C-Suite, the place where the people writing the checks live — is saturated in venture capital and the ways of thinking it encourages.
This means Mozilla Corporation acts like its Bay Area peers, even though it’s special. Even though it doesn’t have to.
This means it does layoffs even when it doesn’t need to. Even when there’s no shareholders or fund managers to impress.
This means it increasingly speaks in terms of products and customers instead of projects and users.
This means it quickly loses sight of anything specifically Mozilla-ish about Mozilla (like the community that underpins specific systems crucial to us continuing to exist (support and l10n for two examples) as well as the general systems of word-of-mouth and keeping Mozilla and Firefox relevant enough that tech press keep writing about us and grandpas keep installing us) because it doesn’t fit the patterns of thought that developed while directing leveraged capital.
(( Which I don’t like, if my tone isn’t coming across clearly enough for you to have guessed. ))
Okay, that’s more than enough editorial for a Moziversary post. Let’s get to the predictions for the next year:
- I still won’t blog as much as I’d like,
- “FOG Migration” might actually happen! We’ve finally managed to convince Firefox folks just how great Glean is and they might actually commit official resources! I predict that we’re still sending Legacy Telemetry by the end of next year, but only bits and pieces. A weak shadow of what we send today.
- There’ll be an All Hands, but depending on the result of the US federal election in November I might not attend because its location has been announced as Washington DC and I don’t know if the United States will be in a state next year to be trusted to keep me safe,
- We will stop putting AI in everything and hoping to accidentally make a product that’ll somehow make money and instead focus on finding problems Mozilla can solve and only then interrogating whether AI will help
- The search for the new CEO will not have completed by next October so I’ll still be three CEOs in, instead of four
- I will execute on my hardware refresh on time this February, and maybe also get a new monitor so I’m not using my personal one for work.
Let’s see how it goes! Til next time.
:chutten
chuttenblog.wordpress.com/2024…
#anniversary #mozilla #thisWouldBeThePotteryOrCopperAnniversaryIfThisWasAMarriage #work #yearOfGleanOnTheDesktop
Eight-Year Moziversary
At the end of my post for my seven-year moziversary, I made some predictions about what was to be and now has been the next year of work. And I got them pretty spot-on: Predictions for the next yea…chuttenblog
mastodon.social/@report_press/…
The Stallman report (@report_press@mastodon.social)
Many people have asked or speculated on why our report was published anonymously. Richard Stallman's political program speaks out in defense of sexual violence, harassment, and even coercion.Mastodon
A lot of comedians are really smart. Not just quick witted. Smart as in, they read things, they know things, and they understand things. They keep the mask up though, because it's not as entertaining to know things.🤷🏿♂️
Sometimes they let the mask slip though. Here's Roy Wood jr, temporarily letting it slip that he knows things about hurricanes.
¿Andan buscando #novelas juveniles que #leer o regalar? @raxxie hizo esta #lista con 10 #recomendaciones de lo más variado:
open.substack.com/pub/albertoy…
#literatura #escritoras #literaturajuvenil #escritores #libros #librosrecomendados #listas #LiteraturaMexicana #LIJ #RaquelCastro #AlbertoyRaquel
When Netanyahu is done with his genocide of Palestinians and is done with sacrificing the Israeli hostages the world will still have on its hands an entire population of genocidal men and women who enjoy seeing others suffer.
All of this was preventable were it not for the US and Germany.
Big news from NBC today archive.is/rd35w
Edit: Cut down in its prime, replaced with an archive link
Was wondering if pocketbase.io could possibly be improved upon, then I found pocketpages.dev.
This might just be my new goto tech stack. Kinda hard to argue with a single-file backend, and by the time you outgrow it you can likely afford to transition away.
PocketBase - Open Source backend in 1 file
Open Source backend in 1 file with realtime database, authentication, file storage and admin dashboardpocketbase.io
(родственница):здравствуйте, я бы хотела узнать, если у вашего банка отделение в Татарстане.
(тётка в банке):извините, наш банк имеет отделения только в России.
(родственница): так... это Россия. Там город Казань...
(тётка в банке): Казань? я повторяю, только по России.
(родственница): но... там река Волга...
(тётка в банке): Волга? ммм?
(родственница): ну да, Волга. она еще в Каспийское море впадает.
с этими словами она ушла, оставив банк в полном шоке.
Could someone please write Taylor Otwell a bot that replies with "💩" to every Pull Request he closes, so that he doesn't have to endure the pitiful and tremendously time-consuming task of having to select one of his reply templates that he can't even be bothered to check if it is even fitting (honestly, it's more likely, he doesn't give a flying fuck given the amount of times this happens)? 🤡
#amCoding #amProgramming #PHP #openSource #FOSS #webDev
Daniel's weekly report October 18, 2024
lists.haxx.se/pipermail/daniel…
libssh2, Undefined behavior, hackerone, commit count, rock-solid curl
This piece on reading the Baby-Sitters Club books as a middle-aged man is pretty decent.
theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
I’m a similar age to the author, so as I read it I absolutely recognised that feeling of repulsion I’d have as a kid at the very notion of accessing any ‘girl’ content. Wonder-Woman, She-Ra, Supergirl, ‘girly’ pop music, books about girl things; I’d actively have nothing to do with them.
I don’t think I’m unusual in that. Perhaps these days, but not then.
As a middle-aged man, I would’ve saved loads on therapy if I’d read Baby-Sitters Club books as a kid
Boys weren’t exposed to emotionally intelligent characters in the books marketed to us. I won’t let my son be a victim of the same social tabooRussell Marks (The Guardian)
📱 Vyšla nová verze upravené Instagram klienta Honista v10.0. Přináší mnoho zajímavých funkcí a odstraňuje reklamy.
ℹ️ Vychází z oficiálního Instagramu: v347.3.0.41.103
🔗 Článek o aplikaci Honista: infoek.cz/honista-je-instagram…
🔗 Stáhnout instalační APK Honista v10 z OSCloudu: oscloud.cz/s/GTef33KKpJmE24p
For all the email writing pros - comment your best email greeting 🥰
And if you can't decide on the email greeting - we can help!
Read our QUICK GUIDE to starting an email 👉 tuta.com/blog/how-to-start-an-…
#email #emailwriting #tuta #emailtips #encrypted
How to start an email (with examples) | Tuta
How to start an email (formal & informal), and the dos and don'ts of email greetings.Tuta
To jsou furt Mastodon srazy, BlueSky srazy, Linux days, ... Pojďte někdo udělat sraz pro pankáče. Aktuální a bývalé 😁
Třeba pod heslem Vlasy slezly, Punk zůstal....
Sedám na letadlo a jsem tam za dvě hodiny....
victor tsaran
in reply to Ben Pate 🤘🏻 • • •Ben Pate 🤘🏻
in reply to victor tsaran • • •@vick21 @Tamasg
I hope so too. #Accessibility is important -- especially for an app based on music
I've talked to a couple of screen reader users, who have bravely volunteered to test out early versions of this code
They've told me that it works well (mostly) and I'm still running through their feedback to make things better
So I won't say Bandwagon is 100% WCAG compliant, but please try it out and let me know if you have any trouble. I jump on accessibility issues as quick as possible
Erion
in reply to Ben Pate 🤘🏻 • • •I have been looking for a simple but comprehensive self-hosted alternative to Bandcamp, and I have to say this is very nice so far.
I also love the Emissary default template, everything so far works great with screen reading software and it's lightweight to run on a Raspberry Pi. Thank you
Ben Pate 🤘🏻
in reply to Erion • • •@erion
Really? It runs on a Rasberry Pi??Thats awesome. You made my day!
If you’re self-hosting, lots of things are changing rapidly with Bandwagon, so we should connect somewhere (email, Mastodon, GitHub) so I can make sure I don’t break your site.
Erion
in reply to Ben Pate 🤘🏻 • • •Thank you very much for the offer. At the moment there are a few missing things, such as embeddable tracks or possibly some sort of payment processor support, so I'm holding off on hosting it in production for now, but I'm definitely keeping an eye on how things will end up. Even without Fedi support, there is nothing out there which is as simple to set up and use as Bandwagon, so that's a plus as well.
I also really like the way Emissary works, it's quite inspiring and refreshing to see high quality software being contributed back to the open source community.