@BestofTimes Still using Byword every day. I appreciate the fact that they don’t try to add more features. It does what it does and it does it very well…
@BestofTimes Still using Byword every day. I appreciate the fact that they don’t try to add more features. It does what it does and it does it very well…
@gr36 I am with @peterimoore on this one: I learned the canonical Gruber version back when I was still publishing on Movable Type and never had any reason to try any other dialect.
@mattbirchler The link in the post doesn’t work.
@patrickrhone The issue I see with this system is that numbers are not memorable.
@cygnoir I guess you don’t have a lot of options, since the physical address is a legal requirement and not something MailChimp de died to require.
@hawaiiboy That is a great combination of two of the most exported cultures.
@amit “In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.”
― Dwight D. Eisenhower
@jasraj I think you are right on: you need some kind of structure to be able to follow conversations but also not so much that you have to search for new content.
@amit I am satisfied with my Productie whenever I review my work log at the end of the day and feel good about it. I may have done my planned work or just fixed emergencies…
@jasraj I don’t support community platforms that don’t support conversation threads such as Telegram. Slack has them, but they still feel like an afterthought. I feel a lot better about Discourse, but my favorite platform is Mighty Networks.
@patrickrhone I’m a huge fan of Nicholas too.
@petebrown I’m so happy that the only thing my watch ‘tells’ me is the approximate time.
@patrickrhone What we believe in…
@cdevroe Did anyone compare the results with Pixelmator’s ML Resize?
@ohBananaJoe It hurts me to read your reports in the struggle to build your house.
As for your question, I always opt to cry a little bit to let me emotions out, but then quickly switch to laughing (usually about my own misery).
@ohBananaJoe I’m actually in the reverse process: moving people from my feed reader to micro.blog. My feed reeder is for when I want to see all publications (at least the titles), whil I consider micro.blog a ‘river of messages’. Usually I just want to dip into micro.blog, find and react to some interesting posts and go on with my day.
@dave SInce they can’t trust cookies anymore, they rely on other tricks, such as encrypted data in the URL parameters.
@Pilchuck I would love to have somebody who I could pay to do these kind of small jobs for me, but good handy man are scarse and most of them prefer to work on bigger projects instead of coming over to fix small issues. The best person I found is overwhelmed with work, so it takes at least five telephone calls and more than a week time to have him come over and look at the issue. 😔
@Pilchuck There is indeed a chicken and egg problem here: I’m not good at it, so I don’t like doing it. And since I’m not dedicating time to do it, I won’t learn how to do it well.
@jeroensangers I was thinking of “Do not connect” as an option next to the existing “Do not disturb”.
@toddgrotenhuis Nice!
@herself Good eye, there is a hair dresser downstairs.
@jeroensangers Sadly, the night after I took this picture someone stole four of the plants outside our house.
@alongtheray If you use micro.blog as your feed reader, you can.