Giving myself a quick break by reading Lukas Rosenstock's monthly review, and coming away with a few thoughts. One is that Lukas is brave, as he recognises, to admit that some things aren't going to plan. Another is that he used six Pomodori to write the review; that seems like time well spent. Another is that he mentions a few tools that are new to me and that I ought to check out. But there's the rub. There's no point checking them out unless I plan to make some use of them.
I do my monthly reviews OK, although June is delayed until next weekend because I have paid work to finish. Should I publish them, and hold myself publicly accountable? Lots of #indieweb enthusiasts are driven by data-logging themselves and making the results available. I don't think I am, although I can see the benefits of tracking and setting specific goals.
When it comes to a decibel meter on my iPhone, I really like SPLnFFT
I have an episode in the pipeline on just this subject; better promote it. @MatthewJDalby
I hope you enjoy what you discovered @skateboardad
Thanks @skateboardad Was that the one where I was decidedly husky? Or just the Gerry Mulligan opener?
I didn't get to the whole week like Calum did, but his thoughts on the Nürnberg IndieWebCamp mirror mine pretty exactly.
I am planning to take part in the virtual HomeBrew Web Club on 31 May 2017 at 5:30 CEST.
I enjoyed my first IndieWebCamp every bit as much as Amber, although I achieved far less. Still there I am, geeking out with Aaron who, like everyone else, was a champ.
Trying out this new-to-me thing called grok, which allows me to reach my local dev site from outside, which I hope will make debugging some things easier. So leaving this as a reply to a post there.
The key is in that word "displaying". They're arriving fine. My hangup is getting my CMS to deal with them meaningfully. But I **am** making progress.