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.
Has that happened? I checked about 20 minutes ago and my @indiehosters was still on the previous release. Still old version at 16 May 2017 1:41 pm
@usfoodpolicy Made fresh an hour before? I don't see why not.
I read the Trump interview in The Economist and just thought "More grist to the mill". Others went to town on his pump priming.
I'm replying to this post for two reasons. First, the recipe does indeed sound amazing. Second, and potentially more importantly, I want to see whether Aaron Dalton is actually receiving and displaying webmentions with the Grav plugin he wrote. If he is, that will give me an incentive to continue.
Funnily enough, after writing that, I had a session bringing in some old posts and doing far more in a text editor rather than in the Grav front end. It proved to be a much more satisfactory an experience overall. I think if I build up a few snippets that allow me to easily produce the YAML front matter that slightly different posts require, then that will be the way to go. I still need to use the front end to check that everything is working, especially where there are images, but other than that, I think it is easier.
Glad you like the tweaks to presentation.
My big task now is to enable comments, so that I can enable webmentions. I'd like to make some progress on that before IWC Nürnberg.
How to fold and store T-shirts alone is worth the price of admission.
Leading by example just doesn't work when the places where it matters most are completely shared. There's no my space and your space in our kitchen, for example.