mentioning http://darch.dk/testing-syndication-via-rss-to-social-media-via-bufffer
(IP: 34.96.47.28)
# I am the Watcher. I am your guide through this vast new twtiverse. # # Usage: # https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/users View list of users and latest twt date. # https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/twt View all twts. # https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/mentions?uri=:uri View all mentions for uri. # https://watcher.sour.is/api/plain/conv/:hash View all twts for a conversation subject. # # Options: # uri Filter to show a specific users twts. # offset Start index for quey. # limit Count of items to return (going back in time). # # twt range = 1 195429 # self = https://watcher.sour.is?offset=193995 # next = https://watcher.sour.is?offset=194095 # prev = https://watcher.sour.is?offset=193895
Foto do single "Yes Sir, I Can Boogie" das Baccara a tocar, com a capa à mostra. Pela capa consegue-se ver que o lado B tem a música "Cara mia". A capa propriamente dita são as duas cantoras vestidas com o que se calhar são camisas de dormir, uma de preto e a outra de branco. Uma delas segura uma rosa. A edição é da RCA Victor.
Foto do single "Yes Sir, I Can Boogie" das Baccara a tocar, com a capa à mostra. Pela capa consegue-se ver que o lado B tem a música "Cara mia". A capa propriamente dita são as duas cantoras vestidas com o que se calhar são camisas de dormir, uma de preto e a outra de branco. Uma delas segura uma rosa. A edição é da RCA Victor.
Foto do single "Yes Sir, I Can Boogie" das Baccara a tocar, com a capa à mostra. Pela capa consegue-se ver que o lado B tem a música "Cara mia". A capa propriamente dita são as duas cantoras vestidas com o que se calhar são camisas de dormir, uma de preto e a outra de branco. Uma delas segura uma rosa. A edição é da RCA Victor.
display_name: To show a human readable alternative for a nick, it fallback to nick if not definedbanner: Using the same format as avatar but the image expected is wider, inspired by other socials around#<https://example.com/tw.txt#yyyy-mm-ddThh:mm:ssZ> is foolproof)
@<...> being mentions
Lizard or shark or something
(#abcdefghijkl https://example.com/tw.txt#:~:text=2025-10-01T10:28:00Z), because it can be simply hacked in to clients currently on hashv1 and provides an off-ramp to location-based addressing2025-10-01T10:28:00Z? That’s not necessarily correct. And, to be proper URLs that Firefox and Chromium understand, it would also need to be written as 2025%2D10%2D01T10:28:00Z. The dash carries meaning, sadly. I think all this just creates needless complication. How about we just go with https://example.com/tw.txt#2025-10-01T10:28:00Z?)
(#abcdefghijkl https://example.com/tw.txt#:~:text=2025-10-01T10:28:00Z), because it can be simply hacked in to clients currently on hashv1 and provides an off-ramp to location-based addressing2025-10-01T10:28:00Z? That’s not necessarily correct. And, to be proper URLs that Firefox and Chromium understand, it would also need to be written as 2025%2D10%2D01T10:28:00Z. The dash carries meaning, sadly. I think all this just creates needless complication. How about we just go with https://example.com/tw.txt#2025-10-01T10:28:00Z?)
18:16 <aelaraji> quark 🙏 much appreciated but it won't be necessary, since there isn't much to miss out on in most of where I hang out, so I could just disconnect and spare everyone else the noise
18:17 *** aelaraji (aelaraji@776014f5a3edd32f1ed19658b7b85c8c655945b0feacaedd92fe60e61a3c0ae2) has quit (/ME goes "yeeeeet..!")
18:18 <quark> No noise for me.
18:18 <quark> It’s all good.
18:18 <quark> What would IRC be without on/offs?
18:19 <quark> Preeeety boring!
18:19 <quark> Ah, he was gone.
18:19 <quark> Well, I will twtxt this to him. LOL.
url field it finds. If there is none, it uses the URL that I’m using for fetching the feed.url field, but then what? You will still show up as zvava in my client or, if you also change your nick field, as movq (zvava).
url field it finds. If there is none, it uses the URL that I’m using for fetching the feed.url field, but then what? You will still show up as zvava in my client or, if you also change your nick field, as movq (zvava).
url to be used for hashing. No matter if it points to a different feed or whatever. Just unsubscribe from malicious feeds and you're done.url is used for hashing, it must never change. Otherwise, it will break threading, as you already noticed. If your feed moves and you wanna keep the old messages in the same new feed, you still have to point to the old url location and keep that forever. But you can add more urls. As I said several times in the past, in hindsight, using the first url was a big mistake. It would have been much better, if the last encountered url were used for hashing onwards. This way, feed moves would be relatively straightforward. However, that ship has sailed. Luckily, feeds typically don't relocate.
(#abcdefghijkl https://example.com/tw.txt#:~:text=2025-10-01T10:28:00Z), because it can be simply hacked in to clients currently on hashv1 and provides an off-ramp to location-based addressing (though i still think the format should be changed to smth like #<abc... http://example.com/...> so it's cleaner once we finally drop hashes)
url (with the url as a fallback), the key could even be a public key so it can be used verifieable in crypto functions[#THREAD_ID] Hello world and replies with (#REPLY_ID) Ahoy) so the content can change without affecting the thread reference, and anyone can use their own schemes freely
cors-anywhere via docker in a minute and it would work the same.