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Johan Bové

Tried installing Mastodon on the Yunohost server on a Raspberry Pi 3. Turns out it does not have enough RAM. Installation aborted itself, left a nice clear log message and then uninstalled everything nicely. That is what is really awesome about Yunohost.

Johan Bové

In the process of moving my OpenPGP based keys and claims - which started on Keybase.io - to Keyoxide.org. It is unclear what will happen to Keybase any given moment since Zoom bought it, so I wanted to be prepared. Even-though Keyoxide has less features, the base principle of confirming ones online identities with public key pairs remains. And it seems that most special Keybase features can be replaced with other services, like Mastodon and such.

Johan Bové

Johan Bové

hmm, somehow I can't reply on posts on Mastodon from my Known site. Will have to dig up ye old error logs.

Johan Bové

Reminds me I need to send some moneys to Tim for keeping my Mastodon instance up over at https://indieweb.social.

Johan Bové

Thanks for the info and insightful stats. About the rising costs; I would personally be fine with sending brid.gy a modest monthly support for keeping the service going, especially as I totally rely on it for my publications to Twitter and Mastodon. Any way you think is cool?

Johan Bové

Syndicating the posts from my site now also to the on my new profile thanks to the Known plugin: https://github.com/danito/KnownMastodon

Johan Bové

Can I run a small and private Mastodon instance on a QNAP NAS server? Let's find out.

Johan Bové

Trying this from my Known site. But it seems to fail. Not sure what is going on.
- Added Granary Atoms feed.
- Added htaccess entry for redirecting webfinger
Testing by replying to this post: https://mastodon.technology/@snarfed/3194674
But my reply is not going through. Will investigate tomorrow.

Johan Bové

You can keep your metrics, Twitter

3 min read

How knowing the number of followers I have makes me want to use it less

I seem to have been hovering around 404 followers for a couple of months now. Some tweets bring me a couple of new ones, other tweets seems to scare away followers. Not sure how to interpret that.

Following people based upon a single Tweet is a mistake and a sure-fire hit to get disappointed later. When I see someone posting something interesting or funny, I don't immediately decide to follow them. I always have a look at their timeline to see the general tone and topics they post about. There is hardly anyone who consistently posts interesting stuff. (There are some really clever people out there, so there are exceptions)

Anyway, I'm not using "social media" to post curated and carefully picked words to please every follower; I share it because I care about the content and/or the author and believe the message important enough to be passed along or promoted.

Some time ago somebody shared the thought that Twitter should offer an option to hide the follower and other counters from the User Interfaces. I agree that this option would actually benefit new joiners to not really know just how little followers they have.

I can understand that the number of followers, retweets and likes are easy to messure metrics to analyse the reach and the impact Twitter users have. But to most, I believe that knowing these numbers will actually demotivate and push those users away from the platform entirely.

That's one of the main reasons why I am totally for taking back control over your online presence and about hosting your own "social website". And thanks to the Known CMS project I could create a pretty neat social media hub within a limited amount of time and effort. It's all open source and currently maintained by Marcus Povey.

He's doing a lot of excellent work on the Known platform and posts about his ideas and implementations.

So I degressed from my original topic; I'll share more insights in how to set up your own Known site in a future post. It wasn't super-easy to set up the site, WordPress is a lot easier to start with, but Known was developed with the ideas of the Indieweb movement in mind.

So thanks to the IndieWeb, Twitter is not my main social media platform any longer. I own my content here and will continue to decide for myself what will be shared on that silo and what stays on my private social media Indieweb site.

We need the IndieWeb, so we can take back our online presence and feel back in control over social posting.

ps. I used Mastodon for a while, but couldn't get the feel right and didn't really enjoy using it. Having to decide on one or maintain multiple Mastodon instances, and set up in a way multiple social media accounts, was too much of a hassle. And unless your hosting your own Mastodon site, it's not really the :-)