10 years ago today, I launched my personal website :D. It's been one of the best decisions of my life. Jobs and platforms come and go, but my website has been a constant outlet that will remain. I wish everyone I met had a personal website!
If you're curious about how I created Umai, and you haven't read my development journals, I just generated a podcast with NotebookLM. Plug this in your favorite podcast app to give it a listen (or click to listen in the browser): https://noeldemartin.com/podcast/feed.xml
@tychi Thanks for your comments. Yes, I agree with mostly everything you're saying. But there is nothing inherent in Solid that prevents this from happening as well (making an app that is user friendly, etc.). I'm sure if people like Dan decided to spend some time making Solid Apps, they would turn out as good, if not better, than Bluesky.
So the question remains. What made them choose Bluesky rather than Solid or any other decentralization project...
@tychi Rather than talking about it as Solid's competition on a technical level, it seems like Bluesky is the only decentralization project that is attracting the mainstream's attention, and is getting A players on board. Other projects seem very fringe.
But if you watch Dan's presentation without knowing much about the technical details, it rings very similar to what Solid is trying to achieve.
Hence my comment about it being just the money, or if there is something else there...
@tychi I know that Solid is lacking in many aspects, I can understand why someone would find Bluesky more appealing.
The point I'm trying to make is that at some point, Bluesky was as experimental (or more) than Solid. But they managed to get a lot of interesting people on board to improve it. Whilst Solid seems to be stuck in time :(. I still think Solid has the potential to improve a lot, but it's been like that for years, "potential".
In any case, this was more of a rhetorical question xD.
Not only that, apparently Bluesky is not even living up to their own ideals (TLDR: Bluesky is not really decentralized... "yet"): https://beige.party/@possibledog/113367997579738126
And in case you're wondering, yes, the Bluesky team did know about Solid. Before announcing the AT protocol, they did an "ecosystem review" in which they studied all the existing solutions they would proceed to ignore: https://gitlab.com/bluesky-community1/decentralized-ecosystem/-/blob/master/README.md
(by the way, if you haven't seen the talk, here's the link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F1sJW6nTP6E)
There are lots of nice recipes on the web. Bigger recipe sites often allow you to store your favorites in a cookbook. Unfortunately those are always restricted to recipes on that site.
Here comes #Solid to the rescue: With an app like #Umai you can store any recipe found on the web to a cookbook in your own Pod.
In the latest #PracticalSolid video, I am showing you how to do that!
https://tube.tchncs.de/w/x4mML2c4fnHE4xH7JMjCGG
Let me know what you think!
βπ§ π₯
Problem Solver. Software Architect. Entrepreneur.
Making Solid apps (solidproject.org), and pondering what to do next.