mobilizon
Grav
Our great sponsors
mobilizon | Grav | |
---|---|---|
7 | 84 | |
290 | 14,291 | |
1.4% | 0.4% | |
9.7 | 8.5 | |
8 days ago | about 19 hours ago | |
Elixir | PHP | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
mobilizon
-
The end of Pepper&Carrot and my next project
David Revoy's involvement in FOSS is almost a blessing. He has drawn this comic, Pepper and Carrot, using free software like Krita. But that's only the surface level of his contribution to FOSS.
He has pioneered a collaborative approach to comic translation in an industry where most publishers respond to volunteer translators with legal threats. (See [1] for the dominant sentiment among conventional comic publishers.)
Dozens of FOSS projects owe wonderful illustrations and mascots to David Revoy, including all of the initiatives by Framasoft (a French association focusing on software freedom). They are characters for communities to rally around, and can make these charitable initiatives and software projects feel more approachable to non-technical people. The open source app Mobilizon has cute cartoon foxes for instance[2], which you can even have as your online profile picture[3]!
Add to that a myriad of educational videos and blog posts about both art in general and doing art with open source software and you can perhaps see how passionate David Revoy is. Well, so concludes my little accolade to him on HN! I wish him the best of luck with his new comic.
[1]: https://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/culture/2022/03/199_314538....
[2]: https://joinmobilizon.org/
[3]: https://www.peppercarrot.com/extras/html/2020_mobilizon-gene...
- Ask HN: Has MeetUp.org been replaced by anything?
-
Most user friendly Fediverse solution?
It seems like Mobilizon is trying to be only events (and then connect to other stuff with ActivityPub), and Bonpfire is more a social network + events (which is what you are looking for?). I have no idea how mature they are/where they have apps, though.
- How do you create a group's presence in Mastodon?
- Looking for self-hosted website for onetime events .. alternative to facebook events
- Mobilizon β federated organization and mobilization platform using ActivityPub
Grav
-
Ask HN: What products other than Obsidian share the file over app philosophy?
There are flat-file CMSes (content management systems) like Grav: https://getgrav.org/
I guess, in some vague/broad sense, config-as-code systems also implement something similar? Maybe even OpenAPI schemas could count to some degree...?
In the old days, the "semantic web" movement was an attempt to make more webpages both human- and machine-readable indefinitely by tagging them with proper schema: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_Description_Framework. Even Google was on board for a while, but I guess it never saw much uptake. As far as I can tell it's basically dead now, both because of non-semantic HTML (everything as a React div), general laziness, and LLMs being able to parse things loosely.
-------------
Side thoughts...
Philosophically, I don't know that capturing raw data alone as files is really sufficient to capture the nuances of any particular experience, or the overall zeitgeist of an era. You can archive Geocities pages, but that doesn't really capture the novelty and indie-ness of that era. Similarly, you can save TikTok videos, but absent the cultural environment that created them (and a faithful recreation of the recommendation algorithm), they wouldn't really show future archaeologists how teenagers today lived.
I worked for a natural history museum for a while, and while we were there, one of the interesting questions (well, to me anyway) was whether our web content was in and of itself worth preserving as a cultural artifact -- both so that future generations can see what exhibits were interesting/apropos for the cultures of our times, but also so they could see how our generation found out about those exhibitions to begin with (who knows what the Web will morph into 50 years later). It wasn't enough to simply save the HTML of our web pages, both because they tie into various other APIs and databases (like zoological collections) and because some were interactive experiences, like games designed to be played with a mouse (before phones were popular), or phone chatbots with some of our specimens. To really capture the experience authentically would've required emulating not just our tech stacks and devices, among other things.
Like for the earlier Geocities example, sure you could just save the old HTML and render it with a modern browser, but that's not the same as something like https://oldweb.today/?browser=ns3-mac#http://geocities.com/ , which emulates the whole OS and browser too. And that still isn't the same as having to sit in front of a tiny CRT and wait minutes for everything to download over a 14.4k modem, only to be interrupted when mom had to make a call.
I guess that's a longwinded of critiquing "file over app": It only makes sense for things that are originally files/documents to begin with. Much of our lives now are not flat docs but "experiences" that take much more thought and effort to archive. If the goal is truly to preserve that posterity, it's not enough to just archive their raw data, but to develop ways to record and later emulate entire experiences, both technological and cultural. It ain't easy!
- Soupault: A static website management tool
- Grav is a modern open-source flat-file CMS
- Grav β A Modern Flat-File CMS Using PHP and Markdown
-
It Took Me a Decade to Find the Perfect Personal Website Stack β Ghost+Fathom
I took a more traditional approach, focusing on something that's "good enough", which in my case was a cheap VPS and an install of Grav: https://getgrav.org/
Some optional customization for page templates/fonts/CSS, some CI so I can build and deploy it inside of a Docker container, Matomo for analytics that respect privacy (which I already use elsewhere) and some additional web server configuration to hide anything interesting behind an additional login and I'm good. Maybe backups and uptime monitoring if I'm feeling brave, which is what most sites should also have (so copy + paste there).
All of that for under 100 euros per year (could also pay half of that if I didn't host anything else on the server), the blog has actually survived getting on the front page of HN once or twice and requires relatively little maintenance, at least a bit less than a proper install of WordPress, due to its larger surface area.
The best thing is that it's simple enough for me to understand how it works, to be able to move it anywhere as needed and use more or less plain Markdown for writing the blog posts. Here's a quick example of a recent post: https://blog.kronis.dev/articles/ever-wanted-to-read-thousan...
Now all that's left is to find motivation to write more, but at least 90% of my time doesn't go into tinkering with custom fancy solutions, no matter how much I'd love that. Then again, nothing wrong with the alternatives either: 400 euros might be perfectly worth it for some, whereas working with static site generators or even custom CMSes would be a fun experience for others!
- Grav: Modern, open-source, flat-file CMS
-
Is it possible to convert a WordPress site into a static site that can still be easily edited?
I'd check out Grav. https://getgrav.org/
-
Gravity - A new, open source DNS/DHCP server with Adblocking and inbuilt config replication
Also, there is a CMS called Grav. Both Gravity and Grav use a very similar (but not identical) font for their logo.
- Mercredi Tech - 2023-06-28
-
website with unlimited pages ??
I would use a flat file cms like https://getgrav.org
What are some alternatives?
mastodon-ios-apps - An ongoing, (hopefully) complete, collaborative list of all Mastodon apps on iOS.
Pico - Pico is a stupidly simple, blazing fast, flat file CMS.
grav-plugin-comments - Grav Comments Plugin
october - Self-hosted CMS platform based on the Laravel PHP Framework.
grav-plugin-events - This plugin provides Calendar Events for Grav CMS
Bolt - Bolt is a simple CMS written in PHP. It is based on Silex and Symfony components, uses Twig and either SQLite, MySQL or PostgreSQL.
Plausible Analytics - Simple, open source, lightweight (< 1 KB) and privacy-friendly web analytics alternative to Google Analytics.
Bludit - Simple, Fast, Secure, Flat-File CMS
Misskey - π An interplanetary microblogging platform π
Strapi - π Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS. Itβs 100% JavaScript/TypeScript, fully customizable and developer-first.
Phoenix - Peace of mind from prototype to production
GetSimple CMS - GetSimple CMS