Then there’s Mastodon, based on Open Source and the concept of the “Fediverse”. It’s not quite as slick as the others, but perhaps its geeky flavour, and the decentralization at its core, will appeal to
the type who like to hang out here on Usenet?
FWIW, I don't want/have a smart phone to use any of these "social media" platforms. Why don't X/Twitter and the other platforms ever consider supporting those of us that are willing to connect via a web interface to use to their services without a phone?
Why don't X/Twitter and the other platforms ever consider
supporting those of us that are willing to connect via a web interface
to use to their services without a phone?
On Fri, 22 Nov 2024 17:22:56 -0000 (UTC), David LaRue wrote:
Why don't X/Twitter and the other platforms ever consider
supporting those of us that are willing to connect via a web interface
to use to their services without a phone?
Twitter was, at least at one point, usable via a Web interface. Mastodon
and the rest of the Fediverse are, I think, primarily accessible that way.
Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:
On Fri, 22 Nov 2024 17:22:56 -0000 (UTC), David LaRue wrote:
Why don't X/Twitter and the other platforms ever consider
supporting those of us that are willing to connect via a web
interface to use to their services without a phone?
Twitter was, at least at one point, usable via a Web interface.
Mastodon and the rest of the Fediverse are, I think, primarily
accessible that way.
Posts to various blogs and mailing lists I see frequently cite URLs
to Xitter sites -- x.com, twitter.com, t.co. I've never been able to
access them using my chosen browser (Seamonkey), even when js is
turned on. No helpful diagnostic from the site, just "something went
wrong, try again".
Posts to various blogs and mailing lists I see frequently cite URLs to
Xitter sites -- x.com, twitter.com, t.co. I've never been able to
access them using my chosen browser (Seamonkey), even when js is turned
on.
I finally got a cell phone because neither of us is able any longer to
walk home from just anywhere -- old, y'know? And opted for a smart
phone because it seemed stupid to pay through the nose for the service
and not have the advanced features available should I ever come to want
one of them. I hate the touch-screen GUI, inaccessibility of the
system, inability to write scripts that modify network interactions,
opacity of nearly everything etc. etc.
I've tried fediverse, but I still don't like the concept of the short messages, especially when people post long text on multiple posts.
I enjoy Usenet and I enjoy that it is text-only
and not full of pictures and memes.
I think this feature inequality will doom the Fediverse in the long run.
1: IMO: SMTP + NNTP = the original Fediverse
FWIW, I don't want/have a smart phone to use any of these "social media" >platforms. Why don't X/Twitter and the other platforms ever consider >supporting those of us that are willing to connect via a web interface to use >to their services without a phone?
Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:
On Fri, 22 Nov 2024 17:22:56 -0000 (UTC), David LaRue wrote:
Why don't X/Twitter and the other platforms ever consider
supporting those of us that are willing to connect via a web interface
to use to their services without a phone?
Twitter was, at least at one point, usable via a Web interface. Mastodon
and the rest of the Fediverse are, I think, primarily accessible that way.
Posts to various blogs and mailing lists I see frequently cite URLs to
Xitter sites -- x.com, twitter.com, t.co. I've never been able to
access them using my chosen browser (Seamonkey), even when js is
turned on. No helpful diagnostic from the site, just "something went
wrong, try again".
I finally got a cell phone because neither of us is able any longer to
walk home from just anywhere -- old, y'know? And opted for a smart
phone because it seemed stupid to pay through the nose for the service
and not have the advanced features available should I ever come to
want one of them. I hate the touch-screen GUI, inaccessibility of the system, inability to write scripts that modify network interactions,
opacity of nearly everything etc. etc.
In any case, I'm not reading blogs or mail on the phone, just on a
Linux desktop and all those Xitter references are effectively null.
Ho hum.
Mike Spencer <mds@bogus.nodomain.nowhere> wrote:
Lawrence D'Oliveiro <ldo@nz.invalid> writes:
On Fri, 22 Nov 2024 17:22:56 -0000 (UTC), David LaRue wrote:
Why don't X/Twitter and the other platforms ever consider
supporting those of us that are willing to connect via a web
interface to use to their services without a phone?
Twitter was, at least at one point, usable via a Web interface.
Mastodon and the rest of the Fediverse are, I think, primarily
accessible that way.
Posts to various blogs and mailing lists I see frequently cite URLs
to Xitter sites -- x.com, twitter.com, t.co. I've never been able to
access them using my chosen browser (Seamonkey), even when js is
turned on. No helpful diagnostic from the site, just "something went
wrong, try again".
Sometime after the sale to Musk, twitter changed to a "you must be
logged in to view this" mode -- however their error messages were never updated to tell anyone that fact.
FWIW, for most "tweets" if you replace "twitter" in the URL with
"xcancel" (i.e. "twitter.com" -> "xcancel.com") then after some
"anti-robot" JS juggling, the 'tweet' will usually appear.
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