Something about omg.lol that goes unnoticed too often and this feels a bit sad so here we are:
"url.town doesn’t have any overly lofty ambitions; we’re just building our own directory of really nice websites. We’re not trying to fully recreate the original Yahoo! or DMOZ directories. We’re not aiming for some astronomical number of links. This is just one space on the web, tied to a community that loves to share neat things with one another. Quality matters much more than quantity. There’s no need to share everything just for the shake of sharing it; it’s much better to share things that are useful or interesting."
Given the predominance of search indexes and model-based suggestions and recommendations, maybe things such as web directories are an interesting step both "back" and "forth" to creating meaningful structure and navigation across a wide range of sites and systems while making sure this is data someone has actually in a way reviewed and considered interesting or relevant - even though, knowing, it's a matter of community and trust at the very end. And maybe this conclusion makes sense in many aspects of digital tools off the path of difficult big tech corporations: Community and trust. #linkdump #omgdotlol #digital_technologies #internet_meta
Sometimes I miss the old days of the web when I’d randomly stumble across cool, fun, and sometimes useful sites. And that just so happens to be what I was feeling earlier this year when I stumbled across OMG.lol, a cool, fun, and useful IndieWeb playground that also happens to remind me of the old days of the web.
It’s built and maintained by just Adam and a handful of diverse volunteers. Every single tool that OMG.lol provides is there because he wants it to exist, not because he’s looking to get rich at just $20/year. He’s always available, supportive, building or improving something, and standing up to bigots.
There is quite a lot provided, and I don’t even use it all, so here’s a small breakdown of what I do use:
Those are just the things I use. There’s actually so much more, from a whole blogging platform to sort of a text adventure game.
I would be remiss if I didn’t close by mentioning the generosity of the community. Back in May, a generous community member offered to match most donations, which resulted in the community donating a total of $19,540.54 to causes we cared about. And, until the end of September, Adam is donating half of everything OMG.lol makes (not just half of the profits) to another community member’s fundraiser for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, which has so far raised over $12,000. Many of us have donated as well, so hopefully we can hit our goal of $50,000 in lifetime donations to St. Jude!
If you’re looking for an IndieWeb playground, or even just a taste of the earlier days of the web, check out OMG.lol!
Account migration time! This account is being migrated to @adam, and posts about omg.lol will now include the #omgdotlol hashtag (which you can follow in your Mastodon client if you’d like).
Thanks for your patience as I work to wrangle my Mastodon usage into something a little more sane.
back on omg.lol! I think I’m here to stay 😅
I love the vibes on it, much more interesting than mstdn.social, never mind all the fun extra stuff you get with it!
#mastodon #omgdotlol
back on omg.lol! I think I’m here to stay 😅
I love the vibes on it, much more interesting than mstdn.social, never mind all the fun extra stuff you get with it!
On that note, I'd really like to know what people on social.lol think about AI as a tool and if that tool is worth the environmental, social, and cultural impacts.
I definitely think it's neat, but I'm not really sold on it being life changing for really anyone. Sure, it's being foisted on me at work, but so are tons of other technologies. This one is probably the least finished technology I've had to use, but I've worked with a lot of software I loathed.