Listen! #Knowledge coming from #museums:
"#ActivityPub is plumbing. It is plumbing built on top of the web, which coordinates the ability for independently operated services, for example a collection of federated social media services, to exchange messages with each other in a decentralized manner.
So #SFOMuseum has built its own ActivityPub server for publishing #socialmedia style messages.
In doing so, it means that we can(& have)created social media accounts for 60,000 objects in our collection including this roll of #HelloKitty toilet paper from #EvaAirlines."
@thisisaaronland
https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2025/02/13/gummy/#fact2025
"#ActivityPub is plumbing. It is plumbing built on top of the web, which coordinates the ability for independently operated services, for example a collection of federated social media services, to exchange messages with each other in a decentralized manner.
So #SFOMuseum has built its own ActivityPub server for publishing #socialmedia style messages.
In doing so, it means that we can(& have)created social media accounts for 60,000 objects in our collection including this roll of #HelloKitty toilet paper from #EvaAirlines."
@thisisaaronland
https://www.aaronland.info/weblog/2025/02/13/gummy/#fact2025
it's not magic – finding our way back to 'just f*cking do it' from 'move fast and break things'
As a general rule plywood and two-by-fours are the structural underpinnings of nearly everything in the built environment no matter how posh, luxurious or expensive the surface trappings. In that same way at least one, but usually both, of the core technologies that define the web still run most of what we call “modern” despite it being old and outdated. Crucially, the reason that plywood, two-by-fours and the web are so important is not because they self-assemble. They don’t. They are important because the qualities which define them make the process of assembling and, critically, re-assembling affordable in time, money and cognitive overhead. They are the means not the ends.
