It worked out! I have practice from attending several talks during the online OurNetworks conf a few years ago :P
"Then CSS came along, it was a fucking miracle." — https://eev.ee/blog/2020/02/01/old-css-new-css/
learned at least 7 different things about the web from this post
read Javi's post from last month about Chromium's Ed25519 implementation to learn about the challenges in getting the last bits over the finish line.
nothing is easy when you want to change the web.
blogs.igalia.com/jfernandez/2...
Can I use Secure Curves in the...
@matrix has gone from $0 to $561K in recurring revenue in just 2 years. But our expenses run $1.2M/yr.
We've burned through reserves and are at a crossroads.
It's the classic FOSS funding problem: use and adoption are at an all-time high, wealthy companies and countries use it, and secure decentralized comms have never been more important. And yet we can't pay our bills.
YOU have a role to play in shaping what comes next: https://matrix.org/blog/2025/02/crossroads/
we've seen things you people wouldn't believe — shell scripts piping `openssl smime` through an HTTP tunnel. push-mode kerberos propagation across 7 zones worth of replicas. `iptables` rules that, over 24 hours, dropped 96 gigabytes of DNS traffic. all these moments will be lost, like tweets in rain
Source code version control is actually such an amazing tool. I wish other industries had similar uses. Like, I'd love to be able to do the equivalent of git blame for 3D objects or vector graphics and see what else changed for that version and trace the "why" for the change.
I'm getting more acquainted with this codebase and seeing where a particular line got added in the history can make such a difference.
Occult Enby that's making local-first software with peer to peer protocols, mesh networks, and the web.
Exploring what a local-first cyberspace might look like in my spare time.