21 comments

  • egypturnash 2 hours ago

    This sure is a social network for a very small and specific set of people.

    • jancsika an hour ago

      In other words, it's a real social network.

  • gentooflux 3 hours ago

    This seems less "decentralized social network" and more "html-less www with extra steps," especially since it's only going to allow socializing between the specific types of people who fall within 3 very specific Venn diagram circles who 1) use emacs, 2) use org-mode, and 3) want to go through the trouble of hosting their own section of the network.

    • bee_rider 3 hours ago

      I guess this is an internet for the folks who are still annoyed by the Eternal September?

    • Joker_vD 2 hours ago

      And also 4) somewhat want to talk to other people ― but not that much that they'd be ready to exit Emacs.

      • small_scombrus 2 hours ago

        > but not that much that they'd be ready to exit Emacs.

        There's great news for the people who want to talk to other people and NOT exit emacs - you can get IRC built straight in.

        https://github.com/emacs-circe/circe

        • gentooflux 2 hours ago

          Try as I might, I have not been successful in getting my wife to use IRC. I guess I should take that as a sign that she just doesn't want to talk to me...

    • crabbone 2 hours ago

      Sort of. There's Org for Vim users :)

  • cml123 2 hours ago

    Just last week I was fiddling around with a tangentially related idea. I made some modifications locally to my setup so that when browsing a .org file in eww, org-html-export-as-html would render it in the buffer as HTML directly. eww doesn't really support much styling via shr, so I was working on adding some basic css parsing to expand the range of expression for an org-based blog approach.

    Many people export their org file based blogs to HTML and then publish them, but my thought would be to skip that and instead provide a path for eww to directly render org files, cutting out my html export stopgap.

  • bitwize 4 hours ago

    Reminds me of .plan files from back in the day.

    • mxuribe 3 hours ago

      Well, there is https://plan.cat ...which, hosts a user's plan files. :-)

      I guess think of it as a little microblog for displaying one's plan file?

      • lemonberry 3 hours ago

        This is kind of neat, thanks for sharing.

    • temp0826 2 hours ago

      We're rewriting the books. finger was the first social network!

      • bitwize an hour ago

        I've observed that Unix itself was a social networking platform. Your Unix account was your identity across many services: email, finger, USENET, talk, etc. And it was distributed. And didn't rely on cruft like ActivityPub.

        • temp0826 an hour ago

          Totally! ident alongside IRC too. So many reinvented wheels. (Side note- I'm a little sad that https is the only protocol used for everything anymore).

  • crabbone 2 hours ago

    We kind of already have groups in Gnus... I even messaged one group, like twice in my life.

  • BrouteMinou 3 hours ago

    What does it solve compared to a normal plain HTML blog?

    • deltasquared 3 hours ago

      This filtered out those who 1) don’t use eMacs 2) don’t use org-mode

      I suspect org-mode users are willing to go through an extra step if needed.

      My notes are in .org if I want to share with someone else I export to .md and use the output

  • Beretta_Vexee 3 hours ago

    This looks like a bad hybrid between RSS and Markdown. Am I missing something?