noobermin 5 years ago

They say when introducing yourself, first impressions matter.

EDIT: after it finally loaded, looks like it's not kernel.org's fault for the hug of death per se, it seems to be hosted by a third party, write.as[0].

[0] https://write.as/

  • thebaer 5 years ago

    Indeed, this is running on our new Teams [0] infrastructure, so HN is giving us some good real-world testing :) Performance issues should be fixed now.

    [0] https://write.as/for/teams

bshimmin 5 years ago

For anyone who was as confused as I was by this, from the root of the site, in the header, click "Reader" to see the actual blogs and posts from the different authors. The navigability of this site needs some work, I would say.

zaarn 5 years ago

people.kernel.org is also a full blown ActivityPub instance, so you can see the content posted by subscribing via Mastodon or Pleroma...

  • iamnotacrook 5 years ago

    Is there an RSS feed of the content available, or is this a "make it a part of your daily ritual by clicking on this bookmark when you think something new might have been posted" deal?

    • zaarn 5 years ago

      There is an RSS feed, your RSS reader should be able to autodetect the RSS url automatically.

janvdberg 5 years ago

I was already wondering where Linus would post his occasional blog now that Google+ has gone belly up.

fdrs 5 years ago

I tried using tusk to follow the blogs using my mastodon.social account... I can see the profiles, but I can't see any post.

  • thebaer 5 years ago

    This is how Mastodon works, unfortunately -- it doesn't pull in old posts. But now that you're following the blogs, you'll start seeing any new posts that come in.

  • sascha_sl 5 years ago

    writefreely doesn't provide a public feed, it only one-off sends to servers that subscribe to it

DigitalTerminal 5 years ago

Biggest take away for me was writefreely. Looks like a viable simpler alternative to WordPress, I will definitely give it a try.

  • r3bl 5 years ago

    > Looks like a viable simpler alternative to WordPress, I will definitely give it a try.

    As someone who already tried it, I'd call it more of a Medium alternative. Or, at least, what Medium should have been.

    Zero pop-ups, actually clutter-free reading experience, and an opportunity to not just host individual blogs (although that is certainly a feasible use case), but to also bring a community together, run a publication, and give the readers the freedom to consume the content in which ever way they'd like (website, decentralized social networks like Mastodon, RSS reader etc).