Linking

One of the first ever personal websites—long before the word “blog” was a mischievous gleam in Peter’s eye—was Justin Hall’s links.net. Linking was right there in the domain name.

I really enjoy sharing links on my website. It feels good to point to something and say, “Hey, check this out!”

Other people are doing it too.

Then there are some relatively new additions to the linking gang:

There are more out there for you to discover and add to your feed reader of choice. Good link hunting!

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

3 Shares

# Shared by Hidde on Tuesday, January 23rd, 2024 at 7:31pm

# Shared by Luke Dorny on Wednesday, January 24th, 2024 at 12:02am

# Shared by The Spicy Web on Wednesday, January 24th, 2024 at 12:02am

4 Likes

# Liked by Joface on Tuesday, January 23rd, 2024 at 7:31pm

# Liked by Juan Fernandes on Wednesday, January 24th, 2024 at 12:02am

# Liked by Ange Chierchia on Wednesday, January 24th, 2024 at 8:02pm

# Liked by Chris Glass on Thursday, January 25th, 2024 at 1:18am

1 Bookmark

# Bookmarked by Nicholas A. Ferrell on Friday, February 2nd, 2024 at 6:23pm

Related posts

Indie Web Camp Nuremberg

Updating my website with related posts and fixing link rot.

Bookshop

Manually machine tagging books as a kind of mindless meditation.

On this day

A time machine for blog posts

Links, tags, and feeds

You can filter my ramblings by subscribing to specific tags.

Service worker resources

Hyperlinks to help you get your site working offline.

Related links

Long live hypertext! – Tracy Durnell’s Mind Garden

This is how I write:

As an online writer, my philosophy is link maximalism; links add another layer to my writing, whether I’m linking to an expansion of a particular idea or another person’s take, providing evidence or citation, or making a joke by juxtaposing text and target. Links reveal personality as much as the text. Linking allows us to stretch our ideas, embedding complexity, acknowledging ambiguity, holding contradictions.

Tagged with

Follow the links | A Working Library

The ability to follow links down and around and through an idea, landing hours later on some random Wikipedia page about fungi you cannot recall how you discovered, is one of the great modes of the web. It is, I’ll go so far to propose, one of the great modes of human thinking.

Tagged with

Curate your own newspaper with RSS

I’m almost certainly preaching to the choir here because I bet you’re reading these very words in a feed reader, but what Molly White has written here is too good not to share:

RSS offers readers and writers a path away from unreliable, manipulative, and hostile platforms and intermediaries. In a media landscape dominated by algorithmic feeds that aim to manipulate and extract, sometimes the most radical thing you can do is choose to read what you want, when you want, without anyone watching over your shoulder.

Tagged with

Click Around, Find Out – Dirty Feed

If you care about the indie web growing, by all means write, by all means create, by all means curate. But most of all, just read. Or listen, or experience. Spend an afternoon clicking around, like everybody used to. The more people who do that, the more everything else will slot into place without even having to think much about it.

Tagged with

Tagged with

Previously on this day

3 years ago I wrote One morning in the future

Video calls with India and flying drones in Antarctica.

6 years ago I wrote Web standards, dictionaries, and design systems

There’s a common pattern here.

9 years ago I wrote Charlotte

Bidding farewell.

11 years ago I wrote Angular momentum

Assume a perfectly spherical web browser…

23 years ago I wrote Jim Page

Standing in front of what is supposedly the original Starbucks (not true: the original building was demolished) Jim Page sang a song about Seattle:

23 years ago I wrote Wireless in Seattle

I’m in Seattle and I’m blogging wirelessly from a Starbucks.

24 years ago I wrote To catch a thief

Here is a fantastic tale of ingenious detective work.