Created
November 11, 2025 15:55
-
-
Save scripting/deca6d866b76d566b05673c94e8610de to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Feed example showing various elements in the source namespace
This file contains hidden or bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
| <?xml version="1.0"?> | |
| <!-- RSS generated by WordLand v0.7.4 on Tue, 11 Nov 2025 15:04:25 GMT --> | |
| <rss version="2.0" xmlns:source="https://source.scripting.com/"> | |
| <channel> | |
| <title>daveverse</title> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org</link> | |
| <description>Dave's WordPress home in the Fediverse :-)</description> | |
| <pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2025 14:41:22 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <lastBuildDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2025 15:04:25 GMT</lastBuildDate> | |
| <language>en-us</language> | |
| <generator>WordLand v0.7.4</generator> | |
| <docs>https://cyber.law.harvard.edu/rss/rss.html</docs> | |
| <source:localTime>Tuesday, November 11, 2025 at 10:04 AM</source:localTime> | |
| <source:self>https://wordland.social/scripting/246529703/rss.xml</source:self> | |
| <site xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">237777565</site> | |
| <cloud domain="rpc.rsscloud.io" port="5337" path="/pleaseNotify" registerProcedure="" protocol="http-post" /> | |
| <image> | |
| <title>daveverse</title> | |
| <url>https://imgs.scripting.com/2025/06/13/tomatoSoup.png</url> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org</link> | |
| <description>Dave's WordPress home in the Fediverse :-)</description> | |
| </image> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Demo post for source:markdown docs</title> | |
| <description><p>This is a test post for the new docs I'm writing about source:markdown. </p> <p>It includes instructions showing how to test it by creating a WordLand post. </p> <p>I'm making use of <a href="https://www.markdownguide.org/cheat-sheet/">markdown</a> in this test, of course, because that's what this is about.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Tue, 11 Nov 2025 14:41:22 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/11/demo-post-for-sourcemarkdown-docs/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/11/demo-post-for-sourcemarkdown-docs/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>This is a test post for the new docs I'm writing about source:markdown. It includes instructions showing how to test it by creating a WordLand post. I'm making use of [markdown](https://www.markdownguide.org/cheat-sheet/) in this test, of course, because that's what this is about.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2705</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>First thoughts on Pluribus</title> | |
| <description><p>Of course I'm watching <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pluribus_%28TV_series%29">Pluribus</a>. I could never not watch a Vince Gilligan show starring Rhea Seehorn. You can see little touches of Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul in the way it's put together, but it's really not the same thing. The main character played by Seehorn is dangerously emotional and not making many friends in the new order. It's science fiction, at least so far, and without spoiling anything, I'm not entirely sure I wouldn't go for the new program. I'm always saying the one thing we need to do better and more of is Working Together, and so far that seems to be the theme of the new order. It'll be interesting to see if this theory holds up through the first season. Also I wasn't aware that they screened the second episode too, so that was a nice little surprise, a whole other episode I didn't know was there. Not sure that scifi is really Gilligan's thing. It's getting great ratings but so far I don't think it's as great as his previous two hits. But still, a must-see imho.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Sun, 09 Nov 2025 13:02:42 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/09/first-thoughts-on-pluribus/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/09/first-thoughts-on-pluribus/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>Of course I'm watching [Pluribus](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pluribus_(TV_series)). I could never not watch a Vince Gilligan show starring Rhea Seehorn. You can see little touches of Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul in the way it's put together, but it's really not the same thing. The main character played by Seehorn is dangerously emotional and not making many friends in the new order. It's science fiction, at least so far, and without spoiling anything, I'm not entirely sure I wouldn't go for the new program. I'm always saying the one thing we need to do better and more of is Working Together, and so far that seems to be the theme of the new order. It'll be interesting to see if this theory holds up through the first season. Also I wasn't aware that they screened the second episode too, so that was a nice little surprise, a whole other episode I didn't know was there. Not sure that scifi is really Gilligan's thing. It's getting great ratings but so far I don't think it's as great as his previous two hits. But still, a must-see imho.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2700</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>I’ll wait till all the episodes are out</title> | |
| <description><p>I don’t like it when reviewers get seven episodes of a new series and the regular folk, like me, are stuck with the first episode only. I won’t read their reviews because they’re writing about something that I don’t know anything about and they try to avoid the spoilers and all I can think about is why can’t I see all of the episodes at once. </p> <p>That’s the effect of Pluribus, which is a highly anticipated show by Vince Gilligan the show runner of better call Saul and breaking bad. I know that if I go to Pirates Bay, I can probably get all of the seven episodes but I think what I’ll do instead it’s just wait for the series to end and then binge watch the whole thing in one shot or it as many shots as I feel, I want to any point in time </p> <p>These shows that portion out the episodes in very small bits or throwbacks to the way TV used to work and it’s too controlling. I like the ability to program my entertainment rather than have a program for me. That’s all I can think about when I read their reviews and I think about what comes next. Well, I would like to know and I don’t wanna wait until next Friday. </p> <p>Another show that got this treatment is Ken Burns upcoming story of the American Revolution. He did a huge press tour and they had all seen the entire series and that’s what they were talking about. It’s so obscene, the first moment I heard that the first reviewer doing the interview had watched the whole damn series I turned it off and I realized I don’t like any of these people. I don’t like the reviewers. I don’t like the people to do the shows. I don’t like the fact that they think there’s a line and they belong on one side and I belong on the other side</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2025 09:56:30 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/08/ill-wait-till-all-the-episodes-are-out/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/08/ill-wait-till-all-the-episodes-are-out/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I don’t like it when reviewers get seven episodes of a new series and the regular folk, like me, are stuck with the first episode only. I won’t read their reviews because they’re writing about something that I don’t know anything about and they try to avoid the spoilers and all I can think about is why can’t I see all of the episodes at once. That’s the effect of Pluribus, which is a highly anticipated show by Vince Gilligan the show runner of better call Saul and breaking bad. I know that if I go to Pirates Bay, I can probably get all of the seven episodes but I think what I’ll do instead it’s just wait for the series to end and then binge watch the whole thing in one shot or it as many shots as I feel, I want to any point in time These shows that portion out the episodes in very small bits or throwbacks to the way TV used to work and it’s too controlling. I like the ability to program my entertainment rather than have a program for me. That’s all I can think about when I read their reviews and I think about what comes next. Well, I would like to know and I don’t wanna wait until next Friday. Another show that got this treatment is Ken Burns upcoming story of the American Revolution. He did a huge press tour and they had all seen the entire series and that’s what they were talking about. It’s so obscene, the first moment I heard that the first reviewer doing the interview had watched the whole damn series I turned it off and I realized I don’t like any of these people. I don’t like the reviewers. I don’t like the people to do the shows. I don’t like the fact that they think there’s a line and they belong on one side and I belong on the other side</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2698</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Gmail AI gets even more intrusive</title> | |
| <description><p>Gmail doesn't just offer to write your emails for you, they actually do it, and it's up to you to delete the text it wrote.</p> <p>Hard to make a screen shot to demo without revealing personal info. That's how awful this thing is. </p> <p>It reeks of desperation.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2025 17:02:06 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/07/gmail-ai-gets-even-more-intrusive/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/07/gmail-ai-gets-even-more-intrusive/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>Gmail doesn't just offer to write your emails for you, they actually do it, and it's up to you to delete the text it wrote. Hard to make a screen shot to demo without revealing personal info. That's how awful this thing is. It reeks of desperation.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2674</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Mullenweg and Borthwick</title> | |
| <description><p>I drove down to NYC to see a fireside chat with Matt Mullenweg and John Borthwick of Betaworks. I know both these guys, did a project with Borthwick that became Bit.ly, had higher hopes for it, but it didn't happen . Had a chance to get my picture taken with Matt and it was good to get a short chat in there. And I've known Matt since he was a 17-year-old boy wonder of Silicon Valley. He and I mostly see eye to eye on what the web is. And now that they're starting we'll find out for sure what their idea of the web in 2025 is. </p> <p>From the intro it sounds like the focus will be on AI.</p> <p><a href="https://werd.io/">Ben Werdmuller</a> is sitting next to me. </p> <p>The audio is terrible. We can make out what Matt is saying, but Borthwick is hard to figure out what he's saying.</p> <p>Acoustics of this room not great, and there are a lot of people who are having a cocktail party because the room is so big. There might be some useful tech, like having it live streamed so people can listen on headphones. </p> <p>ChatGPT is simulated intelligence. It's designed to fooling you into thinking it's thinking but it's not. When you really try to solve problems with your intelligence that's when you learn it's not even close to thinking.</p> <p>Matt's on a 41 day blogging streak. I don't even know how long its been since I didn't post anything on my blog. Honestly I'm not sure my nightly email app would handle no posts on my blog. That probably means I haven't missed a day since May 2017.</p> <p>AI changed the basic capabilities of computers. Some technologies will do fine in the new world, like SQL databases. But the stuff we do -- that's going to change radically. Will anything be left? No one knows, imho. Best thing we can do is keep going on the path we were on, and look for ways to involve AI tech in a way that will bring the power of AI to writers.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Wed, 05 Nov 2025 23:05:36 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/05/mullenweg-and-borthwick/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/05/mullenweg-and-borthwick/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I drove down to NYC to see a fireside chat with Matt Mullenweg and John Borthwick of Betaworks. I know both these guys, did a project with Borthwick that became Bit.ly, had higher hopes for it, but it didn't happen . Had a chance to get my picture taken with Matt and it was good to get a short chat in there. And I've known Matt since he was a 17-year-old boy wonder of Silicon Valley. He and I mostly see eye to eye on what the web is. And now that they're starting we'll find out for sure what their idea of the web in 2025 is. From the intro it sounds like the focus will be on AI. [Ben Werdmuller](https://werd.io/) is sitting next to me. The audio is terrible. We can make out what Matt is saying, but Borthwick is hard to figure out what he's saying. Acoustics of this room not great, and there are a lot of people who are having a cocktail party because the room is so big. There might be some useful tech, like having it live streamed so people can listen on headphones. ChatGPT is simulated intelligence. It's designed to fooling you into thinking it's thinking but it's not. When you really try to solve problems with your intelligence that's when you learn it's not even close to thinking. Matt's on a 41 day blogging streak. I don't even know how long its been since I didn't post anything on my blog. Honestly I'm not sure my nightly email app would handle no posts on my blog. That probably means I haven't missed a day since May 2017. AI changed the basic capabilities of computers. Some technologies will do fine in the new world, like SQL databases. But the stuff we do -- that's going to change radically. Will anything be left? No one knows, imho. Best thing we can do is keep going on the path we were on, and look for ways to involve AI tech in a way that will bring the power of AI to writers.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2657</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>News sockets to WordPress plug-in possible</title> | |
| <description><p>To people who do WordPress plug-ins -- have a look at the <a href="https://github.com/scripting/feedlandSocket">feedlandSocket repo</a>. It sends notifications of news items to any subscriber, via websockets. </p> <p>News items are simple JSON, and contain information in the feed item, and system info like id and when it was received. </p> <p>This makes it easy to stream news to a plug-in running in a WordPress site, that can then do anything with the news they like. It's incredibly simple to use, and we provide all the JavaScript code you need to embed in a browser-based app. </p> <p>Here's a <a href="https://github.com/scripting/feedlandSocket/issues/2">place</a> where you can ask questions.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Wed, 05 Nov 2025 13:17:55 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/05/feedland-news-sockets-to-wordpress-plug-in-possible/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/05/feedland-news-sockets-to-wordpress-plug-in-possible/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>To people who do WordPress plug-ins -- have a look at the [feedlandSocket repo](https://github.com/scripting/feedlandSocket). It sends notifications of news items to any subscriber, via websockets. News items are simple JSON, and contain information in the feed item, and system info like id and when it was received. This makes it easy to stream news to a plug-in running in a WordPress site, that can then do anything with the news they like. It's incredibly simple to use, and we provide all the JavaScript code you need to embed in a browser-based app. Here's a [place](https://github.com/scripting/feedlandSocket/issues/2) where you can ask questions.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2650</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Groceries expensive, voting free</title> | |
| <description><p>I went grocery shopping and it looks like the prices have gone up a lot just in the last week. A cart of groceries that is usually about $70 is now $100. I also voted, the price has stayed the same, $0, and you get a nice sticker, and can chat with the lady poll keepers.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Tue, 04 Nov 2025 18:46:50 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/04/groceries-expensive-voting-free/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/04/groceries-expensive-voting-free/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I went grocery shopping and it looks like the prices have gone up a lot just in the last week. A cart of groceries that is usually about $70 is now $100. I also voted, the price has stayed the same, $0, and you get a nice sticker, and can chat with the lady poll keepers.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2641</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Don't you worry bout a ting</title> | |
| <description><p>I just added a feature that gives you a constant readout of what's in the current "draft" record. </p> <p>We have a way to view it in WordLand, but this is different, it's always visible. </p> <p>Turns out this is a great aid in seeing how the software functions as you do things. Wish I had had this when I was initially debugging the WordLand editor. </p> <p>I need a way to set the title. Right now there is no UI for that. </p> <p>The plan here is to make a bare-bones editor, just to show how to hook up any editor to wpIdentity.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Mon, 03 Nov 2025 19:54:11 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/03/dont-you-worry-bout-a-thing-2/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/03/dont-you-worry-bout-a-thing-2/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I just added a feature that gives you a constant readout of what's in the current "draft" record. We have a way to view it in WordLand, but this is different, it's always visible. Turns out this is a great aid in seeing how the software functions as you do things. Wish I had had this when I was initially debugging the WordLand editor. I need a way to set the title. Right now there is no UI for that. The plan here is to make a bare-bones editor, just to show how to hook up any editor to wpIdentity.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2636</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>In the spirit of Marv Throneberry</title> | |
| <description><p>I never got the heartbreak part of baseball, probably because my team began as a joke, which I think is a healthy way to feel about a baseball team. That was in 1962, when players made a few thousand dollars a year to play a game we’d all be happy to play for free. </p> <p>When the Mets made the World Series in 2015 I was thrilled. I knew we wouldn’t win from the first pitch of game 1 of the World Series with the Kansas City Royals. An inside-the-park home run, the rarest thing in sport. What that said was this run is over. Enjoy the mystery. Yours truly, God.</p> <p>The Royals. What a stupid name for a baseball team. Named that way so that no one who is beaten by them fails to see the humor in the hand of god who deigned this f’d up farce of a fiasco.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Mon, 03 Nov 2025 17:32:21 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/03/in-the-spirit-of-marv-throneberry/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/03/in-the-spirit-of-marv-throneberry/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I never got the heartbreak part of baseball, probably because my team began as a joke, which I think is a healthy way to feel about a baseball team. That was in 1962, when players made a few thousand dollars a year to play a game we’d all be happy to play for free. When the Mets made the World Series in 2015 I was thrilled. I knew we wouldn’t win from the first pitch of game 1 of the World Series with the Kansas City Royals. An inside-the-park home run, the rarest thing in sport. What that said was this run is over. Enjoy the mystery. Yours truly, God. The Royals. What a stupid name for a baseball team. Named that way so that no one who is beaten by them fails to see the humor in the hand of god who deigned this f’d up farce of a fiasco.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2634</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Demo app coming for wpIdentity</title> | |
| <description><p>This last week I've been working on a bare-bones demo app for developers that shows them how to adapt any editor to work alongside WordLand. My hope this is the last time this level of glue is built. It's boring stuff, what you build on top is what's exciting, and what's even more interesting is the interop <em>we</em> will build! The fact that all our editors will work on the exact same data for the users. This is something we've never been able to do on the web, amazingly. </p> <p>I'm 99% sure that wpIdentity can run on the VIP network, so it can scale. We can be in business with this quickly. </p> <p>I'm writing this post in that bare-bones editor. Let's see if it works. 🙃 </p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Mon, 03 Nov 2025 16:04:41 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/03/2627/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/03/2627/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>This last week I've been working on a bare-bones demo app for developers that shows them how to adapt any editor to work alongside WordLand. My hope this is the last time this level of glue is built. It's boring stuff, what you build on top is what's exciting, and what's even more interesting is the interop *we* will build! The fact that all our editors will work on the exact same data for the users. This is something we've never been able to do on the web, amazingly. I'm 99% sure that wpIdentity can run on the VIP network, so it can scale. We can be in business with this quickly. I'm writing this post in that bare-bones editor. Let's see if it works. 🙃 </source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2627</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>What I did on my trip to Canada, part 1</title> | |
| <description><p>I presented <a href="https://wordland.social/">WordLand</a> for the first time publicly, the new one with a timeline, so it more clearly shows how we can build a beautiful social network just from open formats and protocols. </p> <p> No user lock-in, every part replaceable, and open to developers to add functionality without having to reimplement the whole thing. These are all the things I think that have stood in the way of innovation in the web for many years. </p> <p>A social network that starts out with no centralization and is open in every sense has a much better chance of being decentralized than one that starts out centralized and swears they're going to stop doing that -- someday, fingers crossed, etc.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Sun, 19 Oct 2025 13:36:14 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/19/what-i-did-on-my-trip-to-canada-part-1/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/19/what-i-did-on-my-trip-to-canada-part-1/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I presented [WordLand](https://wordland.social/) for the first time publicly, the new one with a timeline, so it more clearly shows how we can build a beautiful social network just from open formats and protocols. No user lock-in, every part replaceable, and open to developers to add functionality without having to reimplement the whole thing. These are all the things I think that have stood in the way of innovation in the web for many years. A social network that starts out with no centralization and is open in every sense has a much better chance of being decentralized than one that starts out centralized and swears they're going to stop doing that -- someday, fingers crossed, etc.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2583</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <description><p>I wanted to show <a href="https://www.crunchbase.com/person/jake-savin">Jake Savin</a>, an old school UserLand dev, how I edit my JavaScript code projects in "Frontier". This is the <a href="https://github.com/scripting/feedland/blob/main/database/source.opml">source.opml</a> file for the <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/feedlanddatabase">feedlanddatabase</a> package, <a href="https://drummer.land/?url=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/scripting/feedland/refs/heads/main/database/source.opml">viewed</a> in my outliner, <a href="https://drummer.land/">Drummer</a>.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Sun, 02 Nov 2025 14:05:13 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/02/2623/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/11/02/2623/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I wanted to show [Jake Savin](https://www.crunchbase.com/person/jake-savin), an old school UserLand dev, how I edit my JavaScript code projects in "Frontier". This is the [source.opml](https://github.com/scripting/feedland/blob/main/database/source.opml) file for the [feedlanddatabase](https://www.npmjs.com/package/feedlanddatabase) package, [viewed](https://drummer.land/?url=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/scripting/feedland/refs/heads/main/database/source.opml) in my outliner, [Drummer](https://drummer.land/).</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2623</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Markdown support coming in NetNewsWire</title> | |
| <description><p>I just got word from Brent that the next release of NetNewsWire will have support for the source:markdown element.</p> <p>This will help the transition to using Markdown as a fully-supported format for RSS. </p> <p>NNW is the first mainstream product to support it, as far as I know.</p> <p>This site has an <a href="https://wordland.dev/scripting/237777565/rss.xml">RSS feed</a> that contains source:markdown elements.</p> <p>Every WordLand-written WordPress post has one of these feeds, so there <em>is</em> an official way to publish content that NNW will display via Markdown. Just sign on to WordLand and start writing. There is a link to the special RSS feed in the popup menu in the editor.</p> <p>I started a <a href="https://github.com/scripting/Scripting-News/issues/334">thread</a> on GitHub to answer questions, etc.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Thu, 30 Oct 2025 17:31:47 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/30/markdown-support-coming-in-netnewswire/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/30/markdown-support-coming-in-netnewswire/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I just got word from Brent that the next release of NetNewsWire will have support for the source:markdown element. This will help the transition to using Markdown as a fully-supported format for RSS. NNW is the first mainstream product to support it, as far as I know. This site has an [RSS feed](https://wordland.dev/scripting/237777565/rss.xml) that contains source:markdown elements. Every WordLand-written WordPress post has one of these feeds, so there _is_ an official way to publish content that NNW will display via Markdown. Just sign on to WordLand and start writing. There is a link to the special RSS feed in the popup menu in the editor. I started a [thread](https://github.com/scripting/Scripting-News/issues/334) on GitHub to answer questions, etc.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2616</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>WordPress and AI</title> | |
| <description><p>I see that the <a href="https://wordpress.org/news/2025/05/announcing-the-formation-of-the-wordpress-ai-team/">WordPress world</a> is getting interested in adding AI features. </p> <p>I had some <a href="http://scripting.com/2024/09/28/132152.html">ideas</a> a <a href="http://scripting.com/2025/07/12/134525.html">few</a> <a href="http://scripting.com/2025/03/20/151234.html">years</a> <a href="http://scripting.com/2023/05/15.html">ago</a>, about how I would like AI to be hooked up to blogging, and the ideas have developed a bit in the years since. </p> <p>As a writer I want most is every bit of writing I’ve published turned into any kind of book I want at any time. </p> <p>I think it’s a great time to invest in new ideas for writers. </p> <p> I have pretty good <a href="https://daytona.scripting.com/search?q=%22still%20diggin%22">search</a> on my blog, but so much more is possible. </p> <p>An example of a book lurking in the archive of my blog. </p> <blockquote> <p><em>A user’s guide to FeedLand.</em> </p> </blockquote> <p>Knowing the AI would pull a users manual together on command, I’d feel more comfortable writing about it on my blog. As it is there’s a lot of good info between other blog posts. </p> <p>Imagine a series of book types you could ask your AI friend to build for you from your own writing. </p> <p>Eventually all user's guides will be assembled by AI. In the case of software products it should have already happened, though I'm just as behind the curve as everyone else is in this regard. </p> <p> And of course the first docs to be produced that way would be <em>A user's guide to WordPress.</em></p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Sat, 25 Oct 2025 15:05:02 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/25/wordpress-and-ai/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/25/wordpress-and-ai/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I see that the [WordPress world](https://wordpress.org/news/2025/05/announcing-the-formation-of-the-wordpress-ai-team/) is getting interested in adding AI features. I had some [ideas](http://scripting.com/2024/09/28/132152.html) a [few](http://scripting.com/2025/07/12/134525.html) [years](http://scripting.com/2025/03/20/151234.html) [ago](http://scripting.com/2023/05/15.html), about how I would like AI to be hooked up to blogging, and the ideas have developed a bit in the years since. As a writer I want most is every bit of writing I’ve published turned into any kind of book I want at any time. I think it’s a great time to invest in new ideas for writers. I have pretty good [search](https://daytona.scripting.com/search?q=%22still%20diggin%22) on my blog, but so much more is possible. An example of a book lurking in the archive of my blog. > _A user’s guide to FeedLand._ Knowing the AI would pull a users manual together on command, I’d feel more comfortable writing about it on my blog. As it is there’s a lot of good info between other blog posts. Imagine a series of book types you could ask your AI friend to build for you from your own writing. Eventually all user's guides will be assembled by AI. In the case of software products it should have already happened, though I'm just as behind the curve as everyone else is in this regard. And of course the first docs to be produced that way would be _A user's guide to WordPress._</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2609</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>wpIdentity work to warm up</title> | |
| <description><p>As a warmup project, I've updated the home page of the wpidentity package, so that it's clear that it's much more than identity. </p> <p>Did the final editing on the api2.js file -- so that all the code is separated from the assignment to the wordpress object.</p> <p>Next up I want to generate a set of docs for the function. I've tried it with ChatGPT before and it seemed to do a pretty good job, this time I'll look more closely.</p> <p>I want to see if I can quickly write a "hello world" scale editor.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Wed, 22 Oct 2025 14:53:02 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/22/wpidentity-work-to-warm-up/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/22/wpidentity-work-to-warm-up/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>As a warmup project, I've updated the home page of the wpidentity package, so that it's clear that it's much more than identity. Did the final editing on the api2.js file -- so that all the code is separated from the assignment to the wordpress object. Next up I want to generate a set of docs for the function. I've tried it with ChatGPT before and it seemed to do a pretty good job, this time I'll look more closely. I want to see if I can quickly write a "hello world" scale editor.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2607</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Reading lists in FeedLand via Gemini</title> | |
| <description><p><em>Note: Generated by Gemini, better docs than anything we had.</em> </p> <p>In FeedLand, a reading list is a list of feeds you can subscribe to as a group. </p> <p>You can subscribe to a reading list by finding its URL and entering it in the "Subscribe to reading lists" tool within FeedLand. When the author of the reading list adds or removes a feed, all subscribers are automatically updated, which is a convenient way to stay current with a curated collection of content. </p> <h4>How to use a reading list</h4> <ol> <li>Find the reading list URL: The reading list will have a unique URL, often shared by the author or influencer.</li> <li>Subscribe in FeedLand: Go to your instance of FeedLand and look for a tool like "Subscribe to reading lists."</li> <li>Enter the URL: Paste the URL of the reading list into the provided field.</li> <li>Stay updated: FeedLand will automatically add the feeds from the list to your subscriptions. You will be notified when the list changes, and your subscriptions will be updated accordingly. </li> </ol> <h4>Key features</h4> <p>• Curated content: Reading lists allow users to get a curated collection of feeds from a single source, making it easy to discover new content. </p> <p> • Automatic updates: When the author of a reading list adds or removes a feed, all subscribers are automatically updated. • Duplicate handling: FeedLand has a feature to prevent a feed from appearing more than once in your list, even if it is both directly subscribed to and part of a reading list.</p> <p>To learn more about the concept of reading lists in FeedLand, you can read this article from FeedLand blog (https://feedland.blog/page/3/) that explains the feature in more detail. You can also explore the FeedLand API documentation on the FeedLand website (https://feedland.blog/2023/11/) to learn how to interact with reading lists programmatically.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Sun, 19 Oct 2025 15:49:46 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/19/reading-lists-in-feedland-via-gemini/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/19/reading-lists-in-feedland-via-gemini/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>_Note: Generated by Gemini, better docs than anything we had._ In FeedLand, a reading list is a list of feeds you can subscribe to as a group. You can subscribe to a reading list by finding its URL and entering it in the "Subscribe to reading lists" tool within FeedLand. When the author of the reading list adds or removes a feed, all subscribers are automatically updated, which is a convenient way to stay current with a curated collection of content. #### How to use a reading list 1. Find the reading list URL: The reading list will have a unique URL, often shared by the author or influencer. 2. Subscribe in FeedLand: Go to your instance of FeedLand and look for a tool like "Subscribe to reading lists." 3. Enter the URL: Paste the URL of the reading list into the provided field. 4. Stay updated: FeedLand will automatically add the feeds from the list to your subscriptions. You will be notified when the list changes, and your subscriptions will be updated accordingly. #### Key features • Curated content: Reading lists allow users to get a curated collection of feeds from a single source, making it easy to discover new content. • Automatic updates: When the author of a reading list adds or removes a feed, all subscribers are automatically updated. • Duplicate handling: FeedLand has a feature to prevent a feed from appearing more than once in your list, even if it is both directly subscribed to and part of a reading list. To learn more about the concept of reading lists in FeedLand, you can read this article from FeedLand blog (https://feedland.blog/page/3/) that explains the feature in more detail. You can also explore the FeedLand API documentation on the FeedLand website (https://feedland.blog/2023/11/) to learn how to interact with reading lists programmatically.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2591</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Matt Mullenweg photo at WordCamp Canada</title> | |
| <description><p>I'm back at <a href="https://canada.wordcamp.org/2025/">WordCamp</a> in a big room <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Mullenweg">Matt Mullenweg</a> to answer questions for the people here. Yesterday's presentation went really well, lots of smart people really interested, fantastic discussion after. A very nice web culture. I went with three slides to get started, and then talked, demo'd, answered questions, and listened to ideas. Told a few jokes. Got a few laughs. It got the job done, help feed the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word-of-mouth_marketing">word of mouth</a> on <a href="https://wordland.social/">WordLand</a>.</p> <p><img src="https://daveverse.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/matt.jpg" alt="" title="" /></p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Fri, 17 Oct 2025 14:23:11 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/17/2577/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/17/2577/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I'm back at [WordCamp](https://canada.wordcamp.org/2025/) in a big room [Matt Mullenweg](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Mullenweg) to answer questions for the people here. Yesterday's presentation went really well, lots of smart people really interested, fantastic discussion after. A very nice web culture. I went with three slides to get started, and then talked, demo'd, answered questions, and listened to ideas. Told a few jokes. Got a few laughs. It got the job done, help feed the [word of mouth](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word-of-mouth_marketing) on [WordLand](https://wordland.social/). </source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2577</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Evan will be excited</title> | |
| <description><p>This is a demo of WordLand at the WCEH.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Thu, 16 Oct 2025 15:57:30 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/16/evan-will-be-excited/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/16/evan-will-be-excited/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>This is a demo of WordLand at the WCEH.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2569</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Arrived in Ottawa</title> | |
| <description><p>Nice easy drive until I got into the city. I forgot that I live in the mountains and never have to deal with city traffic in my usual daily thing. White knuckles all the way. Checked in to the hotel. It's all good. Tired thought.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2025 21:55:13 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/15/arrived-in-ottawa/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/15/arrived-in-ottawa/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>Nice easy drive until I got into the city. I forgot that I live in the mountains and never have to deal with city traffic in my usual daily thing. White knuckles all the way. Checked in to the hotel. It's all good. Tired thought.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2564</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Why did podcasting work?</title> | |
| <description><p>My theory is that we had..</p> <ul> <li><p>An indisputable definition of audio. (MP3.)</p></li> <li><p>A simple format for programming. (RSS.)</p></li> <li><p>A popular mobile device for listening. (iPod.)</p></li> </ul> <p>A million flowers bloomed. (Podcast clients.)</p> <p>Impossible to siloize. (They tried.)</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Wed, 15 Oct 2025 06:54:54 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/15/why-did-podcasting-work/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/15/why-did-podcasting-work/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>My theory is that we had.. * An indisputable definition of audio. (MP3.) * A simple format for programming. (RSS.) * A popular mobile device for listening. (iPod.) A million flowers bloomed. (Podcast clients.) Impossible to siloize. (They tried.)</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2558</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Times I've been ambushed at conferences</title> | |
| <description><p>Well, I think I'm done. I've got the outline for the slides complete. I can't possibly talk about all the stuff that's in the slides. Once I leave tomorrow I think perhaps I'll post a link for the slides and maybe offer a place to comment. Maybe. </p> <p>I get very nervous about these things and then remember when I've prepared as much as I have for this, the talk goes quickly and people generally are nice, though I've been ambushed a few memorable times. Let's see -- Austin, Cambridge, San Francisco and Nashville come to mind. ;-)</p> <p>In Austin it was because I was privileged. I was being honored because it was the 25th year of my blog, and I was one of the keynoters. I told the promoter his people wouldn't like me, and then I forgot I said it when it happened. I was stuck, I didn't want to get into a public argument with anyone. (Had I wanted to rebut, I would have said everyone in this room is privileged, just look around at how well fed and educated everyone is. We all flew in here. We live in a rich country where we are the elite of the elite. Now STFU, in my dreams.) </p> <p>There have been times when I welcomed an argument...</p> <p>In San Francisco, I was invited to lead a panel from the music industry about how great Napster was. This was probably in 2000 or 2001 when Napster was at its peak. It was an ambush. All the panelists made me the issue, and then they voted to kick me off the stage. I stayed there and waited until they exhausted their rage, and then asked them a question about music and Napster. Acted like nothing had happened. I had earned my place there, I was a very early industry adopter of Napster. I loved what it did for us. Imagine until then you either had to buy an album to listen to music, build a collection, or wait until it was played on the radio. (What is radio? Kind of an early form of podcasting.) People were talking about music in supermarkets and airports. This could not be stopped, I was sure of it, and they were acting like babies. I stood up and prevailed.</p> <p>In Nashville, I was invited to be a sort of keynoter for a conference that was patterned after BloggerCon. I did not organize it, but I led a session, which was attended by a famous right wing blogger who I had invited to the Harvard BloggerCon. He brought a bunch of his friends, and they each said no one was listening to them but we were listening to them. I eventually sat down and let them have a session dominated by a few people repeating themselves. It was boring. </p> <p>Finally I was set up by the promoters of a CMS conference which Berkman hosted at Harvard. I was the master of ceremonies. No one told me that one of my most virulent trolls was there, and when he got up to rage at me I asked him to sit down, but Charlie Nesson who was the senior educator there, and kind of naive about internet trolls, said he should speak his mind. I should have walked out at that point. I knew what was coming. It really shook me. </p> <p>In Nashville a columnist in the local paper who said I caused the riot, btw. I swear to god I always take my discussion leader role seriously.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2025 15:24:34 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/14/times-ive-been-ambushed-at-conferences/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/14/times-ive-been-ambushed-at-conferences/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>Well, I think I'm done. I've got the outline for the slides complete. I can't possibly talk about all the stuff that's in the slides. Once I leave tomorrow I think perhaps I'll post a link for the slides and maybe offer a place to comment. Maybe. I get very nervous about these things and then remember when I've prepared as much as I have for this, the talk goes quickly and people generally are nice, though I've been ambushed a few memorable times. Let's see -- Austin, Cambridge, San Francisco and Nashville come to mind. ;-) In Austin it was because I was privileged. I was being honored because it was the 25th year of my blog, and I was one of the keynoters. I told the promoter his people wouldn't like me, and then I forgot I said it when it happened. I was stuck, I didn't want to get into a public argument with anyone. (Had I wanted to rebut, I would have said everyone in this room is privileged, just look around at how well fed and educated everyone is. We all flew in here. We live in a rich country where we are the elite of the elite. Now STFU, in my dreams.) There have been times when I welcomed an argument... In San Francisco, I was invited to lead a panel from the music industry about how great Napster was. This was probably in 2000 or 2001 when Napster was at its peak. It was an ambush. All the panelists made me the issue, and then they voted to kick me off the stage. I stayed there and waited until they exhausted their rage, and then asked them a question about music and Napster. Acted like nothing had happened. I had earned my place there, I was a very early industry adopter of Napster. I loved what it did for us. Imagine until then you either had to buy an album to listen to music, build a collection, or wait until it was played on the radio. (What is radio? Kind of an early form of podcasting.) People were talking about music in supermarkets and airports. This could not be stopped, I was sure of it, and they were acting like babies. I stood up and prevailed. In Nashville, I was invited to be a sort of keynoter for a conference that was patterned after BloggerCon. I did not organize it, but I led a session, which was attended by a famous right wing blogger who I had invited to the Harvard BloggerCon. He brought a bunch of his friends, and they each said no one was listening to them but we were listening to them. I eventually sat down and let them have a session dominated by a few people repeating themselves. It was boring. Finally I was set up by the promoters of a CMS conference which Berkman hosted at Harvard. I was the master of ceremonies. No one told me that one of my most virulent trolls was there, and when he got up to rage at me I asked him to sit down, but Charlie Nesson who was the senior educator there, and kind of naive about internet trolls, said he should speak his mind. I should have walked out at that point. I knew what was coming. It really shook me. In Nashville a columnist in the local paper who said I caused the riot, btw. I swear to god I always take my discussion leader role seriously.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2554</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>How to go fullscreen in Chrome on Mac</title> | |
| <description><p>I finally figured out how to make presentations full screen on the Mac. </p> <p>I'm using Chrome to display the presentation. </p> <ol> <li><p>In Chrome's View menu turn off the first three options.</p></li> <li><p>Choose Enter full screen.</p></li> <li><p>Voila -- full screen!</p></li> <li><p>Whew.</p></li> </ol> <p>BTW, neither Claude.ai or ChatGPT knew that Chrome has all the functionality needed to do this. The commands were in the same menu as the one command the both insisted would do it. So this human beat them both on something they really should’ve been much better at.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Tue, 14 Oct 2025 00:07:57 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/13/how-to-go-fullscreen-in-chrome-on-mac/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/13/how-to-go-fullscreen-in-chrome-on-mac/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>I finally figured out how to make presentations full screen on the Mac. I'm using Chrome to display the presentation. 1. In Chrome's View menu turn off the first three options. 2. Choose Enter full screen. 3. Voila -- full screen! 4. Whew. BTW, neither Claude.ai or ChatGPT knew that Chrome has all the functionality needed to do this. The commands were in the same menu as the one command the both insisted would do it. So this human beat them both on something they really should’ve been much better at.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2548</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Zeroing in on the editor</title> | |
| <description><p>Going through quick hits on my list, not taking chances of breaking core stuff.</p> <p>I want a way to zero in on the editor and hide the timeline, so you can focus just on editing. </p> <p>I don't think I have the answer yet, but I do have a way of trying the idea out. </p> <p>A new command in the main menu entitled <em>Focus on editor.</em></p> <p>Not a great command name either. But we'll iterate to the answer.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2025 14:40:02 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/13/zeroing-in-on-the-editor/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/13/zeroing-in-on-the-editor/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>Going through quick hits on my list, not taking chances of breaking core stuff. I want a way to zero in on the editor and hide the timeline, so you can focus just on editing. I don't think I have the answer yet, but I do have a way of trying the idea out. A new command in the main menu entitled _Focus on editor._ Not a great command name either. But we'll iterate to the answer.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2539</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Closing editor after publish pref</title> | |
| <description><p>Added a setting to close the editor after you publish. </p> <p>This is useful if you do a lot of linkblogging. Typically you don't edit the posts, because they go to systems that don't allow updates.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2025 14:00:26 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/13/closing-editor-after-publish-pref/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/13/closing-editor-after-publish-pref/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>Added a setting to close the editor after you publish. This is useful if you do a lot of linkblogging. Typically you don't edit the posts, because they go to systems that don't allow updates.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2537</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| <item> | |
| <title>Peace in our time? Hmm far from it.</title> | |
| <description><p>Just listened to NPR news and they're quoting people basting Trump with effusive praise for whatever just happened in Gaza and Israel. Well I haven't forgotten that Trump is deploying the military to Portland, Chicago and DC and probably everywhere else before too long. That he's threatened Canada's independence. He says Antifa is his enemy which (as a math major) I am happy to tell you means that he is the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascism">fa</a> in Antifa. He admits it. Thanks for that Uncle Trump.</p> <p>I'd also like to add that before you heap that much praise on Trump, remember that Netanyahu is a member of the Republican Party (yes I know officially he's part of Likud, but I've been paying attention to how little respect he had for Obama and Biden, he even went over Obama's head and addressed Congress on his own, which put him on my permanent shit list, What happened here is that Trump gave him an order as he does to other members of the Republican Party. They don't discuss these things, they just do them, because they are scared shitless of Trump and Stephen Miller. </p> <p>One more thing, the history of the US and Israel is a long one, and there have been plenty of big moments when everyone said peace has finally come to the region, only to find out soon after that it hadn't. It's like celebrating your victory in the World Series when you haven't even made the playoffs yet. Be careful about declaring victory. In this case the odds are not good. </p> <p>NPR is, I guess, hoping to not get sent to the gulag when Trump decides it's time to clean up journalism in the US. I suppose we're all thinking that way to a certain extent, but that's also not a winning strategy imho.</p></description> | |
| <pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2025 12:20:22 GMT</pubDate> | |
| <link>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/13/peace-in-our-time-hmm-far-from-it/</link> | |
| <guid>https://daveverse.org/2025/10/13/peace-in-our-time-hmm-far-from-it/</guid> | |
| <source:markdown>Just listened to NPR news and they're quoting people basting Trump with effusive praise for whatever just happened in Gaza and Israel. Well I haven't forgotten that Trump is deploying the military to Portland, Chicago and DC and probably everywhere else before too long. That he's threatened Canada's independence. He says Antifa is his enemy which (as a math major) I am happy to tell you means that he is the [fa](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascism) in Antifa. He admits it. Thanks for that Uncle Trump. I'd also like to add that before you heap that much praise on Trump, remember that Netanyahu is a member of the Republican Party (yes I know officially he's part of Likud, but I've been paying attention to how little respect he had for Obama and Biden, he even went over Obama's head and addressed Congress on his own, which put him on my permanent shit list, What happened here is that Trump gave him an order as he does to other members of the Republican Party. They don't discuss these things, they just do them, because they are scared shitless of Trump and Stephen Miller. One more thing, the history of the US and Israel is a long one, and there have been plenty of big moments when everyone said peace has finally come to the region, only to find out soon after that it hadn't. It's like celebrating your victory in the World Series when you haven't even made the playoffs yet. Be careful about declaring victory. In this case the odds are not good. NPR is, I guess, hoping to not get sent to the gulag when Trump decides it's time to clean up journalism in the US. I suppose we're all thinking that way to a certain extent, but that's also not a winning strategy imho.</source:markdown> | |
| <post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">2531</post-id> | |
| </item> | |
| </channel> | |
| </rss> |
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment