Manton Reece
About Photos Videos Archive 30 days 90 parks Reading Search Also on Micro.blog
  • I use an old Pixel 4 for testing Android. I really like the buttons: only a power button and up/down volume. All the buttons are on one side. Not sure how I would redesign the iPhone buttons, but I don’t think they’re quite right.

    → 1:17 PM, Jul 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Reevaluating the Twitter / X API

    A month ago I wondered out loud if it was time to add Twitter cross-posting back to Micro.blog. After a lot of thought and feedback from users, I think yes. The goal has always been to help people publish on their own domain first, regardless of where they also choose to share their posts.

    While I hoped X would fade away, it hasn’t, and from an IndieWeb perspective there isn’t a major difference between many of the closed silos: X, LinkedIn, YouTube, Threads. Once you move beyond open protocols, every major social platform asks users to trust how it uses their data and the decisions of the company’s leadership.

    The fediverse support in Threads hasn’t panned out the way we had hoped either. I don’t think Meta’s heart is in it. Their posting API is still private and requires jumping through hoops for approval. Yet we still support it. The web is better off with even partial ActivityPub support in Threads, and connecting to Threads via POSSE, rather than nothing.

    I’m under no illusion that X is going to open their API. They have recently added MCP, which is interesting, but also not very relevant to Micro.blog.

    In reevaluating support for X, there are two competing principles:

    • We support open APIs and protocols, so why give attention to a closed silo? X’s leadership is also erratic and divisive.
    • We want more people to start posting to their own blog. Making it easier to cross-post from blog to closed silo actually expands indie blogging.

    If there’s a conflict in principles, we should do what helps people blog. We can’t control whether X will succeed or fail, just as the principled statement I made when I quit Twitter in 2012 made little difference. Micro.blog doesn’t “support” Elon Musk any more than we support Mark Zuckerberg. We support users who want to blog and reach an audience on other platforms.

    Finally, there is the cost. X’s API is no longer free. It is more affordable now, though, and reasonable for us to support with a Micro.blog Premium $10 subscription. It won’t be available at the standard $5 subscription.

    I’m planning to re-enable X support this week. I don’t love doing it, but on balance it seems right to make people’s blogs even more useful.

    → 12:47 PM, Jul 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • There is always going to be some water spilling, might as well water the plant with it! Great idea at Lazarus on Airport. ☕️

    A small green potted plant is placed on the floor next to a water dispenser with a row of clear plastic cups nearby.
    → 10:30 AM, Jul 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Deployed some fixes and new settings for Mastodon this morning. Always feels good to make things just a little better. 🎉

    → 10:05 AM, Jul 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Satya Nadella writes on his blog about what we potentially give to models for training. He focuses mostly on the enterprise, which I don’t care much about, but this part does describe a real tension of commercial models:

    While the great innovation that comes from model providers having fair use rights to train models on public data is needed, I find it ironic that the status quo is to then turn around and impose restrictive terms on distillation, and to reserve the right to learn from customer usage and interaction data. If learning flows in only one direction, economic value converges toward the owners of the learning infrastructure rather than the creators of the knowledge itself.

    I think this is something that both AI fans and skeptics could agree on.

    → 9:30 AM, Jul 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Good article today from Ben Thompson about Apple vs. OpenAI:

    AI is changing the world, and Apple’s contribution is to deliver two year-old technology differentiated by exclusive access to data it won’t share. It certainly has no interest in delivering on a new AI-driven paradigm that endangers its iPhone franchise in any way; any of its employees who wish to do exactly that, meanwhile, are being told loud and clear that Apple doesn’t just think it owns your laptop, but also your mind and knowledge.

    → 8:54 AM, Jul 13
    Also on Bluesky
  • Simon Willison blogs about how Anthropic keeps extending Fable access, presumably because too many people would cancel their subscriptions and use GPT-5.6 instead:

    At this point I think Anthropic should change track and keep Fable permanently available on those plans. OpenAI are winning users simply due to the uncertainty that surrounds Fable access.

    Anthropic should do this, but also if they do, it will make their original claim that they can’t support Fable in subscriptions look like a lie. Very interesting to watch. 🍿

    → 5:19 PM, Jul 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • TwoMillionKit is a clever solution from Guilherme Rambo (via Daring Fireball) to use private cloud compute by routing through the command-line fm tool. I was accepted into the Small Business Program a few days ago and had forgotten why I had applied until reading this.

    → 4:48 PM, Jul 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • Happy to get an Inkwell update out for macOS. From the news blog today:

    Fixed several bugs in Inkwell for Mac. Grab the latest version with “Check for Updates” or directly from the help page.

    Micro.blog News https://news.micro.blog/2026/07/12/fixed-several-bugs-in-inkwell.html
    → 2:43 PM, Jul 12
    Also on Bluesky
  • Robin Sloan blogged about attending a Stop the AI Race march:

    These things are growing and mutating faster than anybody can make sense of them. So … here’s a wild thought … let’s slow down, and make sense of them.

    I really like Robin’s blog and his books. Great photos from the march too! I don’t think a pause can work, though, because coordinating with China labs and all open source seems nearly impossible. I’d rather see better plans for investing in renewable energy and some kind of UBI-like fund to help with the economy. No matter the speed of AI development, slow or fast, we’re going to need those things.

    → 1:08 PM, Jul 12
    Also on Bluesky
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