HomeOps Tour: Overview
Welcome to my HomeOps Tour, where I’ll be your guide to the stable part of my Homelab. …
Welcome to my HomeOps Tour, where I’ll be your guide to the stable part of my Homelab. …
Ghostty Is Leaving GitHub – Mitchell Hashimoto
I too have been annoyed by GitHub’s performance lately, and that’s just from using it personally.
I can’t imagine what’s it’s like for those relying on it for paid work right now.
Curious to see where Ghostty ends up, and what impact this has on its contributions.
Related:
Feeling inspired after day one of IndieWebCamp Düsseldorf 2026. …
Hallo IndieWebCamp Düsseldorf! 👋
I’ll be joining in remotely this weekend. I do wish I was there with you all, maybe next time!
liked The Colonization of Confidence., Sightless Scribbles
“They are selling you a solution to a problem they created. They want you to feel insecure. If you feel insecure, you pay the subscription.”
“You are not bad. You are a jazz musician in a world trying to sell ringtones.”
here’s a collection of articles that to some degree answer the question “Why have a personal website?” with “Because it’s fun, and the internet used to be fun."
(It still is, but it used to be, too)
liked Open Tabs - Ricardo Chávez
Every time I visit Ricardo’s garden his open tabs become my open tabs.
I’ve seen a few indie web directories popping up lately, so in an attempt to keep track of them all I’ve started on a directory of indie web directories.
Then I was introduced to Russel’s paradox, which asks if a directory should include itself?
The answer is no, you make another one.
all the signs are pointing to the fact that we might be in endgame for “open” as we’ve known it on the Internet over the last few decades
See also:
Yes, I'm going to Homebrew Website Club London tonight. …
Three days after posting Changes to the Site and it’s already out of date.
I wrote that I was going to optimise my photos so they would be smaller and I could include them in my posts, since that’s all I was planning to do.
Then I realised I needed a video in my post. If you’ve read Museum memories you’ll know why. …
This is my entry for this month’s IndieWeb Carnival: Museum memories.
I have not been to many museums or galleries. I am not a cultured person.
My favourite museum is the city of Barcelona. …
I’ve made some recent changes to the site and have a few ideas for what comes next.
Changes:
Ideas:
liked IndieWeb.org Principles
[…] the path back to feeling like you have some control is to un-spin yourself from the Five Apps of the Apocalypse and reclaim the Internet as a set of tools you use to build something you can own & be proud of
paultibbetts/terraform-provider-mythicbeasts is a Terraform provider that lets you declare infrastructure from the company Mythic Beasts as code.
I use it to provision the infrastructure for my personal website.
This is why I built it, what it does, and how to use it. …
In my last post I recommended starting with RSS to make your site followable.
This is how to do that. …
You’ve got 3 posts on your site and you want people to be notified about new ones.
Here’s all the ways I can think of doing that. …
paultibbetts/ansible-role-caddy is an Ansible role for Caddy web server that lets you install Caddy with plugins.
I use it for my personal site and in my homelab.
This is what it does and how to use it. …
My site was hosted on GitHub Pages.
It was simple and free, but it didn’t really feel like it was mine.
I’ve fixed that with a Raspberry Pi. …
Launched: infra.paultibbetts.uk
A documentation site for the infrastructure that runs paultibbetts.uk.
Published: paultibbetts/terraform-provider-mythicbeasts
A Terraform provider for Mythic Beasts.
Published: paultibbetts/mythic-beasts-client-go
A client for the Mythic Beasts APIs, written in Go.
Published: paultibbetts/ansible-role-caddy
An Ansible role to install and operate Caddy web server.