FOSS and Crafts artwork

FOSS and Crafts

63 episodes - English - Latest episode: 26 days ago -

A podcast about free software, free culture, and making things together.

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Episodes

62: Blender

March 03, 2024 19:40 - 43.2 MB

Blender, the absolute powerhouse of FOSS 3d (and increasingly 2d) graphics! We give an overview of the software's history, some personal history of our relationships to the software, what it can do, and where we're excited to see it go! Links: Blender Blender history Grease pencil Some historical Blender videos from the NeoGeo and Not a Number days: Did It, Done It, Not a Number commercial, Come and See Elephants Dream, aka Project Orange Big Buck Bunny Previous episodes on blender: ...

61: A Textile Historian's Survival Guide

December 10, 2023 19:25 - 67.6 MB

How do you survive in a world that is no longer optimized for making your own clothing when you suddenly find that modern conveniences no longer accommodate you? As a textile historian, Morgan has been ruminating for years about women’s contributions to the domestic economy, the massive time investment of producing clothing for a family, and the comparative properties of different textile fibers. These research interests were informed by a lifetime of sewing and other fiber crafts. None of ...

60: Governance, part 2

October 01, 2023 03:10 - 37.3 MB

Back again with governance... part two! (See also: part one!) Here we talk about some organizations and how they can be seen as "templates" for certain governance archetypes. Links: Cygnus, Cygwin Mastodon Android Free Software Foundation, GNU Software Freedom Conservancy, Outreachy, Conservancy's copyleft compliance projects Commons Conservancy F-Droid Open Collective Linux Foundation 501(c)(3) vs 501(c)(6) Stitchting Free as in Freedom LKML (the Linux Kernel Mailing List) Li...

59: Governance, part 1

September 01, 2023 01:40 - 43.8 MB

Governance of FOSS projects, a two parter, and this is part one! Here we talk about general considerations applicable to FOSS projects! (And heck, these apply to collaborative free culture projects too!) Links: Why We Need Code of Conducts, and Why They're Not Enough, by Aeva Black Blender Cloud and the Blender Development Fund

58: WebAssembly

June 16, 2023 00:10 - 18.8 MB

WebAssembly! You've probably heard lots about it, but what the heck is it? Is it just for C and Rust programs? Can you write it by hand? (Do you want to?) And wait, how is Spritely getting involved in WebAssembly efforts? Find out! Links: WebAssembly Hoot! (and Hoot announcement, Andy Wingo joining, Robin Templeton joining) Lisp Game Jam - "Wireworld" - Hoot's low level WASM tooling in action Directly compiling Scheme to WebAssembly: lambdas, recursion, iteration! Understanding th...

57: F-Droid (featuring Sylvia van Os & Hans-Christoph Steiner!)

May 15, 2023 01:30 - 47.6 MB

F-Droid, a repository of free software for your Android devices! Christine interviews F-Droid developers Sylvia van Os and Hans-Christoph Steiner as well as F-Droid board member and chair... Morgan Lemmer-Webber! Links: F-Droid Sylvia van Os Hans-Christoph Steiner F-Droid board announcement Guardian Project Google Play bans Matrix/Element Catima Your app is not compliant with Google Play Policies: A story from hell

56: Make your own dehydrated meals

March 01, 2023 03:00 - 38 MB

In yet another deep dive into yet another weird hobby of Christine's, we talk about how to make your own dehydrated meals! Why the heck would you want to do this? Well, maybe you want more consistent or dietary needs friendly travel food! Maybe you want to go camping or hiking! Maybe you're sick of deciding what's for lunch and you just want to scoop a cup of meal out of a jar on your desk every day! Maybe you want to weird out your fellow conference-goers as you turn a dry powder into a ful...

55: Free Soft Wear

February 01, 2023 03:05 - 34.7 MB

Morgan talks about "Free Soft Wear": textile processes under free culture licenses! Links: Morgan's talk about Free Soft Wear at the Creative Freedom Summit Elena of Valhalla’s repository of CC BY-SA sewing patterns Morgan's blog Free Soft Wear index Dice bag and simple skirt tutorials RSI Glove pattern Simple sweater Layered Skirt Kat Walsh or @[email protected] Tall Dog Electronics face mask (You may recognize Dan and Tall Dog Electronics of TinyNES fame) Wikimedia Commons P...

54: Oops!

December 28, 2022 00:20 - 32.2 MB

Everyone goofs sometimes. Today we talk accidents... some happy, some not! Links: Decaf coffee and history of penicillin, your pop-sci "accidents of history" stories of the day. Look, this is admittedly kind of a fluff episode. Have we linked to Worse is Better before? We did? In the lisp episode? And here's the Terminal Phase episode

53: Fediverse reflections while the bird burns

December 01, 2022 19:30 - 34.3 MB

Twitter is burning, and people are flocking to the fediverse. Is the fediverse ready though? How did we get here? Where should we be going? Since Christine is co-author of ActivityPub, the primary protocol used by the fediverse, Morgan decides it's time to get Christine's thoughts recorded and out there... so we hop in the car as we talk all about it! Links: ActivityPub, the protocol which wires the federated social web together, of which Christine is co-author! Be sure to check out t...

52: Terminal Phase: a space shooter that runs in your terminal!

November 13, 2022 22:05 - 21.4 MB

Terminal Phase! A space shooter that runs in your terminal!!! Who wouldn't be excited about that? Not to mention that it shows off cool features of Spritely Goblins... like time travel: Well, Terminal Phase has been Christine's fun/downtime project for the last few years, and one of the bonuses you can get for the reward tiers of donating to this podcast! And yet we've never done an episode about it! Given that a brand new (and much easier to install) release of Terminal Phase is coming...

51: #vanlife...?

October 01, 2022 19:00 - 44.2 MB

Morgan and Christine walk through their (well, Morgan's) renovation of a cargo van into a campervan. This is a very crafty episode, but we do work in a few analogies to some FOSS (and open hardware) things! Show notes at the end, but how about a quick visual van tour? Back of the van, wide open! A closer look... Actually, let's move that solar panel aside... Here's a better view of the cabinet with all the equipment attached: Here's what the van looks like if you come in the side doo...

50: The Spritely Institute

August 21, 2022 20:25 - 25.9 MB

The Spritely Institute (of which Christine is CTO) just announced its multi-year grant by the Filecoin Foundation for the Decentralized Web and gave a tour of its current tech! This is a big moment that's been in the works for a while, as Spritely moves hands towards real stewardship by a real nonprofit! Also also! The video recording of the Lisp/Scheme workshop (based on A Scheme Primer) is released! Unlock Lisp / Scheme's magic: beginner to Scheme-written-in-Scheme in one hour! (PeerTub...

49: Lisp but Beautiful; Lisp for Everyone

July 15, 2022 01:40 - 34.3 MB

Morgan's out sick! And yet Morgan is still in this episode! And that's because this episode is the audio version of a talk by the very same name from FOSDEM 2022, co-presented by Christine and Morgan! But since Morgan isn't here, Christine fills in, and also gets a bit silly. HACK AND CRAFT SCHEME TUTORIALS! The last live scheme tutorial went really well! And relatedly, Christine and the Spritely Institute just published A Scheme Primer, which is more or less the text version of that pres...

48: Sophie Jantak on pet portraits and Blender's Grease Pencil

June 30, 2022 17:40 - 27.1 MB

The amazing Sophie Jantak joins us to talk about how she makes pet portraits (including one she made for us!) using Blender's Grease Pencil. Hear about Sophie's process, why Grease Pencil is the right tool for her, and what her collalboration process is like on pet portrait commissions! (And yes, you can commission Sophie tool!) BONUS FREE CULTURAL SOURCE CONTENT! We've collectively decided to release this artwork's source code as a free cultural work! Get the .blend (CC BY-SA 4.0)! HACK ...

47: What is Lisp?

June 23, 2022 16:25 - 27.2 MB

This episode is all about the Lisp family of programming languages! Ever looked at Lisp and wondered why so many programmers gush about such a weird looking programming language style? What's with all those parentheses? Surely there must be something you get out of them for so many programming nerds to gush about the language! We do a light dive into Lisp's history, talk about what makes Lisp so powerful, and nerd out about the many, many kinds of Lisps out there! Announcement: Christine is...

46: Mark S. Miller on Distributed Objects, Part 1

June 01, 2022 02:50 - 38 MB

Calling all programming language nerds! Distinguished computer scientist Mark S. Miller (presently at Agoric) joins us to tell us all about distributed object programming languages and their history! We talk about actors, a bit of Xanadu, and little known but incredibly influential programming languages like Flat Concurrent Prolog, Joule, and E! Actually there's so much to talk about that this episode is just part one! There's more to come! Links: The actor model (the core of which is ...

45: A high level introduction to cryptography

May 25, 2022 15:30 - 30.6 MB

In this episode we give a very (very) high level introduction to cryptography concepts. No math or programming background required! Links: Crypto 101, probably the BEST book for learning about cryptography concepts. And a relevant talk from PyCon! We mentioned RSA, which is the first publicly published algorithm for public key cryptography. These days most public key cryptography uses elliptic curves instead. It's possible that in the future, something else will be recommended instead!...

44: Celebrating a Decade of Guix

April 30, 2022 20:25 - 34.3 MB

Guix turns ten! We celebrate Guix's first decade by highlighting ten great things about Guix! Hear all about functional package management, time-traveling operating systems, and why "Composable DSLs" are great! Links: Guix Stories about 10 years of Guix, from the Guix blog Nix Cool Guix features highlighted in this episode: Grafts (for security updates) guix challenge guix shell and guix environment guix pack Nonguix (Proprietary! Nonfree! But sometimes some users need these thin...

43: Repetitive Strain Injuries

March 31, 2022 20:30 - 62.7 MB

This week we’re talking about Repetitive Strain Injuries (RSI). Christine and Morgan tell their stories bout over-using their wrists from programming (prodded along by an injury) and writing academic papers respectively. We discuss what you can do to treat or minimize the effects of these injuries then cap it off with a discussion of RSI gloves including Morgan's Free Soft Wear RSI glove pattern. Repetitive Strain Injuries Morgan's RSI gloves article Your Wrists Hurt, You Must Be a Progra...

42: Learning the Sewing Machine

March 06, 2022 23:00 - 56 MB

Christine finally overcomes her fear of the sewing machine and we talk about Christine and Morgan's respective experiences learning it, and how you can pick it up too! Links: Morgan's article on Basic Sewing Patterns. Includes pictures of the dicebag and skirt! (More tutorials coming soon!) You probably know what a sewing machine is, but isn't there always more to learn? A Cultural Perspective on Gender Diversity in Computing and Building an Effective Computer Science Student Organizati...

41: Learning Emacs

February 05, 2022 17:40 - 46.3 MB

Morgan finally overcomes her fear of Emacs and we talk about Morgan and Christine's respective experiences learning it, and how you can pick it up too! Our talks tomorrow at FOSDEM's Declarative and Minimalistic Computing room: Lisp but Beautiful; Lisp for Everyone Spritely Goblins Comes to Guile Switching capslock and ctrl stuff: (it's a great idea even if you don't use Emacs; many keyboards used to have ctrl key where capslock now is, and much advanced program use benefits from keyboar...

40: Interdisciplinarity and FOSS (SeaGL Keynote)

January 10, 2022 04:00 - 23.6 MB

Morgan and Christine talk about the skills they’ve learned in their humanities backgrounds and how those have translated into their work within FOSS communities and projects. They’ll then discuss the benefits of seeking out varied skillsets within your communities, the value of looking at problems from multiple lenses, and how to use all of the tools we’ve got to promote our projects. (This episode is the audio from our SeaGL keynote of the same name!) Oh yeah, and as we said in the intro, ...

39: The TinyNES: An Open Hardware "Tiny Nostalgia Evocation Square"

December 17, 2021 01:10 - 62 MB

Dan Gilbert of Tall Dog joins us to talk about the Tiny Nostalgia Evocation Square (or TinyNES for short)! The TinyNES is an open hardware system compatible with the compatible with original Nintendo Entertainment System and Famicom cartridges and controllers. Instead of being just an emulator or FPGA-based implementation, the TinyNES uses the original 6502-derived chips and a custom circuit board, preserving and carrying forward computing history! Oh yeah, and it's also running a crowdfund...

38: Spritely Updates! (November 2021)

November 28, 2021 17:15 - 22.8 MB

It's time for some updates on Spritely, the project Christine founded to advance decentralized networking technology! A lot has happened since our episode about Spritely from last year (which is really where Spritely got its main public announcement)! Most notably, Jessica Tallon has joined the project thanks to a generous grant from NLNet and NGI Zero! But there's a lot more that has happened too, so listen in! ALSO! As mentioned at the end of this episode, starting with the NEXT episo...

37: Salt on Resilience in FOSS

November 03, 2021 01:00 - 53.9 MB

Wm Salt Hale joins us to talk about his dissertation on resilience in FOSS communities (especially after crisis events), the kind of impacts founder decisions can have on long-term community development, especially as seen through reactions to software vulnerabilities and license decisions. Also! Salt mentions that we're keynoting at SeaGL this weekend! It's an online conference, so maybe we'll see you there! Links: Wm Salt Hale Salt's master's thesis: Resilience in Free/Libre/Open Sou...

36: Topics of interest!

September 11, 2021 21:22 - 43.7 MB

Lightning round! Morgan and Christine blast through a bunch of snack-sized topics they're currently interested in, ranging from an actual FOSS video game made for the NES, to "Free Soft Wear" clothing, to compiler towers! above image from Morgan's blogpost on "free soft wear" Links: This episode's title was inspired by Ian Bicking's 2009 PyCon talk, "Topics of Interest", but it's bitrotted off the internet so we can't link you to that one. Boooooo! Nova the Squirel by... Nova the Squir...

35: Women and Wool Working in the Ancient Roman Empire, Part 2

August 30, 2021 19:45 - 57.7 MB

In Part 1 of Women and Wool Working in the Ancient Roman Empire, we discussed the practical matters of textile production in domestic and commercial contexts. In this second episode, we look at the performative ways that textile production was used to construct women's identities. This includes the incorporation of textile tools and production into rites of passage such as marriage, childbirth, and death as a symbol of the virtuous matron. We further discuss religious use and association of...

34: Women and Wool Working in the Ancient Roman Empire, Part 1

August 19, 2021 14:05 - 57.9 MB

In the first of two episodes on Morgan's dissertation we introduce the topic of women and textile production in the Roman Empire. Scholars have often viewed the domestic and commercial divide in textile production along gendered lines, associating domestic production with women in the context of the ideal of feminine virtue and commercial production with men working in centralized production centers. Here we use the cottage industry model to contextualize the role of women’s labor in the Rom...

33: Which Color Should We Paint This Episode?

August 01, 2021 21:50 - 35 MB

In this episode, we discuss "bikeshedding" (also known as the Law of Triviality), the famous proposition that complex contributions and ideas (such as plans to build a nuclear power plant), often of high impact and importance, move forward with relatively little interference, whereas simple contributions and conversations (such as which color to paint a bikeshed) get caught up in committee and high-volume debate, and how this tends to impact FOSS communities. We do a (slightly dramatic) read...

32: Happy FOSS & Crafts anniversary!

July 20, 2021 21:45 - 30.5 MB

Chris and Morgan reflect on one year of FOSS & Crafts, as well as announcing... FOSS & Crafts Studios! Links: FOSS & Crafts Studios on Patreon (still also the right place to support Chris Lemmer-Webber's FOSS work) Thank you to our guests: Nick and LP, Zack, Kate and Frankie, Sebastian, Bassam, Tristan, Sumana, Mallory, Vicky, Steve, Elana and Katie, and Steel. 3: Textile production and a nostalgic past 28: FOSS Stitch w/ Elana Hashman and Katie McLaughlin 5: Milkytracker, chiptunes, a...

31: Talking Pressbooks and OER with Steel Wagstaff

July 11, 2021 21:00 - 47.7 MB

Steel Wagstaff joins us to talk about their work at Pressbooks, a FOSS based book publishing suite particularly focused on Open Educational Resources (OER), as well as talking about OER generally, open access, and education as a fundamental human right! Pressbooks (git repos) Pressbooks Directory Steel Wagstaff's website, Twitter account 5Rs of open content UN Sustainable development goals [Cape Town Declaration (September 2007)](https://www.capetowndeclaration.org/read-the-declaration...

30: Gender and Sexuality, A Personal Perspective

June 28, 2021 01:05 - 63.7 MB

On this episode, Chris talks about being nonbinary trans-femme and Morgan talks about being demisexual (and briefly about both being pansexual) and how they have both navigated these experiences in their lives and relationship. Links: There are a lot of resources on the internet about being transgender and nonbinary, and opinions about most of them tend to run strong. That said, Transgender Map has good resources explaining many concerns for those who are transgender or nonbinary, are try...

29: Building Blocks for User Freedom

June 12, 2021 20:10 - 46.7 MB

Any skillset has basic foundational elements or building blocks. In this recording of Chris and Morgan's talk at ÖzgürKon, we discuss the way that access to those basic elements is limited in modern society. This can be seen in any number of fields from actual building blocks increasingly being sold in sets to make specific toys as opposed to generic buckets of blocks that allow kids to develop their creativity to the way that access to the source code and hardware in our technology is incre...

28: FOSS Stitch w/ Elana Hashman and Katie McLaughlin

May 23, 2021 20:17 - 67.6 MB

Elana Hashman (Python Software Foundation Fellow and open source hacker) and Katie McLaughlin (Python Software Foundation Fellow and crafter) join us to talk about F(L)OSS meets embroidery and cross stitching (FOSS stitching?) including a significant conversation about FLOSS vs embroidery floss. Much is also conversed about ih, a project started by Katie with contributions from Elana, a python project which helps generate embroidery patterns from images. Links: ih! ih presented at PyCon...

27: Nerdout! Game Design and Social Systems

May 06, 2021 18:12 - 71.1 MB

Steve is back, talking with Chris about viewing social systems through the lens of game design. How do game mechanics, uncertainty, and narrative map onto governance, society, and citizen participation? Thanks to Kate and Ricky for participating in a pre-show discussion which generated many of the ideas explored in this episode. Links: The first F&C Nerdout episode on "Fuzzy and crisp systems", in case you wanted to hear more of the Chris & Steve conversation dynamic F&C Episode 4: The E...

26: Dr. Morgan Lemmer-Webber, an academic journey

April 23, 2021 14:45 - 47.3 MB

Remember how we've been saying the entire run of this show "Morgan's hard at work at finishing her PhD dissertation?" Well guess what! She finally got it handed in and defended it... Morgan is now officially Dr. Morgan Lemmer-Webber! (She still has to wrap up a few edits but hey it's official now!) Morgan walks us through her experiences of the graduate school process, from applying (and re-applying) to schools, to a masters program, to a PhD program, and the many fun steps, bumps, and adve...

25: Governance, Leadership, and Founder's Syndrome

March 28, 2021 23:05 - 87.5 MB

What story does an institution tell about itself? To whom does a governance structure and its leadership serve? To what degree are leaders within a governing institution subject or exempt to the rules of the governed? We use this framework to discuss the unexpected announcement of Richard Stallman's re-appointment to the FSF board, by the FSF board. Content warning: depression and sexual harassment are both mentioned in this episode. Links: Founder's Syndrome (Wikipedia article) Statemen...

24: Get Organized!

March 12, 2021 19:20 - 51.9 MB

Morgan returns from handing in her dissertation! Very topically, Morgan and Chris talk about organizational systems which can help you stay on track... even when you're working from home or trying to finish your PhD during a global pandemic. Links: The Hipster PDA, including the original semi-satirical announcement post. Org Mode, the world's greatest organizational and outliner system (or so claims Chris), if you're an Emacs user anyway (honestly, Org Mode is a great reason to pick up E...

23: Nerdout! Fuzzy and crisp systems

February 13, 2021 17:15 - 41.1 MB

Morgan is in the final crunch of finishing her dissertation draft, so Chris's brother Steve Webber joins us for a special "nerdout": analyzing the dual nature of fuzzy vs crisp systems! From physics to biology, from programming languages to human languages, the duality of fuzzy and crisp is everpresent. Yes, this really is what Chris and Steve sound like whenever they get together... Links: Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs (but this version looks better on the web) and t...

22: Crafting the past... or trying to

January 29, 2021 22:52 - 58.8 MB

There's all sorts of reasons to pursue historical crafting techniques: for the experience of recreating them or learning new techniques, for education, or for entertainment and immersion. Morgan and Chris explore these paths under the terms "experiential historical crafts", "experimental archaeology", and "historical reenactment". What is important, useful, and fun about each of these? What pitfalls might we want to avoid? What can be gained by what we might find, how might we bring more peo...

21: Vicky Steeves on Reproducibility, Open Research, & Librarians (... and game modding)

January 18, 2021 03:40 - 52.8 MB

We're joined by Vicky Steeves, a hyper-talented librarian specializing in data management, open and reproducible research, and the overlap between FOSS, free culture, and library sciences! We dive into all of that... plus a bit of crafting... and even... what's this? A discussion of what the FOSS world can learn from the world of game modding (and vice versa)! Links: ISAGE (Investigating & Archiving the Scholarly Git Experience) and, to be a bit meta, ISAGE's own data as open and reproduci...

20: Hygiene for a computing pandemic

January 03, 2021 22:40 - 73.1 MB

Chris and Morgan, driving in the Covid-19 pandemic, reflect on lessons of hygiene and a separation of concerns from the past (seen through the retroactively surprising struggle for handwashing acceptance) while analyzing how to bring safety to today's computing security pandemic via object capability discipline. As said in the episode, there's a lot of research and evidence for the object capability security approach! Please do scour the links below (with significant commentary attached). ...

19: Mallory Knodel on bits and bytes and human rights

December 17, 2020 20:50 - 63.7 MB

With computing technology becoming integrated with every aspect of our lives, many issues are simultaneously human rights issues and technical issues. Thus, how are organizations concerned with human rights and social justice engaging with technological authorship and policy-making? Mallory Knodel, presently Chief Technology Officer for the Center for Democracy and Technology, explains her work as a Public Interest Technologist. Mallory is also heavily engaged in a wide number of technical s...

18: Sumana Harihareswara on sketching, standup, and maintainership

December 06, 2020 15:10 - 68.7 MB

We're joined by Sumana Harihareswara, a FOSS advocate yes, but also a person of so many other talents! We talk about sketching, standup comedy, and maintainership for the long life of free software projects. (Did you know you can hire Sumana to help on your FOSS project maintainership btw? Sumana runs Changeset Consulting!) We also talk about representation in the FOSS community within the arts (especially narrative arts), and about learning new skills within "no big deal" contexts. Links: ...

17: Gardening, from seedling to seasoned

November 28, 2020 14:50 - 79 MB

We're joined by our friend Tristan to talk about gardening experiences, from newbies (us) to the wise (Tristan and others who are not us). We (Morgan and Chris) have just started seriously gardening this year, and have learned a lot about what works and what doesn't. And it turns out that people who have been doing it for years (such as Tristan) still have a lot of successes but also a lot of failures. But those can be fun too! Links: Stocking Up (book on preserving) No dig sheet mulching

16: Bassam Kurdali on using Blender for open movie productions and education

November 12, 2020 19:50 - 43.7 MB

Bassam Kurdali (Fediverse, Twitter) talks about using Blender (a free and open source software suite for making 3d artwork) for open movie projects such as Elephants Dream (the world's first open movie project, which Bassam directed!) and Wires for Empathy, as well as use in teaching it to college students studying animation. Links: Blender Urchin studios Chicken Chair (we need a better link for this... check back later!) Elephants Dream Wires for Empathy (aka "Tube") OpenToonz Boats...

15: Scribble and the Open Document Format

November 06, 2020 02:30 - 49 MB

Morgan and Chris talk about the Scribble document authoring format, with Morgan talking about authoring her dissertation in it and Chris talking about writing an OpenDocument Format (sometimes shortened to "ODF" or "ODT") exporter. (That code is now a merge request which will hopefully become part of Scribble itself!) Links: The Digital Humanities Workshops episode... this is kind of a continuation of those topics. Racket and Scribble Racket 7.4 release notes, where Morgan is mentioned a...

14: Digital Humanities Workshops

October 31, 2020 18:30 - 45.6 MB

Morgan and Chris discuss the Digital Humanities workshops they ran introducing non-programmers to Racket and Scribble. Links: The flier (post-LibrePlanet 2018 edition) Course material Building a Snowman with Racket How to Use Scribble to Write your Academic Papers: A Reference Tutorial

13: ActivityPub Conference 2020 with Sebastian Lasse

October 15, 2020 17:45 - 56.1 MB

This week we are joined by Sebastian Lasse, author of the Redaktor ActivityPub powered CMS, and co-host of both ActivityPub Conference 2020 and ActivityPub Conference 2019 along with Morgan. Lots of retrospective, especially on the difference between APConf as an online conference in 2020 vs an in person conference in 2019. Links: ActivityPub Conference 2020 ActivityPub Conference videos The Running a FOSS virtual conference meta-talk/panel ActivityPub FOSShost "Some singing" Redakto...

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