Rob Fahrni

Follow @fahrni on Micro.blog.

Saturday Morning Coffee

Good morning from Charlottesville, Virginia! ☕️

FrapI’m running a bit behind again this week. Kim, Taylor, and I went out for breakfast this morning at TipTop and I had their excellent biscuits and gravy. Something else of not at TipTop is their coffee. It’s excellent! So, if you’re ever in Charlottesville head over to the Pantops area and visit TipTop Restaurant for breakfast. Hopefully you like it as much as I do.

This week was my last week of work until the new year. My brain has been checked out all week, thinking ahead to Christmas and time with our girls, grandkids, and son-in-law.

Oh, we also had a little snow flurry this morning. It was a single cloud overhead and once it passed no other cloud has dropped snow. We saw cars in Charlettesville with snow on them. Not much. Just the tiniest dusting. I’d love to have an inch or two for Christmas, but I we don’t have any in the forecast. Just cold, which is also fine.

I hope you enjoy the links!

Matt Mullenweg • WordPress.org

I hope to find the time, energy, and money to reopen all of this sometime in the new year. Right now much of the time I would spend making WordPress better is being taken up defending against WP Engine’s legal attacks. Their attacks are against Automattic, but also me individually as the owner of WordPress.org, which means if they win I can be personally liable for millions of dollars of damages.

This feud is getting more and more dramatic by the day. I’m surprised it hasn’t been forked a bunch of times and taken in new directions.

What happens to WP Engine if the community fragments and different versions of WordPress evolve? Shouldn’t WP Engine fork it and do with it what they please? Yes, of course. Will they? I doubt it. They’re owned by a private equity firm, Silver Lake. All they want to do is bleed the company dry, sell it off for parts, and move on to the next company.

Joost de Valk

We, the WordPress community, need to decide if we’re ok being led by a single person who controls everything, and might do things we disagree with, or if we want something else. For a project whose tagline is “Democratizing publishing”, we’ve been very low on exactly that: democracy.

This is probably what the WP Engine folks should be doing and I hope more of the community gets behind this effort.

Manton Reece

Some people think that wouldn’t go far enough, that WordPress would be better off with someone new taking over Matt’s role across the project. I’m not convinced. WordPress and Automattic didn’t accidentally become successful. They are successful in large part because of Matt and the teams he built.

The reason I’m linking to Manton is because I think he’s become a leading voice for the open web, blogging, and micro formats. He’s built a nice business on top of open web technologies and fully embraced micro blogging formats like Mastodon, Bluesky, and Nostr. He’s also opened up Micro.blog to post to Tumblr and WordPress blogs. Basically Micro.blog has become the center point of blogging for me. I write on Micro.blog and it gets published to these other locations automagically. Of course you, the blogger, have to configure Micro.blog to publish to these other places but that’s easy. Once you’ve done it, it just magically happens when you post. Easy peasy.

So, if you’re looking for a pure blogging platform give Micro.blog a look. It’s well worth the $5 per month and you can start with a free account just to give it a try.

Cory Doctorow

When a platform can hold the people you care about or rely upon hostage – when it can credibly threaten you with disconnection and exile – that platform can abuse you in lots of ways without losing your business. In other words, they can enshittify their service:

Once of the promises of Bluesky was that by creating the AT Proto protocol the service wouldn’t exist as a single entity, there would be many implementation that all tied together. So far everything is centralized under Bluesky.

I haven’t fully wrapped my brain around what AT Proto really means for the open web. I’d asked what it would take to spin up an instance on Bluesky and I learned there aren’t really other instances but you could host your own data anywhere as long as you did an implementation of a specific portion of the protocol. I have so much to learn.

Drew McCormack

Today, I’m launching Forked, a new approach to working with shared data in Swift. And it has actually worked out better than I expected. I wasn’t even sure it would be possible to build, but with the new Swift macros, I was able to come up with a minimal API that seems to work great. I’m really looking forward to dog fooding it.

This looks extremely interesting to me. I’ve had requests from folks to provide a mechanism to sync Stream feeds across multiple devices. Forked may provide that means. I will be putting some time aside to give Forked a try. Hopefully it’ll do what I need to make syncing work across devices without the need to build a backend service, which could be terribly expensive and time consuming to operate.

Kelly Crandall • Racer

McLeod and co-owner Matt Tifft sold the charter to Spire Motorsports. In doing so, the organization chose to go from a full-time operation to competing on a limited basis, primarily on superspeedways. McLeod made five starts in 2024 (plus two for Carl Long’s team) in the Cup Series and four (plus one for Long) in the Xfinity Series.

I’ve written before about how much I like B.J. McLeod. He’s the little guy, not some giant team with backing from a major manufacturer like Chevy, Ford, or Toyota. It’s surprising a little team like his can put a fairly competitive car on the track. He’s especially good at what are considered Super Speedways like Daytona and Talledega.

He failed to qualify for the 2024 Daytona 500 so I hope he manages to make it in 2025. I would love to see him pull off a miracle win at one of these Super Speedways. Sure, it’s not likely, but of all track types Super Speedways are very unpredictable because of pack racing. These cars are so equally configured they typically run within a few tenths of a second of each other.

I’m looking forward to the opening of the 2025 NASCAR season in February.

Paul Krugman • Bluesky

Reminder for anyone who doesn’t know: I’m writing almost every day on my Substack

I like reading Paul Krugman but he’s decided to host his writing on Nazi loving Substack and that is a bummer. I have a large list of writers I wish would move to a better service (if they must have a service.)

It would be just as easy to host on WordPress.com or even Micro.blog. I’m not sure if Mr. Krugman plans on having a subscription plan but Substack is a terrible choice for it and his wonderful writing.

Jake Johnson • Alternet

UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty wrote in a New York Times op-ed Friday that the for-profit U.S. healthcare system “does not work as well as it should” and that “no one would design a system like the one we have,” admissions that came as his industry faced a torrent of public anger following the murder of UnitedHealthcare’s chief executive.

Medicare for all with the United States Government as the single payor. Yeah, sure, we’d need to pay taxes to make it work but medicine operated as a for profit business is a huge mistake, not to mention the disaster that is medical insurance.

Christopher Harper • Tom’s Hardware

A recently posted photograph of old-school Commodore 64s, which debuted 42 years ago, in use as registers at a modern bakery has attracted a lot of attention. As further sleuthed by commenters, this bakery was identified as the Hilligoss Bakery in Brownsburg, Indiana, and the last publicly posted picture of the Commodore 64 register was in 2021. As such, we called the shop, and they verified that the registers are still in use. At the time of writing, the establishment in question has 488 Google reviews with an average 4.7-star rating and 202 Facebook reviews with an average 4.5-star rating— and, if some reviews mentioning the C64 are any indication, it even seems to be busier than usual, likely encouraged by the spreading word of this retro tech curiosity.

How cool is this? My brother had a Commodore 64 and he had a ton of fun playing games on it. He also wrote a program to generate D & D characters, as one did in the early 80’s.

I think about old tech like this from time to time and wonder if it could be repurposed to very specific tasks. The answer is obviously a resounding YES!

I wonder how they keep the equipment from getting all sticky and covered in flour?

Tiny Apple Core