Scripting News: Saturday, March 8, 2025

David Weinberger on WordLand. "It's a web page that clears out all of WordPress's cruft and gives you an interface that's so simple that it's actually enjoyable." #
Praise from David, author of Small Pieces Loosely Joined and co-author of Cluetrain Manifesto, is the best. He picked up WordLand overnight, and he loves it, for the right reasons. WordLand is an editor for "small pieces," maybe the first. Most of the really easy editors have been stuck in silos and thus are dead-ends. I'm sure the people who designed them wished they weren't locked up, but they had to work for billionaires-to-be, I don't. I called the locked-up editors tiny little text boxes. I created an editor that starts out slightly larger than the TLTBs, and grows as your idea grows. So David opened up WordLand and started typing. And it turned into a normal sized blog post. It flowed right into it. And unlike the TLTB's in twitter-like worlds, those bits live on the open web, and can use all the features of the web, and are fed out to software networks via RSS, which is a lot simpler than other protocols. It can grow faster because there already is a huge installed base of software and knowledge for RSS. Imho developers should build on existing standards, not try to replace them. They might be more alive than you think (or more accurately, wish). #
I updated the screen shot on the WordLand docs page. It was really out of date. WordLand is the best editor for people to write in WordPress. I've been developing it over the last couple of years. I wanted to get a really nice editor into this slot. I felt WordPress deserved one. It's designed to feel like the editor in twitter-like services, but without the limits. I've been writing about this on my blog, while I was doing that, I was developing WordLand in the background. We have ignored the needs of writers for too long. It's time to remove the limits. People believed the formula Twitter arrived at was the right one. It is far too limited for writers. WordLand is the answer, in software. #

Linkblog items for the day.

"Developers should build on existing standards, not try to replace them. They might be more alive than you think (or more accurately, wish)." scripting.com
Rick Scott Reveals Republicans Are Absolutely Cutting Medicare. newrepublic.com
Let's Create "Town Hall Night in America". washingtonmonthly.com
Trumpists Fall Apart On Question: Is President Trump A Russian Asset? youtube.com
Wired is enjoying a moment, with lots of new subscribers, including myself. They should do what a lot of paywalled sites do, allow a certain number of shared posts per month where people can get through the paywall aka "gift links." wired.com
Trump's plan to stockpile crypto complicates industry's policy push. politico.com
Firsthand account of what a firing squad execution looked like. apnews.com
Bless Bernie, he gets it. It's always a good time for a campaign rally. Something that has yet to occur to Democrats. wpr.org
Copyright 1994-2025 Dave Winer.
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