Today I Learned: Footnotes in feed readers

There’s a de facto convention for rendering footnotes in HTML that enables feed readers to give them special treatment, e.g. NetNewsWire and Feedbin display them inline if you select the numbered footnote popup. Simon Willison, referencing Chris Coyier, both with screenshots: I found this code in the NetNewsWire source (it’s MIT licensed) which runs against elements matching this CSS selector: sup > a[href*='#fn'], sup > div > a[href*='#fn'] So any link with an href attribute containing #fn that is a child of a <sup> (superscript) element....

 · Claudine Chionh

IndieWebbing from the couch

I’m not going to pretend for a moment that building a personal website is easier than posting to a platform that someone else has already built. I know that updating content for a static site generator in a git repository from the command line introduces a whole lot of friction (and jargon) to the blogging/publishing process, when I could easily post elsewhere with a mobile app from the comfort of my couch or while commuting on a tram....

 · Claudine Chionh

Adding Open Library IDs to my Reading page

I have updated the book shortcode1 used on my Reading page to link to the Internet Archive’s Open Library, which provides crowd-sourced book metadata – you can also look for these books in your local library! I’ve used the Open Library identifier for a Work rather than a specific edition. I used the Open Library API to take the ISBN of a specific (physical or digital) book and return the Work ID; publishing and documenting that code might have to wait for another day....

 · Claudine Chionh

Resisting linkrot

I say I’m an archivist but I’ve been rather blasé about archiving my own web presence. I can’t find an archive of my GeoCities site and the Wayback Machine only has a single capture from my university undergraduate page (I had already graduated a couple of years before that). But I started collecting my own domains around the early 2000s and the Wayback Machine is a reminder of the many iterations of my personal website,1 the different hand-coded templates, CMSes, and static site generators that I used, and all the text that I published and abandoned over the years....

 · Claudine Chionh

365 days of sobriety

It’s 365 days, give or take a day or two, since I had my last alcoholic drink.1 This is the longest streak since I started paying attention in 2021 or 2022. I don’t have a deeply personal, tragic or inspirational story to tel here. It’s just a commitment that I’ve made to myself, which I find easy enough to follow as long as I remember why I have made it....

 · Claudine Chionh