Actually, Profile picture
20 Oct, 8 tweets, 3 min read
After some tinkering with templates and reading up on iTunes' feed formatting requirements… The old archives for insertcontenthere.com are back up! Built on @eleven_ty, with @otter_ai powered transcripts coming shortly.
Using @Netlify rather than @GithubPages let me use some of the fancy metadata tools in 11ty, and install a few markdown-it plugins to handle definition lists and transcript markup.
Dropped the episodes into an S3 bucket — long term it might be possible to automatically get filesize and audio duration automatically, but for the moment they just go into the frontmatter of each episode's markdown file.
Most of the troubleshooting time was spent making a Nunjucks template for the podcast feed that didn't require lots of special casing — now I can drop it into any other 11ty sites to expose a clean feed with minimal hassle.
11ty's data cascade makes that a lot simpler — you can create a folder full of episodes… *and* supply a single fallback file that handles any metadata not supplied by an individual episode. Handy!
It’s not complete yet, but insertcontenthere.com/episode-11/ feels like a great example — Otter transcripts still take a fair bit of finessing, and I exposed the “raw” version on that episode, but it’s exciting to start making it more accessible.
Some things I ran into: complicated front matter cascades don’t always play nicely with @NetlifyCMS, so I have some troubleshooting to do. Making one source file generate two output files in @eleven_ty seems tricky as well...
That’s not essential, but it would make building audiogram episode previews with Twitter player cards, a lot simpler. Further tinkering to come!

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Actually,

Actually, Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @eaton

21 Oct
I wasn’t kidding when I said that @AOC is the apex predator of modern American politics.
Rolling onto Twitch and playing social deduction games with constituents and having a good time in the middle of a traumatic pandemic that keeps people apart. And using the visibility *to explain how other countries’ health care system works*
Her public persona — not just in traditional media but on the fuzzier social channels — is quick, natural, and focused. She takes every opportunity possible to clarify complexity to constituents, and uses different social channels *in channel-appropriate ways*.
Read 7 tweets
4 Sep
Something interesting, troubling, and important is happening. This weekend there's an NBC special about online disinformation campaigns and recruitment pipelines for right-wing radicalism. On one level it's good; the media has historically ignored the complexity of the problem.
There's a pretty serious problem, though: This isn't a new, emergent issue. The roots go back to the earliest days of the social web, and the specific networks they're covering in Sunday's special predate Trump.
A handful of Black women — writers, scholars, artists, thinkers — were at ground zero for the rise of those disinformation and radicalization networks before anyone else took the issue seriously. 2013, 2014, 2015… long before mainstream reporters knew a chan from a flan.
Read 19 tweets
27 Aug
Good to remember that authoritarian leaders generally do not *eliminate rules*; rather they *make themselves and their allies exempt from them* either officially or by compromising the systems of enforcement and exercising "discretion".
That allows the authoritarian leader to insist that rules are being followed, and to use those rules to punish members of opposition or scapegoat groups, without endangering themselves.
The implicit message to their supporters is: "You and I, we are the good people. The system's rules are meant to stop bad people like the ones who hate us, not constrain good people like us."
Read 7 tweets
25 Aug
Today is full of buzz about @zeynep — a few years back she delivered a wildly thought-provoking and challenging warning at @drupalcon Baltimore that is… *extremely relevant in retrospect* opentranscripts.org/transcript/sur…
Feels like a perfect example of the kind of thing @Blackamazon has deconstructed lately: any time you hear prominent cultural voices say, "No one thought X could happen!" there have been people clearly explaining that X would happen.
There's often real shock as they process what they did not think (or did not want to think) would happen; but there's also a big helping of CYA revisionism.

"I thought it wouldn't happen, and used my platform to tell people it wouldn't, and now it is" is a guilty place to be.
Read 4 tweets
17 Jun
Hello my fellow Ultra Normative Dudes*, this moment in history can feel like an overwhelming time because everything — race, gender, sexuality, class — feels like it's blowing up and we have to do a bunch of Processing Of Big Issues every 30 minutes. That is correct!
It is correct because those different axis have been pretty consistently trash-firey for a lot of people for a long time, but the cultural value of Keepin' The Normalcy Flowin' has always been high, and they were encouraged to Keep It To Themselves Or Be Branded Troublemakers.
Sometimes somebody (or a cluster of somebodys!) would stand up and say, "You know what, this thing is bullshit" and there would be a cultural moment and we (Ultra Normative Dudes) would get big eyes and say, "Holy shit, that's awful. Wow."
Read 11 tweets
10 Jun
Insisting that "we need structured content" and "we need content reuse," makes it easy to build content with *inappropriate* structures that waste effort and work against core needs.

So, what kinds of *specific* structure-needs are common? A thread, illustrated by fast food.
Consistency! Content of a given type shares common structures and patterns, regardless of who created it. If Alice makes a case study, and Bob makes a case study, they'll both obviously be *case studies*. The McDonalds Big Mac is a marvel of consistency: The company's processes are optimized to produce the same burger despite regional differences in ingredients.
Versatility! Content, once it's created, can be used in multiple contexts. An author biography, for example, is needed in many places across a news site. Ranch Dressing is America's universal culinary product, its gift to the world and its original sin.
Read 9 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!