eferraiuolo | 14 years ago | on: Epic Pull Requests
eferraiuolo's comments
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: Flattr - I want to give you my money
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: Flattr - I want to give you my money
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: Flattr - I want to give you my money
Tips identify content just by URL de-coupling content attribution from the authors claiming their tips. This also us to work for tipping content on YouTube, Flickr, and GitHub, etc. without requiring the site to be directly integrated with TipTheWeb.
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: A Reason to Use rel="author" Links
Until now, TipTheWeb.org has supported two types of sites: 1) independent websites (no integration required), where Tips go to the site publisher, and 2) popular publishing platforms like YouTube, Flickr, GitHub, etc. with custom integrations that we did with these sites. With our new multi-author support TipTheWeb now works well with a thrid type of site: ones which have content produced by multiple authors or contributors.
We would love to see sites with user-contributed content add this meta data to their pages, what do you think?
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: Mozilla to crack down on add-ons that slow down Firefox
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: TipTheWeb — Building a Better Web, Together
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: TipTheWeb — Building a Better Web, Together
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: TipTheWeb — Building a Better Web, Together
We’ve made everything about the service extremely flexible and low-key, and shouldn't cause any tense feelings. For example you can cancel Tips (up until they are paid out) if you made a mistake.
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: TipTheWeb — Building a Better Web, Together
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: TipTheWeb — Building a Better Web, Together
All user accounts have Tip Streams that are a feed of the Tips that user has funded (you can make tips before you put money into your account). But, we have an option to make your account anonymous, removing all personal-identifiable information from your Tip Stream page.
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: Readability's new service
Telling web publishers they have tips waiting for them is tricky business, i.e. Don't want to be spammy. We hope to develop some interesting ways to notify people that they have tips; but tippers have been filling this void by mentionig on services like Twitter that they've tipped someone for something.
For now, if a tip goes unclaimed by the publisher for 6 months, it's automatically canceled, and the money is returned to the tipper for them to use to tip something else.
We don't currently have a way for someone to block or decline tips for a particular website, but we've talked about adding this type of feature; someone could claim their site, then say they don't accept tips there.
Bottom line, we don't have any intentions of keeping people's money that goes unclaimed, we rather return it so they could fund other tips with it. People can also help support our operations by tipping us, TipTheWeb; eating our own dog food.
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: Readability's new service
• Support should be direct (whereas ads are indirect)
• People publish all over the Internet, most people don’t own a domain, they have (hosted) Wordpress, Blogger, Flickr, YouTube, Vimeo, GitHub accounts where they publish content, this content _has_ to be supportable.
• You can’t effectively charge someone fees for their acts of voluntary support.
• Voluntary, is voluntary, is no subscription, and is the right to choose!
• Easy to use, low barrier to give, no pulling out the credit card for 25¢.
• Support something while browsing the web and on that web page.
• The mechanism/service you use to support content online can’t be the only winner, consumers and publishers have to be the outright winners!
• The service used _must_ be trustworthy and transparent.
• The service _has_ to work with the Internet, which means it has to work when only given URLs of web pages to support.
So! We actually did this, and built TipTheWeb http://tiptheweb.org/ with all these ideas in mind!
A non-profit that gives 100% of the money tipped by people to the web publisher of the content, non of that fee or cuts crap, 100%. You can support something with TipTheWeb by just giving us a URL to what you want to support and an amount, that's it; no publisher integration required.
We want to provide a positive feedback loop for the web, give publishers a way to know what their followers actually like, give readers/consumers a way to directly support what they truly love online and choose how much they want to give (5¢ — $100 per Tip). We want to encourage publishers to keep it up! Keep their content freely-accessible to everyone <— _this_ is what makes the Internet so great.
The Internet is valuable. Good publishing is hard. Selling content doesn’t work. Advertising is not sufficient. Community-supported web publishing can work!
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: Backbone.js Tutorial - by noob for noobs
backbone.js seems like a great library, and MVC is on the YUI 3 roadmap ( http://yuilibrary.com/projects/yui3/roadmap ), hopefully some of the concepts from backbone get implemented in the YUI’s MVC layer.
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: W3C HTML5 Spinning Logo — Flick with finger or mouse in WebKit
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: W3C HTML5 Spinning Logo — Flick with finger or mouse in WebKit
eferraiuolo | 15 years ago | on: W3C HTML5 Spinning Logo — Flick with finger or mouse in WebKit
It works in WebKit browsers: Safari, Chrome, MobileSafari (iOS), Android, and should work on BlackBerry Touch 6.0.
View the source on the page, its short and straight forward.
eferraiuolo | 16 years ago | on: Simple Tab View (i.e. tabbed-content) with YUI 3
eferraiuolo | 16 years ago | on: Fever: taking the temperature of your slice of the web - by Shaun Inman
eferraiuolo | 16 years ago | on: Fever: taking the temperature of your slice of the web - by Shaun Inman
I really wanted a Hacker News to act as a "spark" in fever, but it does nothing, always says there are "no items". This is extremely disappointing and my attempts to reach out to Shaun via email (on the feedafever.com site) and Titter have failed, and I have received no reply. :-(